Occupation Certificate: Interim vs Final
Interim Occupation Certificate (IOC) permits partial occupation; Final Occupation Certificate (FOC) covers complete works. Distinct rules and risk profiles for builders.
Ask Chalkline about this →The Occupation Certificate (OC) is the document issued by the certifier or RBS confirming a building (or part of it) is safe and lawful to occupy. Two types exist in most Australian jurisdictions:
- Interim Occupation Certificate (IOC): permits partial occupation of a completed portion of a building while other work continues.
- Final Occupation Certificate (FOC): issued at full project completion and signals the build is complete.
When an IOC is used:
- Phased completion: a duplex where Unit A is finished and ready to occupy while Unit B is still under construction.
- Stage-by-stage builds: ground floor finished and the client wants to move in while upstairs finishing-trades continue.
- Renovation living-in: client living in a habitable part of an extended house while a new addition is being completed.
- Pre-completion handovers under contract: where the contract allows partial possession to commence.
An IOC is conditional. The certifier issues it only when:
- The portion to be occupied is itself complete, safe, weatherproof, and meets the BCA / NCC requirements for that classification of building.
- The remaining construction does not endanger the occupied portion (e.g. structural work is complete, fire separation between phases is in place).
- Mandatory inspections for the occupied portion have all been passed.
- Essential services (water, electricity, gas, sewer) are connected to the occupied portion.
- Health and safety controls are in place separating the occupied portion from active construction.
A subsequent FOC is required at full completion. The IOC does not substitute for the FOC.
FOC issuance. The FOC is typically issued when:
- All works are complete to the design and consent.
- All required inspections have been conducted and passed.
- Compliance certificates are in place: electrical Certificate of Compliance, gas certificate, waterproofing certificate, AS 3798 earthworks compliance report, structural engineer’s compliance certificate, fire-system certificates.
- No outstanding directions from the certifier or council.
State variations:
- NSW: under EP&A Act 1979 Part 6. The certifier issues IOC and FOC; council retains an enforcement role.
- VIC: Building Act 1993. The Relevant Building Surveyor (RBS) issues an Occupancy Permit (broadly equivalent to OC) at completion. Interim permits are less commonly used; VIC tends to use the Certificate of Final Inspection (CFI) for non-occupancy structures.
- QLD: Form 21 Final Inspection Certificate or Form 11 Notification of Completion via QBCC.
- Other states: similar structures with different document names.
Why builders care about the distinction:
- Contract progress claims: many residential contracts allow the final progress claim only at FOC, not IOC. Claiming on IOC may breach the contract.
- Risk of partial occupation: client moving into IOC area while construction continues introduces liability exposure if they’re injured by ongoing work or if work disturbs the occupied area.
- Insurance: CW insurance typically continues until FOC, not IOC. The PI / professional risk for the builder continues longer than the IOC date suggests.
- Defects liability period (DLP): starts on FOC, not IOC, in most contracts. A 13-week or 12-month DLP measures from final completion.
For builders.
- Confirm with the certifier early whether IOC is feasible on a staged build. Some certifiers refuse IOC on grounds of construction-zone safety.
- Don’t agree to client move-in on IOC without contract language covering risk and access. A bilingual IOC handover document is wise.
- Schedule the FOC independently of any IOC. The FOC is the trigger for final payment and DLP commencement.
Also known as: IOC, FOC, interim OC, final OC.
Category: Compliance / approvals / completion.
Related
See also
Last updated: 2026-05-14. Verified: 2026-05-14.