
Every great band knows that not all sound is music. Crank the wrong amp setting and you get ear-splitting feedback instead of a killer riff. Business debt works exactly the same way - not all of it is noise, and not all of it is melody. The trick is knowing which is which before it blows your speakers.
For creative professionals and small business owners in Penrith and across Greater Sydney, navigating business debt can feel genuinely overwhelming. The language is dense, the stakes are high, and most accountants make it sound about as exciting as watching paint dry. But understanding the difference between good debt and bad debt in a business context isn't just financial housekeeping - it can be the difference between a thriving, scalable enterprise and one drowning in obligations.
Here's the real talk: according to the Small Business Debt Helpline (SBDH), more than 6,200 Australian small businesses sought debt assistance in 2024–25 - a 21% jump from the prior year. With record business insolvencies of 3,393 in Q1 2025 alone - a 28% year-on-year increase - the cost of getting your debt strategy wrong has never been higher. So let's tune this properly and break it all down.
At its core, the distinction between good debt and bad debt in a business context comes down to one critical question: does this borrowing generate a return that exceeds its cost?
Good debt is money borrowed with a clear, strategic purpose - to purchase income-producing equipment, fund business expansion, acquire property that appreciates, or invest in technology that improves productivity. The hallmark of good debt is that the return on investment (ROI) from the borrowed funds outweighs the total cost of the borrowing, including interest and fees. Repayment terms are fixed and manageable, and the borrowing is tied directly to a specific business outcome.
Bad debt, by contrast, is borrowing that either doesn't generate future value or imposes interest costs that erode the business's financial health. This includes high-interest credit card debt, merchant cash advances (MCAs) - which can carry effective annual percentage rates exceeding 100% - payday loans, and loans taken out simply to cover day-to-day operating expenses.
| Feature | Good Debt | Bad Debt |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Income-producing assets, growth investment | Operating expenses, consumables, depreciating assets |
| Interest Rate | Generally lower, reflecting lower risk | High, often excessive (MCAs can exceed 100% APR) |
| ROI | Returns exceed borrowing costs | No return, or returns below cost of borrowing |
| Repayment Terms | Fixed, manageable, aligned with cash flow | Short, variable, or unsustainable |
| Business Strategy | Proactive, planned borrowing | Reactive, crisis-driven borrowing |
| Tax Treatment | Interest typically tax-deductible (if income-producing) | May not be deductible, especially where personal use is involved |
Understanding good debt vs. bad debt in a business context isn't just about the type of borrowing - it's about how much debt you're carrying relative to your business's financial position. That's where leverage ratios become indispensable.
This is the ratio of your total debt to your shareholders' equity:
Debt-to-Equity Ratio = Total Debt ÷ Shareholders' Equity
A D/E ratio below 1.0 is generally considered healthy for most businesses, meaning creditors and equity holders have a roughly equal claim on assets. Capital-intensive industries like utilities or infrastructure can sustain ratios of 3–5x, while asset-light businesses such as creative studios or professional services firms typically operate between 0.3–1.0x.
This ratio measures how many years of operating earnings it would take to repay your total debt:
Debt-to-EBITDA = Total Debt ÷ EBITDA
A ratio between 1.5x and 3.5x is considered investment-grade for stable businesses. Above 5.0x signals a highly stressed financial position that warrants urgent attention.
Debt-to-Assets = Total Debt ÷ Total Assets
A ratio above 0.5 indicates your business is financed more by debt than by equity - not necessarily a crisis in isolation, but a signal that warrants close monitoring.
Tracking these ratios regularly - at minimum monthly, and ideally weekly - gives you an honest, real-time read on whether your debt load is amplifying growth or creating distortion you never asked for.
One of the most compelling arguments for strategic debt use in an Australian business context is the tax deductibility of interest. Under Section 8-1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997, interest on business loans used for income-producing purposes is generally tax-deductible. In plain terms: if you borrow funds to generate assessable business income, the interest you pay on that borrowing reduces your taxable income.
For example, a 5% interest rate on a business loan, with a corporate tax rate of 25%, results in an effective after-tax cost of just 3.75% - calculated as 5% × (1 − 0.25). That's a meaningful cost advantage that makes well-structured debt genuinely attractive as a financing tool.
What is generally deductible:
What is generally not deductible:
From 1 July 2025, the ATO's General Interest Charge (GIC) and Shortfall Interest Charge (SIC) are no longer tax-deductible. This materially increases the real cost of carrying ATO debt and is a significant shift for any business with outstanding tax obligations. For businesses in this position, refinancing that ATO debt through a commercial lender - where interest on qualifying loans may remain deductible - is worth discussing with a qualified adviser.
This article provides general information only and does not constitute financial or tax advice. Always consult a registered tax professional regarding your specific circumstances.
The numbers paint a confronting picture for Australian small businesses heading into 2026.
The SBDH assisted with over $429 million in ATO debts in 2024–25, with a median ATO debt of $70,000 per business. ATO debt represented 64% of all cases - up from 61% the prior year. Critically, 28% of businesses seeking assistance had been operating for more than a decade, demonstrating clearly that debt stress isn't exclusively a problem for inexperienced or newly established operators.
Approximately 30,320 entities carry active ATO defaults, with total outstanding defaults of $9.48 billion - an average of $410,000 per default. The construction sector led ATO default registrations in Q1 2025 at 22%, followed by financial services at 14%, and accommodation and food services at 9%.
Perhaps most concerning is the awareness gap: 38% of Australian SMEs acknowledge needing financial or business debt advice, yet only 32% are aware of debt restructuring solutions, and just 27% are aware of alternative or private lending options. Many businesses are carrying the weight of problem debt without knowing what instruments are available to address it.
The distinction between good debt and bad debt in a business context only matters if business owners know enough to act on it.
Recognising the early indicators of debt stress is just as important as understanding the theory. Australian courts recognise up to 14 indicators of insolvency - and you don't need to tick all 14 boxes to be in serious trouble.
If several of these indicators are present simultaneously, the debt situation warrants urgent professional attention. Early action is nearly always more effective - and far less costly - than waiting until a crisis forces the issue.
Financing a business is a bit like choosing your instrument - debt and equity each have their own tone, range, and ideal context.
| Factor | Debt Financing | Equity Financing |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Generally lower due to tax-deductible interest | Generally higher - investors expect stronger returns |
| Ownership | No dilution of control | Ownership and control are diluted |
| Obligation | Fixed repayment regardless of business performance | No fixed payment obligation |
| Financial Risk | Increases with leverage | Reduces overall financial risk |
| Tax Treatment | Interest is generally deductible | Dividends are not tax-deductible |
| Flexibility | Can restrict future borrowing capacity | Increases financial flexibility |
The optimal capital structure - the right mix of debt and equity - is the point at which the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) is minimised:
WACC = (E/V × Re) + (D/V × Rd × (1 − T))
Where E is the market value of equity, D is the market value of debt, V is total capital (E + D), Re is the cost of equity, Rd is the pre-tax cost of debt, and T is the corporate tax rate.
Because interest on debt is tax-deductible (unlike equity returns), debt is typically the cheaper capital source - up to a point. Beyond the optimal leverage level, increased financial distress risk causes both lenders and equity investors to demand higher returns, ultimately pushing WACC upward rather than down. It's a delicate mix, and getting the balance right is where genuine financial expertise earns its keep.
Understanding good debt vs. bad debt in a business context isn't a one-time exercise - it's an ongoing discipline. The businesses that navigate debt most successfully tend to share a few defining habits: they maintain meticulous financial records, monitor leverage ratios at minimum monthly, approach borrowing strategically rather than reactively, and communicate proactively with lenders and advisers before problems escalate.
Before taking on any business debt, the most grounded question you can ask is: will the return this borrowing enables genuinely exceed its total cost? If the answer is a confident yes - backed by your numbers, not just optimism - you're likely looking at good debt. If the honest answer is uncertain, or if you're borrowing to plug a cash flow gap rather than create value, that deserves a harder look before you sign anything.
For creative professionals and business owners across Penrith and Greater Sydney, getting this distinction right isn't abstract financial theory. It's the foundation on which sustainable, profitable businesses are built - one strategic, well-considered note at a time.
Good debt generates a return that exceeds its cost – for example, a business loan used to purchase income-producing equipment or fund revenue-generating expansion. Bad debt, on the other hand, is borrowing that carries high interest costs or is used for purposes that do not generate measurable business value, such as covering operating expenses without a clear return.
Generally yes. Under Section 8-1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997, interest on loans used for income-producing business purposes is deductible. However, from 1 July 2025, certain charges like the ATO's General Interest Charge (GIC) and Shortfall Interest Charge (SIC) will no longer be tax-deductible. Always consult a tax professional for advice on your specific situation.
A Debt-to-Equity ratio below 1.0 is typically considered healthy for most small businesses. Additionally, a Debt-to-EBITDA ratio between 1.5x and 3.5x is generally viewed as investment-grade, although these benchmarks can vary by industry.
Early warning signs include consistent cash flow shortages, reliance on short-term borrowing to cover operating expenses, overdue tax obligations, suppliers shifting to cash-on-delivery terms, inability to secure new credit, and poor or incomplete financial records. Recognizing several of these indicators should prompt seeking professional advice immediately.
Debt relief options include entering the Small Business Restructure (SBR) process, negotiating directly with creditors, refinancing existing debt, asset refinancing, and sale-and-leaseback arrangements. However, awareness of such options remains low, so consulting with a financial adviser or the Small Business Debt Helpline (SBDH) can be a good starting point.
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