Asset finance in plain English: chattel mortgage, lease or rental?
Asset Finance
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Asset finance is how Australian businesses fund the equipment they earn with — utes and trucks, excavators, trailers, machinery, fit-outs, medical and IT equipment — without draining working capital to buy it outright. The three main structures are the chattel mortgage, the finance lease and the rental (operating lease) agreement, and the differences between them come down to one question: who owns the asset, and when. Each structure has different cash-flow, tax and end-of-term consequences, so the right answer depends on your business, not on which product a salesperson mentions first.
A chattel mortgage is the workhorse of Australian equipment finance and the closest thing to a normal secured loan. "Chattel" is just the legal word for movable property.
Here is how it works: the lender advances the funds, you own the asset from day one, and the lender registers a security interest over it (on the PPSR) until the loan is repaid. You make fixed repayments over a term commonly between two and seven years, optionally with a balloon at the end to reduce the monthly commitment. When the final payment clears, the security interest is released and the asset is unencumbered.
Why businesses like it:
The trade-off is that the asset and the debt both sit on your balance sheet, and a balloon still has to be paid, refinanced or covered by selling the asset at the end.
Under a finance lease, the financier buys the asset and owns it; your business leases it for a fixed term at fixed rentals. Although you do not own the asset, you carry most of the risks and benefits of ownership — you maintain it, insure it, and at the end of the lease you are generally responsible for the asset's agreed residual value. Typically you can then pay out the residual and take ownership, extend the lease, or return the asset and settle any shortfall against the residual.
A finance lease can suit businesses that want to preserve capital and prefer rental-style payments, and lease rentals for business-use assets may be deductible in general terms — again, the accounting and tax treatment depends on your circumstances and current rules, so take advice. The key thing to understand is the residual: if the asset is worth less than the residual value when the lease ends, that gap is usually your problem, not the financier's.
A rental agreement (often structured as an operating lease) is the furthest from ownership. You pay to use the asset for an agreed period and hand it back at the end, with no residual obligation in the standard case. Rentals are common for technology and other equipment that dates quickly, where the point is access to current gear rather than long-term ownership.
The attractions are flexibility and predictable payments that may be deductible for business use in general terms. The caution is cost: over a long period, renting can cost considerably more than owning, some agreements roll over automatically if you miss an end-of-term notice window, and you build no equity in the asset. Read the end-of-term clauses before signing — that is where rental agreements earn their reputation, good and bad.
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Tax treatment differs meaningfully across the three structures, and this is exactly where generic internet advice goes wrong. In general terms only:
As at July 2026, the sensible position is the same as it always is: decide nothing on tax grounds until your accountant has confirmed how the current rules apply to your business. The right finance structure chosen for the wrong tax reasons is still the wrong structure.
Much business equipment finance is written without full financial statements. If your business has an established ABN (commonly two or more years), is GST-registered, and has a clean credit history, many lenders offer low-doc or streamlined approval for standard income-producing assets up to policy limits — often supported by little more than the application, identification and asset details, particularly where the asset is a common, easily valued one like a vehicle or trailer.
Stronger amounts or unusual assets may need bank statements or accountant confirmation rather than full financials. Pricing on low-doc asset finance is generally a little higher than fully verified lending, but for time-poor operators the speed is often worth it — approvals can happen in days. We cover the documentation spectrum in detail in our low-doc loans guide, and you can see what lenders typically fund on our asset finance page.
A rough decision path:
If the asset is a vehicle, the same structural logic applies alongside the consumer considerations in our car loan guide.
A broker who works across equipment financiers can match the structure to the asset, check low-doc eligibility for your ABN, and package the application so it moves quickly — while your accountant confirms the tax side. If you are planning a purchase, get in touch and we can map the options before you commit.
Ownership. Under a chattel mortgage you own the asset from day one and the lender holds a security interest until the loan is repaid. Under a finance lease the financier owns the asset and you rent it, usually with responsibility for an agreed residual value at the end. The tax and balance-sheet treatments differ too, so confirm the details with your accountant.
In general terms, a GST-registered business may be able to claim the GST included in the asset's purchase price on its next activity statement, depending on its accounting basis. Under leases and rentals, GST is typically built into each payment instead. Your accountant can confirm how the rules apply to your specific situation.
It can — assets bought under a chattel mortgage are owned by your business, which is generally what write-off measures require. But thresholds, eligibility and end dates change with legislation, so never structure a purchase around a write-off without your accountant confirming the current rules and your eligibility first.
Low-doc means the lender approves the loan without full financial statements — typically relying on your ABN history, GST registration, credit history and the asset details, sometimes with bank statements. It generally suits established ABNs, commonly trading two or more years, buying standard income-producing assets. Pricing is usually slightly higher than fully verified finance in exchange for speed and simplicity.
A balloon lowers the monthly repayment and can match finance to an asset's earning pattern, but you pay interest on the balloon for the whole term and must pay it out, refinance it or sell the asset at the end. It works when the end-of-term plan is genuine — for example, a planned equipment upgrade cycle — and works badly as a way to stretch into equipment the cash flow cannot really support.




This article is general information only and doesn't consider your personal objectives, financial situation or needs — it isn't personal credit advice, and lending criteria, rates, fees and government schemes change. Before acting, speak with a licensed MakeMyLoan broker or credit representative who will assess your circumstances and provide a credit guide before any credit assistance is given.