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Your fridge dies on a Tuesday. Rent is due Friday. You’re on JobSeeker, and every dollar is already spoken for.
If you’re on Centrelink, start with the cheapest help first: an interest-free advance, an Urgent Payment, or a no-interest community loan. For those who have already worked through government options and still need support, Centrelink Loans from a licensed lender like City Finance offer a regulated commercial option with clear eligibility checks and disclosed repayment terms.
Figures below reflect rules and rates available in May 2026, but they can change, so confirm details before you apply.
Key Takeaways
Start with interest-free help, move to community finance next, and treat commercial credit as the last option.
- Advance Payment: An interest-free advance on certain Centrelink payments, usually repaid over 13 fortnights. Apply in myGov or the app.
- Urgent Payment: Early access to part of your next payment, usually up to about $200, for immediate hardship. It is not extra money.
- Crisis Payment: A one-off, non-repayable payment for extreme circumstances, such as family and domestic violence or release from custody.
- No Interest Loans (NILS): Up to $2,000 for essentials and up to $3,000 for rental bond or disaster recovery, with zero fees and zero interest.
- Home Equity Access Scheme (HEAS): A government loan for older Australians with property, at 3.95% a year, compounding fortnightly. Try free options first.
- Avoid Payday Credit: Fees can reach 20% upfront and 4% a month, so call the National Debt Helpline first.
What Counts as a Centrelink Loan?
A Centrelink loan is usually a marketing label, not a personal loan from Services Australia.
Centrelink does not offer standard personal loans. The term usually covers government advances, community finance, and private lenders that target benefit recipients.
Those options carry different costs, rules, and consumer protections, so the order you apply in matters.
What to Apply for, in Order
Apply for money that is free or already attached to your payment before you look at outside credit.
- Advance Payment or Urgent Payment: Check eligibility in myGov, and confirm top-ups such as Rent Assistance with the Payment and Service Finder.
- No Interest Loans (NILS): If the need is an essential item, repair, or rental bond, apply through an accredited provider. The supplier is usually paid directly.
- Crisis Payment: Claim quickly after the event, because strict time limits apply.
- Home Equity Access Scheme (HEAS): If you’re an older homeowner, assess HEAS for a modest top-up and speak with the Financial Information Service first.
- Commercial Personal Loans: Consider these only if a gap remains, and compare the total cost before you sign.
Interest-Free Government Options
Advance, Urgent, and Crisis Payments cost less than private credit, but they solve different problems.
Advance Payment
An Advance Payment is an interest-free loan against future Centrelink payments. Eligible payments include Age Pension, Disability Support Pension, Carer Payment, JobSeeker, Youth Allowance, and others, but rules vary.
Apply in myGov or the Express Plus Centrelink app. Repayment usually runs over 13 fortnights, so check that the lower future payment will still cover rent, food, and power.
Urgent Payment
An Urgent Payment releases part of your next entitlement early, usually up to about $200. It can arrive faster, but your next fortnight is lower, so use it for a real short-term gap.
Crisis Payment
Crisis Payment is a one-off payment for extreme circumstances, such as family and domestic violence, release from custody, or humanitarian arrival. You do not repay it, but you must claim within the required time window.
Community Finance: No Interest Loans (NILS)
NILS is usually the best fit when you need an essential item and an Advance Payment will not cover it.
No Interest Loans, or NILS, offers up to $2,000 for essentials such as appliances, car repairs, or dental work. It can also provide up to $3,000 for rental bond or disaster recovery. There is zero interest and zero fees.
Funds usually go straight to the supplier, which helps keep the loan tied to the need. Bring quotes or invoices, photo ID, and 90 days of bank statements to speed up approval.
Home Equity Access Scheme for Older Homeowners
HEAS can lift income for older homeowners, but it is a real loan secured against property.
The Home Equity Access Scheme lets eligible older Australians use real estate as security. It can top up income to 150% of the pension rate or provide a modest lump sum.
The current rate is 3.95% a year, compounding fortnightly on the balance. That means the debt grows over time.
Think about how much equity you want to keep, then speak with Services Australia’s Financial Information Service. It is free and can help you test the trade-offs.
Commercial Personal Loans (Last Resort)
If you still need credit after free options, compare total cost, not just the advertised repayment.
Use the Moneysmart calculator and check the comparison rate, which combines interest and standard fees into one yearly rate. That makes cheap-looking ads easier to test.
Payday loans are especially costly. They can charge an establishment fee of up to 20% of the amount borrowed and a monthly fee of up to 4%. Repayments must stay within the legal cap of 10% of your after-tax income.
Walk away if a lender pressures you to share your myGov login, charges an upfront broker fee, or promises guaranteed approval. If you need help fast, call the National Debt Helpline before you sign.
Protect Your Cash Flow After Approval
The safest loan is one you can repay without missing rent, food, or utility bills.
Align direct debits with your payment day, or use Centrepay, a free bill-paying service for Centrelink customers. If cash flow tightens, change Advance Payment deductions online before you fall behind.
You may also be able to cut bills instead of borrowing again. Energy retailers must offer hardship programs and payment plans. Telcos must provide realistic help under the Australian Communications and Media Authority, or ACMA, Financial Hardship Industry Standard.
If debt is starting to stack up, a free financial counsellor can negotiate with creditors and help you sort priorities. Call the National Debt Helpline on 1800 007 007.