Whether you’re buying vacant land to build your dream home, land banking for future investment, or purchasing a rural block — AJP Finance structures land loans that fit your plans and your budget across Australia.
We assess your land purchase goals, zoning, and intended use to match you with the right lender and structure.
A land purchase loan is a specialised mortgage that finances the acquisition of a vacant block of land — whether residential, rural, or commercial. Unlike standard home loans, land loans carry different risk profiles for lenders because the land itself doesn’t generate income and has no habitable structure on it.
Lenders view unimproved land as a higher-risk security. There are no tenants, no rental income, and in the event of default, land can be harder to liquidate than a completed dwelling. This higher risk profile means land loans typically come with:
AJP Finance navigates these complexities on your behalf — ensuring you get the best available structure for your specific land purchase scenario.
The loan product that’s right for you depends on the type of land you’re buying and what you plan to do with it.
For buying a residential block in an established or new estate. Most buyers plan to build within 1–2 years. Lenders assess the block’s zoning, location, size, and shape. Lots in registered estates with services connected are viewed more favourably than raw, unserviced land.
A combination loan structure: you borrow to purchase the land, then draw down additional funds progressively as construction milestones are reached. The loan converts to a standard home loan once construction is complete. This is the most common structure for new home builds.
Finance for larger rural blocks, hobby farms, and lifestyle properties (typically over 2 hectares). Specialist lenders are often required. Assessment includes primary production activity, water access, road access, services, and the property’s ability to be sold to a broad buyer pool.
For commercial, industrial, or mixed-use zoned land. These loans are structured as commercial facilities with different assessment criteria including the land’s development potential, DA approvals in place, and the borrower’s commercial property experience.
For developers purchasing land with DA approval to subdivide into multiple lots. These are typically structured as non-bank or private lending facilities with higher interest rates and shorter terms, transitioning to conventional loans once lots are sold or leased.
Some rural land parcels carry environmental covenants, heritage overlays, or bush fire attack level (BAL) ratings that restrict building. These require specialist lender assessment. We identify which lenders will accept these as security and under what conditions.
Understanding what makes a land loan approvable helps you prepare a stronger application — and avoid choosing a block that lenders won’t accept as security.
Most land buyers plan to build. A combined land and construction loan is the most efficient way to finance both stages of the process — here’s how it works in practice.
At land settlement, you draw down the land component of the loan. You pay interest (or P&I) on the land balance while finalising your building plans and obtaining a building permit. This is known as the “land-only” period — no construction loan funds are drawn yet.
Once construction commences, the lender releases funds in progressive drawdowns aligned to completed construction milestones. Standard residential construction milestones are:
During the construction phase you only pay interest on the funds actually drawn down — not the full approved loan amount. This significantly reduces your holding costs during the build. As each stage is completed and drawn, your interest-only repayment increases incrementally.
Once the certificate of occupancy (or practical completion certificate) is issued, the full loan converts to your agreed ongoing structure — typically principal and interest on a 25–30 year term. The property is now a completed home, which may allow you to access better rates or refinance to a home loan product with your preferred lender.
Understanding all the upfront costs of buying land helps you budget accurately and avoids unpleasant surprises at settlement.
| Cost Item | Description | Approximate Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Stamp Duty (Transfer Duty) | State government tax on the land purchase price. Rate varies by state and purchase price. | 1.5%–5.5% of land value (state dependent) |
| Conveyancing / Legal Fees | Solicitor or licensed conveyancer to handle contract review and title transfer. | $900 – $2,500 |
| Land Valuation | Lender-ordered valuation of the land to confirm market value. | $300 – $700 |
| Mortgage Registration | Government fee to register the mortgage over the land title. | $100 – $400 (state dependent) |
| Lender Application Fee | Establishment or application fee charged by the lender (some lenders waive this). | $0 – $995 |
| LMI (if LVR > 80%) | Lenders Mortgage Insurance. Applies if deposit is less than 20% of land value. | $2,000 – $20,000+ (varies significantly) |
| Council Rates & Levies | Adjustments at settlement for council rates already paid by the vendor. | Varies by council |
| Inspection Fees (Rural) | Pest, soil, or survey reports on rural or irregularly shaped parcels. | $200 – $1,000 |
From finding the right block to settling on the title — here’s how AJP Finance supports you through every stage.
We start by understanding your land purchase goals — are you building, investing, or subdividing? We map your finances, establish a realistic budget, and outline which loan structures will suit your scenario.
Before you make an offer, we assess the land itself. Location, zoning, size, access to services, and any overlays are reviewed against our lender panel’s current policy. We identify any lender appetite concerns before you’re committed.
We obtain a conditional pre-approval so you know your borrowing capacity before you negotiate on a block. This strengthens your position with vendors and developers and allows you to act quickly when the right block comes up.
Once you’ve signed a contract, we submit the formal application with all required documentation. We order the lender valuation, manage the credit assessment, and handle all lender correspondence on your behalf.
If you’re building, we coordinate with your builder to align the construction loan structure with your building contract milestones. We ensure the combined land + construction facility is structured correctly before the first drawdown.
We coordinate with your conveyancer to ensure seamless settlement. Post-settlement, we remain your finance partner — managing construction drawdowns, and reviewing your loan once the build is complete to ensure you’re on the best possible rate and product.
Rural land purchases are subject to different lender policies, additional due diligence requirements, and specific legal considerations that don’t apply to standard residential lots.
Lenders distinguish between working farms (where income is generated from the land) and lifestyle blocks (no commercial activity). Primary production loans are assessed on farm income, commodity prices, and enterprise viability. Lifestyle properties are assessed like residential land.
Water access is critical for rural land. Assess whether the property has town water, bore water, dam, creek access, or tank-only supply. Water licences and entitlements are separate to land title in many states and must be transferred correctly at settlement. Some lenders require minimum water supply for habitation.
Rural properties without sealed road access or electricity connection receive significantly lower lender appetite. Check whether the property has gazetted road access, power connection, NBN or alternative internet, and proximity to the nearest town. All of these affect both lender approval and property resale value.
Properties in high BAL zones (BAL-29, BAL-40, BAL-FZ) face mandatory building construction requirements under AS 3959, significantly increasing build costs. Lenders and insurers assess BAL ratings at valuation. Ensure you obtain a BAL assessment before committing to a rural block.
Rural landowners inherit any existing pest management orders (e.g. notifiable weeds, declared pests) and biosecurity obligations under state legislation. Failure to comply can result in fines and enforcement action. Conduct thorough due diligence — including a pest and weed inspection — before settlement.
Rural parcels often have boundaries defined decades ago and may not accurately reflect fences, improvements, or encroachments. A registered surveyor’s report is recommended to confirm exact boundaries, identify any encroachments, and ensure the title description is correct before settlement.
We see the same costly errors repeated. Here’s what to watch for before you sign anything.
Land contracts in most states are legally binding with tight cooling-off periods. Signing a contract before confirming your land loan approval is approved in principle exposes you to forfeiting your deposit. Always get pre-approval first.
Vacant land generates no income but incurs loan interest, council rates, land tax (in most states), insurance, and any maintenance costs. Model the full holding cost picture — especially if your build is 12–24 months away — before committing.
Zoning determines what you can legally build on a block. Overlays (flood, heritage, environmental, bushfire, vegetation) can significantly restrict construction or add cost. Always obtain a planning certificate (S10.7 in NSW, Schedule 6 Certificate in VIC, etc.) before exchanging contracts.
Land sold in new estates is often “off the plan” — the subdivision has been approved but lots are not yet registered with the titles office. Pre-approvals cannot convert to formal approval until title is registered. Settlement can be delayed by 6–18+ months, during which your financial situation, income, or property values may change.
Site conditions affect construction costs significantly. Sloped sites, rock, highly reactive clay soils (Class H, E, or P), or proximity to trees all increase engineering and preparation costs. Always obtain a soil test and site assessment before your builder prices the build — surprises after contract signing are expensive.
Most Australian states impose land tax on vacant land above a threshold (excluding owner-occupied principal residences in most cases). Investment land is typically subject to land tax from year one. Factor this annual cost into your holding cost calculations.
Land purchase is often just the first step. Explore the full range of services we offer to support your property journey.
Your most important land financing questions — answered directly.
Whether you’re buying a residential block, a rural lifestyle property, or land to build your home — AJP Finance structures the right loan for your land, your timeline, and your plans.