Stop work order
Stop work order shuts a site immediately under NSW, Vic, Qld, WA building enforcement law. Tools down. Costs $330k+ per breach. Appeal window typically 28-30 days.
Ask Chalkline about this →A stop work order is the regulator instrument that shuts a building site immediately: tools down, all construction work suspended, until the order is lifted, the issue rectified, or successfully appealed. Issued by various authorities across the states (councils, building surveyors, state building regulators (Building Commission NSW, VBA, QBCC, Building and Energy WA), under planning and building enforcement legislation. Defying a stop work order is among the most serious enforcement offences in Australian construction: NSW corporations face up to $330,000 plus $33,000 per day under the RAB Act and DBP Act. Verified per NSW EP&A Act, RAB Act 2020, DBP Act 2020, and equivalent state legislation (2026-05-23).
Who can issue a stop work order:
| Authority | When | Statutory basis |
|---|---|---|
| Council / consent authority | Work without DA or breaching consent | EP&A Act 1979 (NSW), planning legislation in other states |
| Building surveyor / certifier | Non-compliant or dangerous work | Building legislation per state |
| State building regulator (Building Commission NSW, VBA, QBCC, Building and Energy WA) | Licensed contractor breaches, systemic defects, serious defects in Class 2+ | RAB Act, DBP Act, equivalent state Acts |
| SafeWork / WorkSafe | WHS issues; not strictly a “stop work” under building legislation but functionally identical | WHS Acts |
Common triggers:
| Trigger | Likely issuing authority |
|---|---|
| Building without DA or building permit | Council |
| Work in breach of consent conditions | Council |
| Unsafe site conditions | Building surveyor or council |
| Defective workmanship causing risk | State regulator |
| Suspended or expired licence used | State regulator |
| Unauthorised demolition | Council |
| Heritage breach | Council + heritage body |
| WHS imminent risk | SafeWork/WorkSafe |
Penalties for non-compliance:
Non-compliance with a stop work order is a regulator-prosecuted offence:
| Jurisdiction | Penalty |
|---|---|
| NSW (RAB Act, DBP Act) | Corporations up to $330,000 + $33,000 per day; individuals $110,000 + $11,000 per day |
| NSW (EP&A Act Tier 1) | Corporations up to $5,000,000 + $50,000 per day; individuals $1,000,000 + $10,000 per day |
| VIC | Corporations up to ~$200,000 + per-day penalty under Building Act 1993 |
| QLD | QBCC penalties up to ~$70,000 + per-day under QBCC Act |
| WA | Building and Energy penalties under Building Act 2011 |
The “per day” component is the most painful: a builder ignoring an order for a month faces seven-figure penalty exposure.
Appeal window:
| Jurisdiction | Appeal window | To |
|---|---|---|
| NSW (DBP Act) | 30 days | Land and Environment Court |
| NSW (planning) | 28 days | Land and Environment Court |
| VIC | 60 days | VCAT |
| QLD | 28 days | QCAT |
| WA | 28 days | State Administrative Tribunal (SAT) |
Appeal windows are tight. If you receive any order, engage a construction lawyer the same day.
What to do when you receive an order:
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1. Stop work immediately | Tools down across the site or specified portion |
| 2. Document the order | Photographs, copies, file note |
| 3. Notify subbies and trades | Site is cold; they’re not coming today |
| 4. Engage construction lawyer | Same day; appeal window is short |
| 5. Engage relevant specialists | Engineer, certifier, fire safety; depends on the issue |
| 6. Rectify the issue | The fastest exit; appeal can take months |
| 7. Apply for lifting | Once rectified, formal application to lift the order |
| 8. Confirm in writing when lifted | Don’t recommence on verbal assurance |
The Building Commission NSW public register:
Since the RAB Act 2020 commenced, the NSW Government maintains a public register of building work orders at the Building Commission NSW website. The register lists:
- Builder/developer name.
- Date order issued.
- Type of order (stop work, rectification, prohibition).
- Building address.
- Current status (active, lifted, complied).
The register is searched by potential buyers, lenders, and competitors. Appearance on the register has reputational consequences beyond the order itself.
Recent NSW examples (verified per public register 2026-05-23):
- Hayat Constructions Pty Ltd: stop work order 21 May 2025.
- Structural Master Construction Pty Ltd: stop work order 12 March 2025.
- JRK Construction Group Pty Ltd: stop work order 20 December 2024.
- PSR Crownview Investment Pty Ltd (Wollongong): stop work order RAB Act s.29, 17 February 2026.
Builder’s preventive measures:
| Risk | Preventive measure |
|---|---|
| DA / building permit non-compliance | Pre-construction certifier briefing; clear understanding of consent conditions |
| Heritage breach | Heritage consultant engaged early; conditions of consent reviewed before any demolition |
| WHS imminent risk | Daily site safety briefing; immediate response to any near-miss |
| Defective workmanship | Hold-point inspections; engineer’s certification |
| Licence expiry mid-project | Track licence expiry; renew 8-12 weeks ahead |
Cross-state equivalents:
| State | Most-common stop-work instruments |
|---|---|
| NSW | DCO (council EP&A Act); RAB Act / DBP Act / HBA orders (Building Commission); building surveyor compliance directions |
| VIC | Building order (Building Act 1993); planning enforcement order |
| QLD | QBCC direction to stop work or rectify; planning enforcement |
| WA | Building and Energy direction; planning enforcement |
| SA | PlanSA stop direction |
| TAS, NT, ACT | State-specific |
Builder takeaway:
- Treat any order seriously. Same-day legal engagement.
- The “per day” penalty makes delay catastrophic. Fix it or appeal it; don’t ignore.
- Public register exposure damages future tendering and lending.
- Preventive measures (correct licence, certifier engagement, clear consent compliance) cost far less than one order.
Also known as: stop notice; cease and desist (informal); enforcement order; site closure order.
Category: Regulators.
Related
See also
Last updated: 2026-05-23. Verified: 2026-05-23. Quarterly review for currency.