Chattel Mortgage
Own from day one
- Ownership from day one; asset on your balance sheet
- Fixed or variable rate; optional balloon to lower repayments
- Common for vehicles, equipment and machinery
See how chattel mortgage, hire purchase, finance lease and operating lease stack up for Australian businesses — with example repayments, tax/GST notes and what suits different situations.
Asset finance in Australia spans several structures with different ownership, accounting and cash flow outcomes. This page lays out the main options side-by-side so you can compare quickly, then dive deeper into the product or asset class that fits — the right structure depends on whether you want ownership on day one, lower repayments via a residual/balloon, or flexible replacement cycles. When you’re ready, ask for help and we’ll guide you through the pros and cons for your use case.
Own from day one
Repay to ownership
Use now, residual at end
Use, return or upgrade
Need a quick steer? Share the asset type, budget and preferred term and we’ll flag likely structures in minutes. Get tailored help.
Use this comparison to see how chattel mortgage, hire purchase, finance lease and operating lease differ on the factors that usually drive the decision: ownership, GST timing, tax deductions, balance-sheet treatment and end-of-term outcomes.
| Factor | Chattel Mortgage | Hire Purchase | Finance Lease | Operating Lease |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ownership during term | You own · day 1 | Financier | Lessor | Lessor |
| Ownership at end | Already yours | Transfers after final payment | Pay residual / refinance / trade | Return, extend or upgrade |
| Balance sheet (AASB 16) | Asset + loan liability | Asset + HP liability | Right-of-use + lease liability | Right-of-use + lease liability (low-value / short-term exemptions) |
| GST claim timing | Up front on purchase price | Up front on purchase price (agreements from 1 Jul 2012) | On each lease payment | On each lease payment |
| Typical tax deductions | Interest + depreciation | Interest + depreciation | Lease payment portion | Lease payment portion |
| Balloon / residual | Optional 0-30% | Optional 0-30% | Contracted residual at end | Set return value / extension terms |
| Typical rate range (p.a.) | 6.5% - 12% | 6.5% - 12% | 7% - 13% | 7% - 13% (often bundled) |
| Best suited to | Long-life assets where ownership matters | Similar to chattel mortgage; some tax timing differences | Newer assets with a planned upgrade | Fast-changing tech, fleet replacement |
Indicative asset finance rates in Australia typically range from about 6.99% p.a. to 14.99%+ depending on asset age, business profile, loan term, documentation, and residual/balloon settings. Strong, well-documented applications for standard assets price toward the lower end; specialist, older or low-doc scenarios price higher.
Important: Rates and repayments are indicative and subject to lender assessment, fees and your business profile. Total interest depends on your exact approval profile and fees. This is not a quote.
Deep guides to the specific Australian asset finance topics readers ask us about most often. Each is built on primary sources (ATO, ASIC, AFCA, AFSA, AASB) and reviewed regularly.
Authoritative references:
Choose the asset or structure first, then explore supporting pages for rates, requirements, approval time, GST and tax.
Share the asset type, budget and preferred term and we’ll outline likely structures, indicative rates and next steps.
Commonly financed assets include vehicles (cars, utes, vans, trucks), plant and machinery (excavators, forklifts, earthmoving), medical and dental equipment, IT/office equipment, and certain fitouts. Lenders prefer assets with identifiable serial numbers and strong resale value.
Full-doc deals typically need identification, ABN/ACN, recent bank statements, BAS/financials, asset quote/invoice and insurance. Low-doc deals may rely on bank statements, an accountant’s letter and asset details. Startups may need a business plan and cash flow forecast.
Well-documented standard assets can see same-day to 48-hour approvals. Complex, used or specialty assets may take 3-7 business days. Allow time for valuation, invoices, insurance and settlement paperwork.
A balloon (loan) or residual (lease) lowers ongoing repayments by deferring part of the principal to the end. You can pay it out, refinance it, or trade/upgrade (subject to the agreement and asset value).
GST treatment depends on the structure and your GST registration. Many businesses can claim input tax credits on the purchase price or on each lease payment. Confirm details with the ATO or your accountant. See ATO GST guidance linked above.
Loans like chattel mortgage generally recognise the asset and liability on balance sheet. Under AASB 16/IFRS 16, most leases are also recognised on balance sheet except short-term or low-value exemptions. Confirm treatment with your accountant.
Yes, case-by-case. Expect tighter asset age limits, more deposit, higher pricing or additional support docs. See our pages for startup equipment finance and bad credit asset finance.
Terms typically range 24-60 months. Residual/balloon settings vary with asset life and lender guidelines. See detailed pages on loan terms for each structure.
Authored and maintained by: the Asset Finance Help editorial team. We publish under organisational authorship; for our review and correction process see our Editorial Policy.
Last updated: 1 June 2026