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Non-Bank Mortgage Lenders NZ — Alternatives to the Big Five Banks

Updated

When the main banks say no — or when your situation doesn’t fit their standard criteria — non-bank lenders offer an alternative path to mortgage finance in New Zealand. Understanding what non-banks offer, how they differ from banks, and what they cost helps you make an informed decision.


What Are Non-Bank Lenders?

Non-bank lenders (also called non-bank financial institutions or NBFIs) provide mortgages but are not registered banks. Key differences from banks:

Regulatory: Banks are registered under the Reserve Bank of NZ Act and subject to RBNZ’s LVR restrictions and capital requirements. Non-banks are licensed differently and, crucially, are not subject to the LVR restrictions that limit how much high-LVR lending banks can do.

Funding: Banks fund mortgages primarily through deposits. Non-banks typically fund through wholesale markets, securitisation, or institutional investors.

Credit assessment: Non-banks often have more flexible credit policies — willing to lend to borrowers that mainstream banks decline. This is their core value proposition.

Cost: Greater flexibility comes at a price. Non-bank rates are typically 0.5%–2.0% higher than bank rates, and fees (application, annual) are often higher.


The Main Non-Bank Lenders in NZ

LenderSpeciality
Avanti FinanceAdverse credit, non-standard situations, second mortgages
ResimacSelf-employed, complex income, prime and near-prime
Pepper MoneyPost-credit-event borrowers, non-standard income
Liberty FinancialFlexible assessment, alternative income
ASAP FinanceShort-term and bridging finance

This is not an exhaustive list — the non-bank sector has several smaller players. A mortgage broker who works with non-banks can match your situation to the right lender.


When to Use a Non-Bank Lender

Declined by mainstream banks

If ANZ, ASB, BNZ, Westpac, or Kiwibank has declined your application, a non-bank may say yes. Common reasons mainstream banks decline that non-banks can work with:

  • Adverse credit history (defaults, late payments)
  • Insufficient self-employment records (less than 2 years)
  • LVR too high for the bank’s allowable bucket (non-banks aren’t capped by RBNZ LVR rules)
  • Non-standard income (irregular, commission-heavy, PAYE + self-employed mix)
  • Property type issues (certain construction types some banks won’t touch)

Bridging strategy

A non-bank can get you into a property now, at a higher rate, while you:

  • Clean up your credit history
  • Build 2 years of self-employment records
  • Build additional equity through payments and/or property value growth

After 1–2 years, refinance to a mainstream bank at a lower rate. This “bridging” use of non-bank lending is common and legitimate.

Speed of approval

Non-bank lenders often process applications faster than mainstream banks — useful when you need finance confirmed quickly (e.g., for an urgent auction or settlement).


Non-Bank vs Bank: The Cost Comparison

Example: $500,000 mortgage, 25-year term

Lender typeRateMonthly repaymentExtra annual cost vs bank
Mainstream bank5.55%$3,062
Non-bank (near-prime)6.30%$3,302$2,880/year
Non-bank (adverse credit)7.50%$3,678$7,392/year

The rate premium is real and significant. A 2-year stay at a non-bank before refinancing might cost $10,000–$15,000 more in interest than a bank. If it’s the difference between buying and not buying, many borrowers accept this. But don’t stay at a non-bank a day longer than necessary — refinance to a bank as soon as you qualify.


Fees at Non-Bank Lenders

Non-banks typically charge:

  • Application/establishment fees: $500–$2,500 (higher than most banks)
  • Annual service fees: $150–$500/year (rare at banks)
  • Break/early repayment fees: Variable, sometimes more complex than bank break fee formulas

Always get a full schedule of fees before committing.


LVR at Non-Banks

Non-banks aren’t bound by RBNZ LVR restrictions. This means they can theoretically lend at LVRs above 80% for owner-occupiers and above 65% for investors. In practice:

  • They still manage their risk — high-LVR lending at non-banks comes with a higher rate premium and often requires LMI-equivalent products or additional fees
  • They won’t lend at any LVR regardless of risk — they have their own credit policies

But for a borrower with a 15% deposit who’s been declined everywhere, a non-bank willing to lend at 85% LVR (at a higher rate) is a viable option.


How to Access Non-Bank Lenders

Most non-banks don’t deal directly with borrowers — they work exclusively through licensed mortgage brokers. To access Avanti Finance, Resimac, Pepper Money, or similar, you need a broker with those lenders on their panel.

This is another reason to use a mortgage broker: they open the door to the full market, including non-bank options that aren’t available directly.

See Mortgage Broker vs Bank NZ and Using a Mortgage Broker NZ.


Further Reading