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Bridging Loans | Mortgage Broker Fit Check | Rate Challenge
Google reviews 35+ lenders • VOW / YBR panel Australia-wide • Residential bridging scenarios
Bridging loans • Australia-wide

Request a mortgage broker fit check for a bridging loan scenario

If you are buying before selling or your current property sale has not settled yet, a mortgage broker can review whether a bridging loan looks sensible, too risky, or worth structuring more carefully.

  • Broker callback, not lender applicationA mortgage broker reviews the scenario first and contacts you. No lender submission happens unless you choose to proceed.
  • Exit strategy matters mostThe strongest bridging scenarios usually have a real purchase deadline and a credible sale path.
  • Better to hear no earlyIf the numbers or timing look weak, we would rather say so than push the wrong bridge structure.

Best suited to residential borrowers with a real purchase deadline, a credible sale plan and enough equity buffer to absorb carry cost and timing pressure. General information only.

Mortgage broker review 2-step fit check Residential bridging

Request a bridging loan fit check

A mortgage broker will review whether your buy-before-sell or short-term bridging scenario looks like a genuine fit before any lender application.

Credit Representative No. 567366Australia-wide

Prefer to speak first? Call 0407 908 024

A stronger bridging enquiry usually has a real purchase deadline, a realistic sale plan and enough equity buffer.
We only ask for the first details that matter most when working out whether a bridge looks worth a closer review.
This page is for residential buy-before-sell and short-term bridging scenarios, not unsecured personal lending or commercial bridging.

So a mortgage broker can review the bridge scenario and call or email you back. No lender submission happens unless you choose to proceed.

Optional 20-second detail Helpful for a more accurate broker callback. Skip any of these if you prefer.
Add a few more optional details
  • Broker reviews it first
  • Sale path matters more than hype
  • Better to rule it out early than force a weak bridge

By submitting, you are asking a mortgage broker at Rate Challenge to contact you about this enquiry. No lender submission happens unless you choose to proceed. We do not sell your data. See our Privacy Policy. General information only; it does not take your objectives, financial situation or needs into account.

Thanks — your bridging fit check request has been sent

A mortgage broker will review the scenario and aim to contact you quickly during business hours. No lender submission happens unless you choose to proceed.

  • Bridge scenario reviewed first
  • We will flag weak sale/timing risk early
  • The next step will be practical, not pushy

Why borrowers use Rate Challenge for bridging scenarios

A practical first step for residential buy-before-sell decisions.
Exit strategy first

See if the bridge looks sane before you rush the deal

The strongest bridging files usually have a real purchase deadline and a believable sale exit, not just optimism.

Less guesswork

Compare likely pathways in plain English

Depending on the scenario, the right answer could be bridging, sell-first, or a more conservative structure.

Faster judgement

Know the real next step sooner

If the file looks too brittle, we would rather tell you early than let you stretch into the wrong bridge.

How bridging usually works

Simple language. No lender jargon.
1. Check the new purchase pressure

Work out how real the timing is

Signed contracts, auction deadlines and accepted offers create a different level of urgency than early browsing.

2. Check the sale exit

Buying first only works if the sale path is believable

Listed, under offer or under contract is usually much stronger than “we will sell later”.

3. Check whether the numbers still hold

Buffer matters as much as the headline loan

Peak debt, carry cost, valuation movement and sale timing all need enough room to absorb reality.

What makes a stronger fit — and what increases risk

The two core questions are usually “Could this work?” and “What breaks it?”
  • A real purchase deadlineAuction, signed contract or accepted offer usually points to a more genuine bridging need.
  • A credible sale pathListed, under offer or under contract is usually stronger than “not listed yet”.
  • Enough equity bufferMore room after lender limits usually means more flexibility if the sale takes longer or lands lower than hoped.
  • Mainstream residential securityStandard residential property is generally easier than unusual security or edge-case deals.
  • No real sale planIf the current property is not moving yet, the whole structure can become fragile fast.
  • The numbers only work in the best caseIf the deal breaks when the valuation is lower or the sale is slower, it is too tight.
  • Emotion is driving the decisionWanting one property badly is not the same as having a strong bridging file.
  • Too little carry bufferShort-term funding still gets painful if the exit is late or the cost profile is misunderstood.

We help borrowers focus on the sale exit, timing pressure and total risk, rather than treating bridging like easy short-term money.

Bridging loan FAQs

Common questions borrowers ask before they enquire.
Does submitting this mean a lender application starts?

No. Submitting this requests a mortgage broker fit check. A lender application only starts later if you choose to proceed.

Do I need my current property listed first?

Not always, but the strongest bridging scenarios usually have a clear sale path rather than a vague plan to sell later.

What if I am bidding at auction before my current property sells?

That is a common reason borrowers explore bridging, but it is also where weak sale assumptions can create real risk.

Is bridging only for owner-occupiers?

Not always. Some residential investor scenarios can be possible too, but lender policy and pricing can differ.

What if the sale price is lower than expected?

That is exactly why buffer matters. If the structure only works at the top of your assumptions, it may be too brittle.

Could there be upfront costs?

Potentially, yes. Depending on the structure, there can be valuation, application, legal, settlement or discharge costs.

Need a quick answer on whether a bridging loan looks worth exploring?

Start the short fit check or call now. This page is built for borrowers who want a practical broker view before they stretch into the wrong bridge.

Request broker fit check Call now
Broker review first • no lender submission unless you choose to proceed
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