Direct answer
Banjo Loans Business Loans Profile
Banjo Loans Business Loans Profile is profiled as an Australian business finance option. It may be relevant when its product type, amount range, documents, repayment rhythm and security settings match the business need. It may not suit businesses that need a different product structure, cannot evidence repayment capacity, or need terms the lender does not currently offer.
Key facts
Overview
Banjo Loans is a non-bank SME lender in Australia. Products: Business Loan Excel, Business Loan Express, Business Loan Flexi, Business Loan Bridge, Asset Finance Excel, Asset Finance Express. Whether it fits a business depends on the funding purpose, amount, timing, repayment source, revenue, security position, credit
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Product type
Rates shown are publicly advertised starting rates and ranges where available. Your actual rate depends on lender assessment, security, turnover, time in business, credit profile and loan structure. Updated 10 May 2026.
Decision guide
How this page is reviewed
Compare the main funding paths
Direct answer
Banjo Loans is a non-bank SME lender in Australia. Products: Business Loan Excel, Business Loan Express, Business Loan Flexi, Business Loan Bridge, Asset Finance Excel, Asset Finance Express. Whether it fits a business depends on the funding purpose, amount, timing, repayment source, revenue, security position, credit profile, documents and lender criteria.
Lender overview
This page places Banjo Loans in the wider lender market. A lender can look familiar and still be the wrong starting point if the product does not match the cash-flow problem.
Comparison One’s working rule is simple: compare the funding path before you compare the lender. A bigger job, an invoice gap, a vehicle purchase, tax timing, equipment replacement, fitout cost and seasonal stock run may each call for a different finance structure. The useful question is not only “Is Banjo Loans good?” The useful question is “Does Banjo Loans appear to offer a product that fits this business, this use of funds, this repayment source and this timing problem?”
Snapshot: key facts to check
Who is Banjo Loans?
Banjo Loans is relevant to Australian SME finance searches because it appears in the decision journey of owners comparing banks, online non-bank lenders, specialist finance providers and broker-led pathways. The business owner may already know the name from an ad, a broker panel, an accountant referral, a finance article, a comparison site or a previous application.
Start with the business problem rather than the lender name. A business may need funds because cash has to leave before the return comes back: materials before progress payments, stock before sales, equipment before increased capacity, vehicle cost before extra work, a BAS or tax obligation before the next cash cycle, or a larger job before the client pays. That is the cash-before-growth gap. Banjo Loans may be one possible route for some situations, but only if the product and criteria fit.
Third-party and industry sources commonly list Banjo as founded around 2014. Its official site states loans are provided by FundIT Ltd as trustee of the Banjo Small Business Loan Fund and positions Banjo around working capital and asset finance.
The useful framing is practical and calm. No lender is automatically best, and approval is never guaranteed. The decision should come back to facts, use cases, cost checks and warning signs.
What products does Banjo Loans appear to offer?
The product list matters because many business owners search a lender name before they understand the product type. A borrower may think “business loan” when the better fit could be a line of credit, invoice finance, trade finance, asset finance, overdraft, secured facility or a government/ATO pathway.
A business owner should not apply just because the lender offers “business finance”. The product should match the purpose. A one-off vehicle purchase, a repeat invoice-timing gap and a seasonal stock order have different repayment patterns. The wrong structure can make a good business feel tighter than it needs to.
Interest rates, pricing and fees
A clearer way to check pricing on this page is to separate official public rate information from personalised quote information and third party comparison snapshots.
Banjo’s official FAQ result for interest rates did not provide a simple rate figure in the snippet. Finder notes an origination fee and circumstance-based rates. Treat rates as personalised and quote-based unless official Banjo documents provide a current rate.
Check whether the lender publishes a current rate, a base-rate formula or personalised pricing. Rates can depend on the business profile, product type, security position and repayment structure. Third party rate snapshots should be verified before relying on them.
The borrower should check establishment fees, ongoing fees, early repayment terms, late/default costs, brokerage/referral costs if any, security/guarantee exposure and repayment frequency. A lower-looking rate can still be a poor fit if the repayment rhythm clashes with the business cash cycle. A faster approval can still be expensive if the business only needed a slower but cheaper secured facility.
Loan amounts and terms
Banjo’s Trustpilot company description states loans between $20,000 and $5 million and terms between 6 and 60 months. Finder describes an unsecured business loan from $20,000 to $2 million. Because ranges vary by product/source, use official Banjo product pages for current ranges.
Trustpilot company copy says 6 to 60 months. Finder says short loan terms from 6 months to 5 years. Verify current product page per solution.
Where multiple public pages or third party pages show different ranges, treat the ranges as product-specific and check the current lender page. This is especially important for lenders that offer both small unsecured loans and larger secured or specialist facilities. A product range is not an invitation to borrow the maximum. The amount should be framed around the actual business move.
Practical check:
Borrow the amount the move requires, not the amount the lender says may be available.
For many SMEs, the relevant question is often: “Can I fund the next move without draining my buffer?” That may mean $30,000 to $50,000 for stock, materials, a vehicle deposit, equipment, fitout or working capital. A larger maximum loan range should not distract from affordability.
Eligibility, credit profile and lender appetite
Official sources reviewed did not provide a single universal credit-score threshold. Some third party articles mention trading-history and turnover requirements, but use official criteria only if Banjo confirms them.
Business lenders generally look beyond the basic question of whether the owner wants money. They may consider ABN/ACN status, GST registration, trading history, recent revenue, bank statement conduct, arrears, ATO/tax position, existing debt, industry risk, security, director credit history, loan purpose and serviceability.
The phrase “credit rating” can mean different things. For a small business borrower it may refer to director credit history, business credit score, defaults, tax debt, bank conduct or lender-specific risk grade. Unless the lender publishes a credit-score threshold, do not invent one.
A lender may like your industry and still decline your file if cash-flow conduct, documentation or repayment capacity does not fit. Another lender may tolerate a different profile but price for that risk. That is why comparing lender fit matters before sending an application.
What kind of businesses may look at Banjo Loans?
Working-capital loans and asset finance for Australian SMEs, especially growth, seasonal cash-flow, bridging ahead of expected inflows, inventory and equipment/assets.
In practical terms, this lender may be researched by owners asking: Can this lender fund my kind of business? Does it offer unsecured, secured or specialist finance? Does it publish rates or will I need a quote? How fast is the process if I already have documents ready? Will it look at my business after a bank delay or decline? What will repayments do to next month’s cash buffer?
These questions should help the owner feel more prepared, not more pressured.
Possible fit scenarios
These are situations where the lender may fit.
Possible mismatch scenarios
Some lender paths are simply the wrong fit.
Review signals and trust checks
Trustpilot rating: 4.8/5 from 821 reviews.
Use review platforms carefully. Trustpilot, ProductReview.com.au and Google reviews can show useful service themes, but they are not credit assessment tools and may not be product-specific. A broad bank review score may reflect retail banking, cards, app support or branch service rather than business lending. A non-bank lender review score may reflect broker experiences, invited reviews, speed of process or customer-service interactions more than long-term loan suitability.
When using review platforms, check the score, review count and date checked. Read recent positive and negative reviews, and do not treat reviews as proof that the lender is right for the business.
Review scores can tell you something about service experience. They do not tell you whether the repayment structure fits your cash-flow cycle.
How Banjo Loans compares with other lender types
This comparison does not rank Banjo Loans against other lenders. The point is that lender category matters. If a business needs to fund a ute, equipment finance may fit better than a general loan. If a business has unpaid B2B invoices, invoice finance may be worth comparing. If a bank declined due to security or paperwork, a non-bank lender may be possible, but affordability still matters.
What to check before applying
Before applying directly, the business owner should answer these questions:
The final check is simple: would the business still have enough operating buffer after taking the finance? If the answer is no, the application may need to be paused, resized or redirected.
