Compare 20 Australian mortgage brokers.

ASIC AFSL credential, MFAA / FBAA membership, lender panel + fee transparency.

20 brokers 5 Australian cities Sourced from ASIC + MFAA register Updated 1 June 2026

Should I use a mortgage broker or go direct to the bank in 2026?

Mortgage brokers now write 74% of all Australian home loans (MFAA Q1 2026 data), and for good reason. A broker compares 30-50 lenders simultaneously and has access to wholesale rates that aren't advertised. Best for: first home buyers, self-employed/PAYG with complex income, refinancers, investors. Banks only sell their own product range. Brokers are paid a commission by the lender (~0.65% upfront + 0.15% trail) — you don't pay them directly. Under Best Interests Duty laws (since 2021), brokers are legally required to act in YOUR interest, not the lender's.

Based on analysis of 20 providers across 6 service categories.

Key takeaways

  • 20+ mortgage broker profiled across Australia.
  • Transparent pricing across all services.
  • Independent ranking. No paid placements. No email capture.
  • Updated June 2026.
  • Every provider cross-referenced against the relevant Australian regulator's public register.

About this mortgage broker comparison

Best Mortgage Broker Australia is an independent Australian comparison service dedicated to helping consumers and businesses find, compare, and contact mortgage broker across every state and territory. We track 20 named providers across 6 service categories, pulling information from public sources, industry-body directories, and provider websites.

Our ranking methodology uses a transparent weighted score updated quarterly: 40% aggregated public reviews, 25% price transparency and itemised quoting, 20% service coverage and geographic availability, 10% credentials and registration with the relevant Australian industry body, and 5% complaint history logged with state fair trading offices and industry ombudsmen. We do not accept payment to rank providers. Where referral fees apply, they are disclosed in our footer and do not influence position.

Every mortgage broker on our platform is cross-referenced against the relevant Australian regulator's public register – whether that is AHPRA, ASIC, the Tax Practitioners Board, the Clean Energy Council, OMARA, or another. We also check Australian Business Register (ABR) records and review Fair Trading complaint data where published. We do not independently audit clinical, technical or service quality. Always verify a provider's current registration directly with the relevant regulator before engaging them.

For mortgage broker specifically, consumers typically compare providers on: pricing (including both headline rates and hidden fees), geographic coverage, specialisation relative to the specific need, wait times and availability, communication quality, and credentials.

If you are a mortgage broker provider interested in being listed or featured, contact us via the form below. Inclusion in our directory is free and does not require payment; featured placement in our rankings is earned through performance metrics, not fees.

Fact checks

Common mortgage broker myths, independently checked

We check the most common misconceptions we hear from Australian consumers.

False

"Using a mortgage broker costs more than going direct to the bank."

Mortgage brokers in Australia are paid by the lender (upfront + trail commission) not the borrower. Their best-interests duty (from 2021) legally requires them to recommend the best loan for you.

Source: asic.gov.au

Mostly True

"A bigger deposit always means a better interest rate."

LVR thresholds (80%, 70%, 60%) unlock better rates. But lender choice, loan type, and your profile matter more than marginal deposit increases beyond the 80% LVR band where LMI is avoided.

Source: www.apra.gov.au

Common questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How does a mortgage broker get paid?

Mortgage brokers are paid by the lender, not by you. Standard commission: 0.65% of the loan amount upfront plus 0.15% trail commission per year. For a $600,000 loan, the broker receives ~$3,900 upfront and $900/year ongoing. Under Best Interests Duty laws (introduced 2021), brokers are legally required to recommend the loan that's in YOUR best interest, not the one paying highest commission. They must disclose all commissions in writing before you proceed.

Are mortgage brokers really free?

Yes — for the borrower in 99% of cases. Some specialist brokers charge fees for very complex deals (commercial, foreign income, bridging finance) — typically $1,500-$5,000, disclosed upfront. The lender pays the broker commission whether you go direct or via broker, so the cost to you is the same. Brokers often negotiate better rates than walk-in customers due to their volume relationships with lenders. There's no downside to using a broker for a standard residential mortgage.

How long does mortgage broker pre-approval take?

Initial broker assessment: 30-60 minutes (usually free). Lender pre-approval: 2-7 business days for most lenders, 1-2 days for some online lenders. Pre-approvals last 60-90 days. Full unconditional approval after you find a property: 2-4 weeks including valuation. The whole process from first broker meeting to settlement: typically 6-12 weeks for a residential purchase. Broker can fast-track urgent applications — let them know if you're in a competitive auction situation.

Should I use the same broker for refinancing as my original purchase?

Not necessarily. The mortgage market changes constantly. A broker who was great for your purchase 5 years ago may not be the best for refinancing today. Best refinancing brokers focus on: knowing current cashback offers, negotiating discharge fees aggressively, and processing applications quickly to capture limited-time deals. Many borrowers use 2-3 different brokers across their property journey based on specialty. Loyalty has no commercial benefit — choose the best broker for your current situation.

How do I find a good mortgage broker?

Look for: 5+ years experience, MFAA or FBAA membership (industry bodies), 30+ lenders on their panel (more options), Best Interests Duty compliance documentation, transparent fee disclosure, willingness to explain options without pressure, and strong recent reviews on Google/ProductReview. Avoid brokers who: only mention 1-2 lenders, push specific products without comparing alternatives, are vague on commission disclosure, or pressure you to commit quickly. Get 2-3 brokers before deciding.

Can a mortgage broker get me a better rate than going direct?

Almost always, yes. Brokers receive wholesale and discounted pricing not available to walk-in customers. Typical broker-negotiated rate is 0.10-0.50% below the lender's advertised rate. Brokers also know which lenders are currently aggressive on pricing for your borrower profile (PAYG vs self-employed, owner-occupier vs investor, LVR brackets). They run multiple applications simultaneously and pick the best offer. Direct-to-bank usually means accepting their advertised rate without negotiation leverage.

What documents do I need to give my mortgage broker?

Standard documents: 2 years of payslips/tax returns, 3-6 months bank statements, current liabilities (credit cards, loans, HECS), 100 points of ID, evidence of deposit savings (genuine savings 5%+), employment verification letter. Self-employed: 2 years tax returns, business bank statements, ATO statements. Investors: rental statements, depreciation reports. The broker requests these once and shares with multiple lenders, saving you submitting separately to each bank.

What's "best interests duty" for mortgage brokers?

Best Interests Duty (BID), introduced January 2021, legally requires mortgage brokers to act in the consumer's best interest when providing credit assistance. This means recommending the loan that genuinely suits the customer's situation — not the highest-commission loan. Brokers must document why their recommendation is in your best interest. ASIC regulates this. If you suspect a broker has breached BID, you can complain to AFCA. This regulation made mortgage broking safer and more accountable than going direct to a single bank.

Sources

Trusted Australian authorities

We reference these authorities for facts, statistics, and to verify provider credentials. Linking to external sources does not imply endorsement.