Why Use a Finance Broker?

When looking for car finance, you have two main options: go direct to a lender (bank, credit union, online lender) or use a finance broker. As brokers ourselves, we think it's important to give you the honest truth about both options.

What Does a Finance Broker Do?

A finance broker acts as a middleman between you and multiple lenders. Instead of you applying to several banks, the broker:

  1. Assesses your situation
  2. Searches their panel of lenders for suitable options
  3. Recommends the best match for your needs
  4. Handles the application process
  5. Manages communication until settlement

Brokers are paid a commission by the lender when your loan settles — you typically don't pay them directly.

Advantages of Using a Broker

1. Access to Multiple Lenders

A good broker works with 20-40+ lenders. One application gives you access to all of them, rather than applying to each individually.

2. Time Savings

Comparing loans yourself takes hours. A broker does the legwork and presents you with options — often within hours.

3. Expert Knowledge

Brokers know which lenders suit different situations:

4. Better Chance of Approval

Brokers know each lender's criteria. They won't send your application somewhere likely to decline — saving your credit file from unnecessary hits.

5. Negotiating Power

Good brokers can sometimes negotiate better rates, especially for strong applicants.

6. Free to You

The lender pays the broker, not you. You get a professional service at no direct cost.

Disadvantages of Using a Broker

1. Not All Lenders

Brokers only work with their panel. Some lenders (including some banks) don't use brokers at all. You might miss a better deal elsewhere.

2. Potential Conflicts

Brokers earn commission from lenders. A dishonest broker might recommend a loan that pays them more, not the one that's best for you.

How to protect yourself: Ask about multiple options, not just one recommendation. A good broker will explain why they're suggesting each option.

3. Variable Quality

Like any industry, there are excellent brokers and terrible ones. Doing some research (reviews, recommendations) helps find the good ones.

4. Less Direct Control

You're relying on someone else to handle your application. If they drop the ball, it affects you.

Advantages of Going Direct

1. Existing Relationship

If you've banked with someone for years, they know your history. This can sometimes help with approvals or rates.

2. All Lenders Available

You can approach any lender, including those that don't work with brokers.

3. Direct Communication

No middleman means direct access to the decision-maker (though in practice, you often deal with call centres anyway).

4. Potential Package Deals

Some banks offer better rates if you bundle products (home loan + car loan, for example).

Disadvantages of Going Direct

1. Limited to One Lender

Each application shows on your credit file. Applying to several lenders to compare can actually hurt your credit score.

2. Time-Consuming

You need to research, compare, and apply separately to each option.

3. No Expert Guidance

Bank staff are trained to sell their products, not to tell you if a competitor is better for your situation.

4. May Not Get the Best Rate

Without comparing, you don't know if you're getting a good deal or not.

Comparing the Options

Factor Finance Broker Going Direct
Lender Choice Multiple options (panel) One lender at a time
Time Required Lower (broker does work) Higher (you do research)
Expert Advice Yes Limited (sales-focused)
Credit File Impact One enquiry (usually) One per application
Cost to You Free (lender pays) Free
Best For Most borrowers Loyal customers, simple situations

When to Go Direct

Going direct might make sense if:

When to Use a Broker

A broker is probably better if:

THE VERDICT (HONEST VERSION)

For most people, a good broker will get you a competitive rate with less hassle. The key word is "good" — choose one with solid reviews, who explains your options clearly, and doesn't pressure you. That said, if you have a great relationship with your bank and they're offering a competitive deal, there's nothing wrong with going direct.

The Bottom Line

There's no universal right answer. The best approach is often to check with a broker AND your own bank, then compare. Just be upfront — a good broker won't mind you doing your homework.

Want to see what we can offer? Get a free quote — no obligation, and we'll show you multiple options so you can decide what's best for you.

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