SOPA (Security of Payment Act)
SOPA is the family of state Security of Payment Acts: fast-track adjudication for unpaid construction progress claims. NSW 1999; QLD BIF; VIC 2002; WA 2004.
Ask Chalkline about this →SOPA is the industry shorthand for the Security of Payment Acts that exist in every Australian state and territory, providing contractors and subcontractors a fast-track statutory pathway to enforce unpaid progress claims. Each state has its own version with subtle differences in timing, claim form, reference dates, and adjudicator panels, but they share a common philosophy: pay now, argue later: adjudicators make interim binding cashflow decisions in 8-12 weeks, and either party can litigate the underlying dispute separately. Verified per current state legislation (2026-05-16).
State-by-state SOPA legislation:
| Jurisdiction | Act | Style |
|---|---|---|
| NSW | Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act 1999 | East Coast |
| VIC | Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act 2002 | East Coast |
| QLD | Building Industry Fairness (Security of Payment) Act 2017 (BIF Act) | East Coast, trust-mechanism enhanced |
| SA | Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act 2009 | East Coast |
| TAS | Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act 2009 | East Coast |
| ACT | Building and Construction Industry (Security of Payment) Act 2009 | East Coast |
| WA | Construction Contracts Act 2004 | West Coast |
| NT | Construction Contracts (Security of Payments) Act 2004 | West Coast |
East Coast vs West Coast SOPA models:
| Feature | East Coast (NSW, VIC, QLD, etc.) | West Coast (WA, NT) |
|---|---|---|
| Trigger | Payment claim served by claimant | Dispute notice + payment dispute |
| Respondent’s mandatory schedule | Payment schedule must be issued within 10-14 days (or deemed admission) | No mandatory schedule; respondent’s silence less consequential |
| Adjudicator’s scope | Strictly the payment claim and any payment schedule reasons | Broader; may consider any payment dispute |
| Default position | If no payment schedule: claimant wins by default | Default rules less harsh; less risky for respondent to ignore claim |
| Used by | Most subbies in eastern states | Less commonly used in WA/NT than expected |
The standard SOPA cashflow:
1. Subbie does work → Payment claim issued
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2. Head contractor responds: Payment schedule (or deemed admission if silent within 10-14 days)
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3. If unpaid: Adjudication application within 10 BD typical
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4. Adjudicator's determination within 10 BD of response
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5. Pay or have judgment debt registered (s.25 cert in NSW)
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6. Garnishee, writ, charging order, statutory demand if unpaid
Total elapsed time: 8-12 weeks to enforceable judgment.
Critical SOPA timings (NSW):
| Action | Time limit |
|---|---|
| Payment claim | Issued at any reference date (typically end of month); progress on a project |
| Payment schedule | 10 business days after receiving payment claim (or as contract specifies, whichever shorter) |
| Adjudication application | Within 10 BD of payment schedule (or due-but-not-served date) |
| Adjudicator acceptance | Around 4 BD |
| Adjudication response (respondent) | Later of: 5 BD after application, OR 2 BD after acceptance |
| Determination | Within 10 BD of response |
| Payment of adjudicated amount | Within 5 BD of determination |
| Certificate registration in court | At any time after payment date passes |
Who is covered by SOPA:
| Party | Covered under SOPA? |
|---|---|
| Subbie (commercial relationship) | Yes; primary beneficiary |
| Subbie’s subbie (sub-subbie) | Yes |
| Head contractor against principal | Yes |
| Owner-builder against engaged builder | NSW: NO (HBA pathway instead); other states: varies |
| Owner against builder (residential) | NSW: NO since 2014; QLD: NO; VIC: limited |
| Cleaner, security guard, etc. | Yes, if construction-related |
In NSW the owner-occupier exclusion (since 2014) was tightened in 2024 to exclude unlicensed subbies entirely from SOPA, requiring NSW Fair Trading or contract pathways instead.
Cross-state notable points:
| State | Notable feature |
|---|---|
| NSW | Owner-occupier excluded from SOPA; subbie must use HBA path; unlicensed subbies excluded since 20 Aug 2024 |
| QLD | BIF Act adds Project Trust for projects over $1M private / $10M public; trust funds protect subbie payments |
| VIC | ”Excluded amounts” restriction repealed effective 15 April 2026; previously excluded set-offs, damages, etc. from adjudication |
| WA | West Coast model; less aggressive default; less commonly used |
| NT | West Coast model |
Builder takeaway:
- Treat every payment claim as serious; lodge a payment schedule within the SOPA window every time.
- If you’ve defaulted on a payment schedule, expect a deemed admission and an adjudication application landing fast.
- Document the project scope, variations, and deductions in real time; you have only the payment schedule reasons to rely on later.
- For project trusts (QLD) on large jobs, maintain the trust account discipline; non-compliance is a regulator offence.
- Brief the office staff on SOPA timings; missing a 10 BD deadline is the #1 SOPA defect.
Also known as: Security of Payment Act; SoPA; BIF Act (QLD); Construction Contracts Act (WA, NT).
Category: Contracts & commercial.
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Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16. Quarterly review for currency.