Building compliance sounds straightforward until you’re standing in front of an inspector who’s telling you the extension you just finished doesn’t meet code. Then it stops sounding straightforward pretty fast.
Most people find out about compliance the hard way. They start a renovation, get partway through, and only then discover that the work needs a permit, or that the permit they got doesn’t cover half of what’s being built. If you’ve ever been in that spot, you know it isn’t just annoying. It can cost real money and hold up a project for months.
What “Compliance” Actually Means in a Building Context
Compliance, in plain terms, is proof that a building or a piece of work meets the rules. Those rules come from a few different places: the National Construction Code, state-level acts and regulations, and sometimes local council overlays. In Victoria, for example, the Building Act 1993 and the Building Regulations 2018 are the two documents that keep coming up.
The tricky part is that these rules aren’t just about the structure standing up. They cover fire safety, accessibility, energy efficiency, ventilation, plumbing, glazing, and a long list of other things. A house can be perfectly stable and still fail compliance because the smoke alarms are wired wrong or the balustrade is a few centimetres too low.
There are basically three moments when compliance shows up:
- Before construction, when you’re getting permits and approvals sorted
- During construction, at inspection stages
- After construction, if there’s a dispute, a sale, or an audit on an existing building
Each stage has its own paperwork, its own inspections, and its own ways of going sideways.
The Permit Stage
Almost all building work needs a permit. There are a few exemptions in the regulations, mostly for very minor jobs, but the default is that you need one. Skipping this step is where a lot of DIY renovators come undone.
A building permit isn’t the same as a planning permit. Planning is about whether you’re allowed to do the work at that address at all. Building permits are about whether the design meets the code. You often need both, and they run on separate tracks.
The permit application itself needs drawings, specifications, sometimes engineering reports, and a bunch of other supporting documents. If any of it’s missing or wrong, the whole thing gets kicked back. A building surveyor reviews everything, and only after they’re satisfied does the permit get issued.
Inspections Along the Way
Once work starts, inspections happen at fixed stages. The exact list depends on what you’re building, but typical checkpoints include pre-slab, frame, and final. If any stage fails, work stops until it’s fixed.
This is where people sometimes try to shortcut things. They’ll cover up frame work before inspection because they’re behind schedule, or they’ll push ahead without booking the next stage. It always catches up to them. An inspector who can’t see the frame can’t sign it off, and if they can’t sign it off, the project can’t get its occupancy permit at the end.
What Happens When Something Goes Wrong
If a build has issues, there are options, but none of them are cheap. A building surveyor can sometimes certify work retrospectively if it can be shown to meet the code, though this usually involves opening up finished areas to inspect what’s underneath. In other cases, a Building Notice or a Building Order gets issued by the council, and the owner has to respond within a set timeframe.
Working with someone who understands the regulatory pathway matters a lot at this stage. Something like the compliance services by Conti Group can be the difference between a manageable fix and a demolition order, because the response has to be written properly and backed by the right documentation.
Compliance for Existing Buildings
Not all compliance work is about new construction. Existing buildings need to stay compliant too, especially commercial and multi-occupancy properties.
A few common triggers for compliance work on existing buildings:
- Buying or selling a property and wanting a due diligence report
- Renewing an Essential Safety Measures schedule
- Changing the use of a building (turning a warehouse into a gym, say)
- Responding to a council notice about unauthorised works
- Insurance claims where the insurer wants proof of code compliance
Each of these needs someone who can assess the building against current regulations, write it up properly, and often deal with the council or an insurer on the owner’s behalf.
Where People Waste the Most Money
Talking to anyone who’s worked in building surveying for a while, the same patterns come up.
The biggest one is starting work without the paperwork. It feels faster at the time. It never is. The rework, the fines, and the delay usually add up to more than the permit would have cost, sometimes by a lot.
Second is treating the building surveyor as a rubber stamp instead of a technical adviser. A good surveyor will flag issues early, when they’re cheap to fix. Ignoring their advice or trying to work around it tends to end badly.
Third is assuming that because a builder is licensed, everything they do is automatically compliant. Licensing and compliance aren’t the same thing. Plenty of qualified builders miss regulatory details, especially on smaller jobs where they’re not used to the paperwork.
When to Bring in a Professional
Not every job needs a compliance consultant on speed dial. A straightforward extension with an experienced builder and a good surveyor might not need much extra input.
But there are situations where getting outside help early pays for itself:
- Any project with a change of use
- Anything involving fire safety systems or occupancy loads
- Older buildings where original documentation is missing
- Disputes with a council, a neighbour, or a certifier
- Insurance or legal matters where an independent expert is needed
In those cases, waiting until things are already wrong is the expensive way to do it.
The Short Version
Building compliance is one of those areas where the rules are stricter than most people think, the consequences of getting it wrong are bigger than most people expect, and the fix is usually simpler if it’s dealt with early. If you’re planning work, don’t leave the compliance question until the tradies are already on site. Ask it first, get the paperwork moving, and you’ll spend the rest of the project focused on actually building the thing instead of arguing with an inspector about what should have been signed off six weeks ago.

