Page last updated: 04 October 2018

Peer-to-peer lending

Peer-to-peer lending providers match people who want loans with people who might be willing to fund those loans. You may be offered a high interest rate, but this is because you take more risk.

When you invest via peer-to-peer lending, you're earning interest by loaning your money directly to an individual, small business, community group or charity.

Borrowers list their request on a provider’s website, and investors browse the website to decide which loans to invest in.

Lenders may be able to lend the full loan requested or just a portion of it. The provider may also group up similar loan requests so the lender has the opportunity to invest in a variety of loans at one time.

Borrowers have to follow certain rules such as being honest about the information they provide about how they will use the money and their ability to pay it back. They can borrow a maximum of $2 million in any 12 month period, although some services may only allow smaller loans.

Peer to peer lending

Understanding the risks

The borrower(s) may be unable to repay you, so you could lose your money or not get the interest you've been promised.

Some providers offer ways to reduce this risk - such as spreading your loans across more borrowers or guaranteeing the repayments themselves. But this doesn't eliminate the risk.

Even where the repayment is guaranteed you will only receive repayments if the person or service providing the guarantee has enough money to pay.

Unlike some other investments, you may not be able to sell the loan or withdraw your cash whenever you want. If you're lending money you need to make sure you can afford to have your money tied up for the period of the loan. The general risks involved in investing also apply.

Things to look out for

Some providers provide more administrative support than others.

Make sure you read the description of the service carefully. Administration can include arranging for the money to go from you to the borrower(s), dealing with repayments and interest payments, and chasing any defaults.

You need to do your own checks

We don't check the financial health of borrowers or any information you get from the lending service, so it's important you ask the service about the level of checking they have done.

If you want to re-invest you may have to wait

At a bank, you can often roll over your term deposit as soon as it falls due, but with peer-to-peer lending, you may need to wait until there are peers who want to borrow it. You may miss out on some interest while you're waiting.

How to reduce risk

  • Make sure the peer-to-peer lending provider has been licensed by us. 
  • Check our peer-to-peer lending report – to find out how many loans are in arrears or have been written off in the last year – and read the information given to you by your peer-to-peer service provider to assess the risk of non-payment.