Variations process: how to issue, price, and enforce scope changes
How to issue, price and enforce variations in Australian residential building contracts. HIA cl 18, MBA cl 14, QBCC rules, and what happens to unsigned variations.
Ask Chalkline about this →TL;DR
A variation is any change to the contracted scope, price, or timeline after signing. Get it in writing and signed before starting the work: under the Home Building Act 1989 (NSW) Schedule 2 cl 1(2) and equivalent state rules, an unsigned variation gives the owner a basis to refuse payment for the additional work (verified 2026-05-09). Under HIA cl 18 (NSW) and MBA BC4 cl 14, the owner has five working days to sign and return the builder’s offer; once that window closes, the offer lapses. Builder-initiated variations for unforeseen conditions follow the same written-and-signed rule. Skipping the paperwork puts you in quantum meruit territory at best, and that is a harder, longer, more expensive fight than a properly documented variation.
When you do this
A variation is needed whenever the scope, price, or programme changes after the contract is signed. Common triggers:
- Owner requests a change (different fittings, layout alteration, scope addition or omission)
- Unforeseen site conditions emerge (hidden services, unsuitable fill, latent conditions)
- A building surveyor or other statutory authority directs a change in the works
- Design changes required to meet regulatory compliance (NCC update, council condition)
- PC sum or PS item resolves at a value different from the allowance in the contract
Do not start any variation work until you have the signed document back. The one exception is urgent work required to prevent injury, damage to property, or legal non-compliance, where it is not reasonably practicable to obtain prior written agreement. In that case, produce and serve the written variation document as soon as practicable after the work.
Who’s involved
| Party | Role |
|---|---|
| Builder | Identifies the variation trigger, prepares the written variation offer, tracks the acceptance window |
| Owner | Reviews the builder’s offer, signs and returns within the acceptance window, or negotiates scope/price |
| Owner’s agent | May act on the owner’s behalf if authorised in writing |
| Building surveyor | May direct variations via a written statutory direction; that direction forms the trigger |
| Contracts manager / administrator | Drafts, logs, and manages the variation register across the project |
Steps
1. Identify and document the trigger
As soon as you become aware of a variation trigger, note it in writing. Record the date, the nature of the change, the instruction or event that triggered it, and any supporting evidence (photos, council notice, geotechnical report, design instruction).
Do not start the additional work at this point.
2. Prepare the written variation offer
Under HIA NSW cl 18 and MBA BC4 cl 14, the builder’s offer must be in writing and include (verified 2026-05-09):
- A clear description of the work to be added, omitted, or changed
- The price for the variation: itemised where reasonably practicable (labour, materials, builder’s margin)
- Any adjustment to the contract price (increase or decrease)
- Any extension of time to the building period (see EOTs)
- The date of the offer
For HIA contracts, the builder must respond to an owner-requested variation “as soon as reasonably possible” (HIA cl 18.2). There is no fixed builder response deadline in the standard HIA residential contract, but unreasonable delay weakens your position in any dispute.
For MBA BC4 compliance-related variations (cl 12), the owner must provide written instructions within five days of receiving the builder’s notice, or the builder may suspend the relevant work (verified 2026-05-09, MBA ACT guidance).
Include any supporting documentation: revised plans, specifications, subcontractor quotes, council directions.
3. Serve the offer and track the acceptance window
Serve the written variation offer on the owner by an approved method (in person, post, or email where the contract permits).
The owner acceptance window is:
| Contract | Acceptance window |
|---|---|
| HIA NSW cl 18.4 | 5 working days from receipt of the builder’s offer |
| MBA BC4 | 5 working days for compliance-related variations; refer to contract for others |
| QBCC (QLD) | Before variation work starts OR within 5 business days from agreement, whichever is earlier |
If the owner does not sign and return within the HIA cl 18.4 window, the offer lapses. You will need to reissue if you still want to proceed with the variation.
4. Obtain signed acceptance before starting
When the signed variation document is returned, counter-sign it and provide the owner a copy of the fully executed variation. Keep the signed original on file.
The Home Building Act 1989 (NSW) Schedule 2 cl 1(2) requires that any agreement to vary the contract or plans and specifications must be in writing and signed by or on behalf of each party (verified 2026-05-09). The same obligation is embedded in HIA cl 18.1 and MBA BC4 cl 14.
Only now do you start the variation work.
5. Add to the variation register
Record the executed variation in your project variation register:
| Field | What to record |
|---|---|
| Variation number | Sequential, project-specific (V001, V002, etc.) |
| Date of offer | |
| Date of acceptance | |
| Scope description | |
| Price impact | Ex-GST increase / decrease |
| Time impact | Days added to programme |
| Running contract sum | Updated total |
| EOT status | Claimed, granted, pending |
A variation register is your first line of defence in any payment dispute and in any Security of Payment adjudication (see below).
6. Claim payment at the next progress claim
Agreed variations are part of the contract sum. Include them in the next progress claim alongside the base contract works. Label each variation by number and amount.
Under the Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act 1999 (NSW), a builder’s entitlement to a progress payment includes the value of construction work carried out, which encompasses agreed variations (verified 2026-05-09). If the owner disputes a variation in the payment schedule, the claim proceeds to adjudication.
Documents needed
| Document | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Signed variation form | The core legal instrument: scope, price, time, both signatures |
| Supporting evidence | Photos, test reports, council direction, subcontractor quotes |
| Revised plans / specs | Where the variation changes the design |
| Variation register | Running log of all variations, impacts, and status |
| Payment claim | Includes all approved variations at the next claim milestone |
QBCC recommends Form 4 or Form 5 variation forms for Queensland domestic building contracts (verified 2026-05-09, QBCC).
Common holds
Owner refuses to sign. Do not start work. Explain the legal requirement: the Home Building Act (NSW) and equivalent state legislation require written signed agreement. If the owner verbally directs the work but refuses to sign, serve a written notice that you cannot proceed without written authorisation.
Owner claims verbal approval is enough. It is not enforceable in NSW and most states. Verbal agreements lack legal standing under the Home Building Act framework (verified 2026-05-09, NSW Government guidance).
Dispute over price. The contract typically specifies a valuation method (contract rates, reasonable cost plus margin). If no rate applies, use fair market value with a documented cost breakdown. For compliance variations under MBA BC4 cl 12, costs are assessed using contract rates or reasonable expenses plus overheads and profit.
Urgent works situation. Carry out the minimum necessary work, then issue the written variation document as soon as practicable. Document the urgency reason clearly: this is your defence if challenged.
Unforeseen site conditions. Under HIA contracts, builder-initiated variations for conditions “that could not reasonably have been foreseen by the builder at the time the contract was entered into” are permitted grounds for a variation. Serve the written notice promptly; waiting until the work is complete substantially weakens any claim.
Owner acceptance window lapses. The offer is withdrawn. Reissue a fresh offer. Do not start the work on the basis of a lapsed offer.
Try it
A Variation Letter Generator is planned for this article. When it ships, you will be able to generate a compliant variation notice directly from this page: scope, price, time extension, signatures, all formatted to HIA and MBA standards.
State notes
The core written-and-signed requirement applies in all Australian states. NSW, QLD, and WA have specific statutory frameworks that prescribe additional mechanics. SA and VIC follow similar written variation principles under their domestic building legislation.
NSW
The Home Building Act 1989 (NSW) Schedule 2 cl 1(2) is a mandatory contract term for all residential building contracts over $20,000 (verified 2026-05-09). It requires any agreement to vary the contract or plans and specifications to be in writing and signed by or on behalf of each party. For contracts over $20,000, the written-and-signed requirement applies regardless of the variation value (verified 2026-05-09, NSW Government).
Consequence of non-compliance: the variation may be unenforceable as a contract claim. The builder’s only remedy is quantum meruit, which requires proving five elements (established in Goodacre v Trinder Alpine Constructions [2013] NSWCCT 124): the work exceeded contract scope, the owner knew of it, understood it was outside scope, knew payment was expected, and the builder can evidence fair market value (verified 2026-05-09, BSM Law). A quantum meruit claim cannot be made under the Security of Payment Act 1999 (NSW).
Disputes can be referred to NCAT.
Queensland
QBCC Act Schedule 1B s 40-41 requires the contractor to provide the homeowner with a written copy of the agreed variation before the earlier of: variation work starting, or 5 business days from agreement (verified 2026-05-09, QBCC). The variation document must be readily legible, dated, describe the variation, state the price impact or calculation method, and note any delay estimate.
Critically, you cannot require payment for a variation before the variation work is started (QBCC Act Schedule 1B s 41).
QBCC-recommended forms: Form 4 or Form 5 depending on contract type.
Victoria
Victoria uses the Domestic Building Contracts Act 1995 (VIC) and associated regulations. Written variation requirements apply. Disputes go to the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT) or the Building Commission Victoria.
Western Australia
The Home Building Contracts Act 1991 (WA) applies to residential work between $7,500 and $500,000. Written variation requirements apply under that Act. Disputes go to SAT (State Administrative Tribunal) or through the court system.
South Australia
The Building Work Contractors Act 1995 (SA) governs residential building contracts in SA. Written variation requirements apply. Disputes are handled by SACAT (South Australian Civil and Administrative Tribunal). For current threshold details, check Consumer and Business Services SA.
What can go wrong
- Starting work on a verbal okay. One of the most common causes of building disputes in Australia. The owner disputes the price, signs off on reduced payment, and the builder has no signed document to support the claim.
- Vague scope description in the variation form. “Extra works to bathroom” is not a scope description. A dispute over what was actually agreed is almost guaranteed when there is no itemised description.
- Missing extension of time from the variation. If the variation adds time to the programme but no EOT is requested with the variation, the builder may be exposed to liquidated damages for the period the variation added. Always address time impact at the time of the variation.
- Not keeping a variation register. Without a register, you cannot quickly reconcile the running contract sum, prove EOT entitlements, or prepare a coherent payment claim.
- Unsigned variation, then dispute during progress claim. Under the Security of Payment Act (NSW), an owner can dispute a progress claim that includes unsigned variations in the payment schedule. The claim goes to adjudication, and without the signed variation, the builder’s contractual entitlement is at risk.
- Issuing the variation after the work is done. Retrospective variations are harder to enforce. The owner did not have the opportunity to refuse before the work was carried out.
References
- Home Building Act 1989 (NSW), Schedule 2 clause 1(2) (verified 2026-05-09)
- Contracts for residential building work (NSW Government, verified 2026-05-09)
- Contract changes and variations (QBCC Queensland, verified 2026-05-09)
- QBCC Act Schedule 1B s 40-41 (verified 2026-05-09)
- Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act 1999 (NSW) (verified 2026-05-09)
- Home Building contract variations and quantum meruit (BSM Law, verified 2026-05-09)
- Claiming variations: you must comply with the procedure (Master Builders ACT, verified 2026-05-09)
- Understanding variations in HIA NSW building contracts (Contracts Specialist, verified 2026-05-09)
Related
- Extensions of Time (EOTs)
- Reading a building contract
- Retentions clause
- Variation (glossary)
- Scope of works
- Liquidated damages
- EOT (glossary)
- HIA contracts overview
See also
- MBA contracts overview
- ABIC contracts overview
- Adjudication
- Practical completion
- RFI
- PC sum
- HIA fixed price contracts
- HIA cost-plus contracts
- Defects liability period
Last updated: 2026-05-09. Verified: 2026-05-09. Quarterly review for currency.