Construction lending is re-emerging as one of the most strategic growth opportunities for brokers in 2026, but it’s not the straightforward PAYG builds driving demand. It’s the self-employed clients who are ready to build and they are finding traditional lending pathways increasingly difficult to navigate.

Across the market, entrepreneurs, business owners and contractors are keen to build, yet strict income verification requirements and conservative servicing models at the major banks are making it harder to convert approvals into real projects.

For brokers, this isn’t a shrinking opportunity, it’s an evolving one.

The widening gap in construction lending

Construction appetite among the major banks has tightened in recent years. Serviceability buffers remain elevated, income verification is more prescriptive and there is a strong preference for clean PAYG profiles.

This creates challenges for self-employed borrowers whose taxable income doesn’t always reflect their true servicing capacity. Many business owners reinvest profits, structure income strategically for tax purposes or experience fluctuations year to year. On paper this can appear inconsistent, even when the underlying business is strong.

Construction adds further complexity. Progress payments, valuation sensitivity and potential cost variations can amplify lender caution, meaning deals are often declined despite solid borrower fundamentals.

At the same time, Australia’s small business sector continues to grow. These borrowers are confident, asset-focused and often looking to build their next home or investment property rather than transact in a tight resale market. The demand is there, but it requires a different approach to assessment.

Why Alt Doc construction matters

Alt Doc construction lending is no longer niche; it’s becoming an important strategy for brokers working with self-employed clients.

Traditional full-doc construction policies often aren’t designed for the way business owners earn income today. Flexible verification methods such as accountant declarations and alternative income assessments can provide a clearer picture of a borrower’s financial position.

At Brighten, this flexibility is integrated into our Brighten Easy Builder® construction product. Easy Builder® allows brokers to combine Alt Doc income verification with a streamlined construction process, including progress payments aligned to standard building stages and interest-only repayments during the build period to support borrower cash flow.

Importantly, complex income scenarios are assessed within a clear policy framework from the outset, giving brokers confidence that the structure agreed at application stage carries through to final drawdown.

The opportunity ahead

In construction lending, certainty is critical. Approvals that unravel at valuation or mid-build can create financial and reputational stress for brokers and borrowers alike.

When the fundamentals stack up, viable business activity, sensible LVRs and realistic build costs, flexibility can be applied responsibly.

Construction lending isn’t disappearing, it’s evolving. Brokers who understand where flexibility exists and how to structure Alt Doc construction deals will be well placed to capture the opportunity.

When done well, flexible lending solutions help turn complex scenarios into concrete outcomes.