Australian private credit demand surges as traditional lending tightens

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A fundamental reshaping of Australia’s financial landscape is underway, presenting both a challenge and an opportunity for the nation’s small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). As businesses seek capital to fuel growth, they are increasingly finding the doors of traditional banks less open. This tightening of institutional lending has catalysed the rapid expansion of a powerful alternative: private credit. The scale of this shift is undeniable, with the Australian private credit market surpassing $224 billion by early 2024, cementing its position not as a niche product but as a mainstream force in business finance.
The great tightening: Why banks are pulling back
The primary driver behind this market transformation is the strategic retreat of major banks from significant segments of the business lending market. This pullback is not arbitrary but a calculated response to a confluence of regulatory and commercial pressures. Stricter capital requirements and increased oversight from bodies like the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) are compelling major banks to de-risk their portfolios. As detailed in recent regulatory actions, this has led to a sharpened focus on the lowest-risk segments, such as prime residential mortgages, leaving many viable commercial borrowers underserved.
This institutional shift creates a distinct mismatch with the needs of dynamic SMEs. Banks often rely on rigid, “black-and-white” criteria that fail to accommodate the unique circumstances of businesses with complex project pipelines or those operating in sectors like commercial real estate development. As reported, many mid-market deals fall outside these strict parameters, creating a significant funding gap. The evidence of this unmet demand is clear; data from late 2023 shows a significant 5.1% year-on-year surge in business credit applications, confirming that while bank appetite has diminished, the ambition of Australian businesses has not.
A new capital source: The rise of private credit
Into the void left by traditional lenders has stepped a growing cohort of specialised non-bank institutions, driving what has been described as a “quiet lending revolution.” Private credit, defined as direct lending from specialised investment funds, has emerged as a critical component of the corporate funding ecosystem. Its momentum is underscored by projections forecasting a 22% annual growth rate, highlighting its increasing importance in financing Australian enterprise. For growth-focused businesses, the advantages offered by private credit providers are compelling.
The key benefits drawing SMEs towards this alternative capital source include:
- Speed and agility: Funding decisions are frequently made within weeks, not the months typical of bank processes, enabling businesses to seize time-sensitive opportunities.
- Structural flexibility: Private lenders can design bespoke loan covenants and repayment schedules that are tailored to a company’s specific cash flow cycles and project milestones.
- Higher-risk appetite: These specialised lenders are better equipped to accurately assess and price for risks that fall outside the rigid credit models of traditional banks.
- Partnership approach: The lending relationship is often more collaborative, with financiers providing strategic value that extends beyond the provision of capital alone.
Unlocking value: How asset-backed lending fills the gap
One of the most powerful and practical forms of private credit is asset-backed lending, where a business can secure capital against tangible assets, most commonly commercial real estate. This segment is becoming particularly crucial as the private real estate credit market is forecast to expand from $50 billion to $90 billion by 2029. This approach allows lenders to assess a loan application based on the quality of the underlying asset and the strength of the business plan, rather than relying solely on historical financial metrics.
“Corporate businesses require funding for unique situations can secure a range of corporate debt solutions through RSC that are outside of typical bank funding parameters,” explains Tarek Omar, CEO of Royce Stone Capital. “Private corporate debt has less stringent requirements than banks, is streamlined and can provide funding before you can meet your bank manager.”
Private credit allows investors to look at the whole picture—the quality of the asset and the viability of the business plan—to structure tailored funding solutions that banks simply aren’t equipped to offer. It provides certainty and flexibility so businesses can seize growth opportunities without delay.
The operational differences between these two lending options are stark, providing a clear choice for SME leaders depending on their specific needs and circumstances.
| Feature | Traditional bank loan | Private credit solution |
| Approval speed | Slow (4-8+ weeks) | Fast (1-4 weeks) |
| Lending criteria | Rigid, focused on credit score and historicals | Flexible, focused on asset quality & future viability |
| Loan structure | Standardised, one-size-fits-all products | Bespoke, tailored to specific business needs |
| Ideal borrower | Established businesses with perfect credit history | Growth-focused SMEs, complex projects, property developers |
| Relationship | Often transactional | Typically partnership-focused |
Navigating Australia’s new financial mainstream
The growth of private credit in Australia represents a permanent structural change in market trends, not a fleeting phenomenon. The funding gap created by the strategic repositioning of major banks is being decisively filled by more agile and specialised non-bank lenders. For SME owners and managers, success in 2026 and beyond will depend on understanding the full spectrum of available lending options and identifying the right financial partner.
The key is to move beyond legacy assumptions about business funding and engage with partners who understand a specific industry, vision, and asset base. For innovative and asset-rich Australian businesses, this new era of finance presents more opportunities than ever to secure the tailored capital required to not only survive but thrive in a competitive global market.

