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For business owners thinking about future funding, the message is particularly important. Lenders generally want a clear view of who owns the business, where revenue is earned, how assets are held and whether tax obligations are being managed cleanly. A structure that was convenient in the first months of trading may later create complications for loan assessment, security arrangements, cash flow forecasting or due diligence.
The timing also matters because the new financial year has increased the pressure on business administration. From 1 July 2026, Payday Super requires employers to pay superannuation closer to each pay cycle, removing the quarterly buffer many SMEs previously used for working capital. At the same time, the closure of the Small Business Superannuation Clearing House means affected employers need alternative payment processes. Separately, ATO interest charges incurred from 1 July 2025 are no longer deductible, making late tax debts more expensive to carry.
These changes do not mean every SME needs a complex structure. In fact, over-engineering can create unnecessary costs. The practical takeaway is that structure should match the owner’s likely path: steady local trading, growth through additional sites, asset purchases, investor funding, succession or eventual sale. The right setup can support cleaner records, stronger asset protection and a smoother finance application; the wrong one can create delays at precisely the moment a business needs speed.
SMEs planning to apply for business finance options should review whether their structure, tax records and banking data tell a consistent story. Lenders may look more favourably on businesses that can demonstrate disciplined cash flow management, clear separation between personal and business expenses, and a realistic plan for meeting payroll, super and tax obligations.
The best next step is usually a joint conversation between an accountant and a finance specialist before the business urgently needs capital. That gives owners time to fix documentation gaps, understand borrowing capacity and avoid restructuring under pressure. For many growing SMEs, structure is no longer just a tax question; it is part of being finance-ready.
Published:Saturday, 4th Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori
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