Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 652

Sixteen steps in a typical SMSF borrowing

SMSF borrowing requires timing and precision that would be unexpected for someone buying an investment property. The investment property in a DIY structure is not held in the borrower’s name but by the trust that administers the super fund.

Before engaging in a limited recourse borrowing, the superannuation trust deed may need to be amended before the borrowing can take place. Also, investment and gearing strategies may need to be reviewed.

There are a number of names used to describe a loan made to an SMSF, including holding trust deed, custodial deed and bare trust. The most common name used now is limited recourse borrowing arrangement or LRBA. This term describes the working of the loan because if the loan defaults, the lender's rights are limited to the asset held in the separate trust, meaning there is no recourse to the other assets held in the SMSF.

A typical borrowing by an SMSF has the following steps and the order of these steps is important to minimise any difficulties in completing the transaction:

  1. Determine (often with the help of the fund’s accountant or financial planner) that borrowing would be an appropriate strategy to leverage investment
  2. Check the SMSF trust deed to ensure trustees have power to borrow, grant security & allow assets to be held by custodians/nominees for the trustee (if not, amend the trust deed)
  3. Check the SMSF investment strategy to ensure it allows for the acquisition of the investment asset and permits borrowing for that purpose (if not, amend the investment strategy)
  4. Source the asset for purchase, negotiate the price and reach an agreement with the vendor
  5. Finalise borrowing arrangements with the lender including in-principal loan approval
  6. Determine who is to be the custodian – if a new company, purchase the new company
  7. Custodian resolves in writing to act as custodian for the super fund trustee in the purchase of the asset
  8. SMSF trustee resolves in writing to purchase the asset and to appoint the custodian to act for the super fund trustee as bare trustee of the bare trust
  9. Sign the bare trust deed (Qld, SA, NT)
  10. Signing of the purchase contract by the custodian (note: not SMSF trustee)
  11. SMSF trustee provides all the deposit money for the purchase (should come directly from the super fund’s account. If the deposit initially comes from the pocket of the SMSF trustee, then this deposit amount should be paid into the SMSF as a superannuation contribution within several weeks and notation made to that effect in the SMSF’s records
  12. Custodian and SMSF trustee sign the bare trust deed (NSW, ACT, VIC, TAS, WA)
  13. SMSF trustee signs all loan documents with the lender (note: SMSF trustee is the borrower)
  14. Purchase of the asset is completed using only money coming from the SMSF’s account or from the loan by the lender
  15. The bare trust deed is submitted to the NSW Office of State Revenue for payment of stamp duty.
  16. When the loan is eventually repaid the asset can be transferred from the custodian to the super fund trustee for nominal stamp duty provided the bare trust deed has been stamped already.

This style of lending will be new to many trustees and caution should be taken to ensure the gearing of property inside a DIY fund is in the interests of all fund members.

After the loan is repaid – unwinding the LRBA – things to consider:

Unwinding an LRBA involves repaying the borrowing by which the Acquired Property was acquired and then transferring the Acquired Property to the SMSF.

Unwinding an LRBA therefore raises issues as to whether the transfer of the Acquired Property is a CGT Event or a taxable supply and whether the transfer is entitled to concessional transfer duty treatment.

Additionally, unwinding the LRBA involves the registration of the transfer form and the payment of various land titles office registration fees.

 

Peter Townsend BA LLB FCLA FAICD is Managing Director of SUPERCentral, and a business lawyer with over 30 years’ experience in providing legal advice to participants in the financial planning and securities industries.

Please note that these comments are for your consideration only and are provided to assist you in deciding whether to proceed to obtain a formal opinion on the issue. These comments cannot be relied upon by either you or any of your clients until and unless we issue that formal opinion.

 

  •   4 March 2026
  • 1
  •      
  •   

RELATED ARTICLES

Reader questions on operating an SMSF

Heed my problems borrowing in my SMSF

Oh dear, not another glitch with borrowing in SMSFs

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

2 billion reasons to fix retirement income

A proposal to address Australia's 'stranded balances' in retirement by requiring super funds to transition members to pension phase at 65, boosting retirement income and reframing super as a source of income.

The ultimate superannuation EOFY checklist 2026

Here is a checklist of 28 important issues you should address before June 30 to ensure your SMSF or other super fund is in order and that you are making the most of the strategies available.

Do super funds need a massive wake up call?

UK retirement expert, Guy Opperman, believes super funds are failing at supporting members in deaccumulation. Here is what Australia should do about it. 

Two months into retirement

A retirement researcher's take on retirement and her focus on each of her six resource buckets to stay engaged during the transition and beyond.

Welcome to Firstlinks Edition 662 with weekend update

The debate over the budget is increasingly shaped by frustration and perceptions of unfairness, rather than clear-eyed assessment of policy outcomes.

Reforming the taxation of wealth and wealth transfers

As the budget approaches debate continues about the need and method for addressing wealth inequality. Could reinstating wealth transfer taxes be the answer?

Latest Updates

Back to the future - Why indexing CGT is a good idea

A return to indexation of capital gains would be a fairer way to compensate households for the effects of inflation than the current discount. Importantly, it opens the door to future, broader reforms to stop the taxation of inflation.

Australia has no death duties. Technically.

Australia may not levy formal death duties, but a growing web of tax measures is quietly shaping what wealth passes between generations. Now, the 2026 budget adds another layer.

Strategy

The folly of the Iran war

From oil shocks to fractured alliances, the Iran war carries the hallmarks of a historic policy misstep - one that could tip an already fragile global economy into crisis.

Taxation

Noel Whittaker’s take on the budget

Marketed as a fix for inequality and housing affordability, the latest budget instead delivers a tangle of tax changes that leave everyday Australians worse off.

Investment strategies

The red metal's long game

Copper has had a rough few weeks but investors should not ignore the potential for future price increases as supply increasingly falls behind demand.

Taxation

The lesser-known effects of changed property taxes

The budget’s property tax reforms are being framed as fairness measures, but they risk splitting the housing market, penalising lower‑income investors and introducing distortions that may prove costly.

Latest from Morningstar

Why stocks sometimes fall for no obvious reason

The vast and opaque world of private assets is a powerful gravitational force - and when trouble hits, it's the more liquid public equities that often the feel it first.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2026 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.