What does a mortgage broker do?

There are plenty of ways to obtain a home loan.

You can walk into your nearest bank or lender, you can trawl through all the options online and apply for a loan without leaving your seat, or you can seek out a mortgage broker.

But what exactly does a mortgage broker do, and why would you consider using one?

As a guide, a mortgage broker’s role can take in any or all of the following functions.

What is a mortgage broker and what do they do?

Rather than you sifting through dozens of potential lenders, home loans and interest rates, it’s a broker’s job to crunch the numbers and provide you with the best options, based on your personal situation and finances.

Essentially, mortgage brokers do the legwork in tracking down and setting up the best home loan for you, first and foremost, the mortgage broker works for you.

“What a mortgage broker typically does is put the customer hat on and looks at what is the most suitable lender or suitable product for the customer, based on their needs.”

“They’ll sit down with the customer and spend an hour understanding exactly what they want to do or achieve and what their plans are, and then obviously look to provide them with the most suitable lender or product, depending upon their circumstances.”

Assess your borrowing power

A good broker will not only determine how much you’re able to borrow from various lenders, but also the maximum amount that you should borrow, in order to protect you if things change.

“A broker will  sit with you, understand your situation, do analysis of all your expenses, incomes, plans, and then look and research around the various lenders that are suitable.”

A part of the mortgage broker  work is to make sure a client can afford the repayments if rates go up to 7% or 8% and how that is going to impact on their lifestyle, or how it will impact if they get a loan tomorrow, versus what they’re paying in rent today.

Find you the best deal

It stands to reason that a person who lives and breathes home loans every day should be able to secure a better deal or interest rate than someone who’s searching for the first time.

“A customer should be able to come to a broker and get a lower rate than what they can get by walking into a branch,”

Get you pre-approval

Should you tick off on one of the loan options put forward by a broker, they’ll do further legwork to get your loan pre-approved with that lender.  That then gives you the ability to go out view  properties, knowing the lender has approved you to borrow a certain amount.

They’re independent

Most brokers will be at pains to stress that they’re independent, meaning they don’t favour any one lender, and will seek out the best possible deal or rate from the dozens of lenders with whom they’re accredited.

Irrespective of whether the mortgage broker works for a franchise group or a smaller business, they’re independent from a particular lender.  As a general rule, all mortgage brokers are accredited with 20 to 40-plus lenders.

Who pays the broker?

You may not realise that the vast majority of mortgage brokers aren’t paid by you, the customer. Instead, they’re paid a portion of the home loan amount by the lender once the loan is finalised.

That means that if you elect not to proceed with the loan options they put in front of you, you won’t pay anything, and they won’t receive anything.

It’s one of the ways you can generally be sure they’ll hunt the best deal down for you: they want you to be happy so you’ll proceed with the loan.  A broker gets paid the same, irrespective of whether a customer pays 4% or 10% (interest rate). So it’s in the broker’s best interest to get the customer the lowest rate, because there’s no enticement for a broker to get a higher rate and get paid more.