Fitness and propriety (builder licensing)
Fitness and propriety is the test state licensing bodies (QBCC, NSW Fair Trading, VBA) apply to determine builder licence eligibility. Convictions, insolvency, breaches.
Ask Chalkline about this →Fitness and propriety (F&P) is the test applied by state building licensing bodies to determine whether a person is suitable to hold a builder’s licence. Each state regulator (QBCC in Qld, NSW Fair Trading in NSW, VBA in Vic, similar bodies in other states) applies the test at:
- Initial licence application (new builder).
- Licence renewal (typically annual).
- Licence restoration (after expiry or cancellation).
- Following an investigation (complaint, incident).
A finding of unfitness can refuse, suspend, or cancel the licence.
What the test considers:
| Factor | What the regulator looks at |
|---|---|
| Criminal convictions | Particularly fraud, dishonesty, violence; financial offences |
| Insolvency history | Personal bankruptcy, company liquidations, directorship of failed companies |
| Prior licence breaches | Suspensions, cancellations, conditions on previous licence |
| Disciplinary actions | From any building authority in any state |
| Outstanding judgments | Unpaid court orders, particularly building-related |
| Compliance history | Outstanding building work, defects orders, statutory directions |
| Tax compliance | Outstanding ATO obligations; some states check |
| Financial position | Some states (Vic specifically) require financial information to confirm capacity |
| Truth in application | Misleading statements on the application form |
| Insurance compliance | Current home warranty insurance, public liability |
State-specific applications:
- NSW (Home Building Act 1989): Section 33 sets the licence eligibility test. NSW Fair Trading applies F&P at application and renewal.
- Vic (Building Act 1993): VBA assesses F&P plus financial capacity (the “financial requirements” component, layered with F&P).
- Qld (QBCC Act 1991): Section 31 sets the F&P test plus the minimum financial requirements (MFRs) for builder licensing.
- WA (Building Services (Registration) Act 2011): Building Services Board assesses F&P.
- SA (Building and Construction Industry Long Service Leave Act 1987 + state licensing): assessed by Consumer and Business Services.
- Tas, NT, ACT: similar frameworks under each state body.
Common builder issues leading to F&P findings:
| Issue | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Director of a recently liquidated company | Likely refusal or conditions on the new licence |
| Outstanding building defects orders unaddressed | Renewal refused until resolved |
| Fraud conviction in last 5-10 years | Likely refusal |
| Insolvency in last 3-5 years | Conditions or refusal (varies by state and circumstance) |
| Misleading application | Cancellation if discovered; criminal offence in some states |
| Repeat building-act breaches | Cancellation or conditions |
The 5-year insolvency rule (informal):
Most states treat insolvency in the last 5 years as a flag. A history of multiple directorships of liquidated companies (phoenixing pattern) is treated as a serious F&P issue and typically results in licence refusal or cancellation regardless of formal time elapsed.
For builders.
- Disclose everything on the application: prior insolvency, prior licence breaches, prior convictions. Hiding them is worse than disclosing them.
- Maintain compliance on prior builds: outstanding defects orders, statutory directions block renewal.
- Resolve disputes before renewal date: VCAT / NCAT findings against you accumulate.
- Maintain tax compliance: Qld specifically checks ATO.
- If F&P concerns are flagged at renewal, engage a building lawyer immediately. The process has appeal pathways; getting them right requires expertise.
Note: this article is general information, not legal advice. If you’re facing an F&P concern, engage a specialist building lawyer.
Also known as: fit and proper test, fitness test builder licence, F&P assessment.
Category: Licensing / regulatory / builder.
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Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16.