process Practical and on-site 6 min read

Handover and PCI process (residential)

Handover and PCI: pre-completion inspection, defects list, occupation certificate, handover meeting, key transfer, retention release. Step-by-step procedure.

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TL;DR

The handover process leads from “build done” to “client has the keys and the wall warranty starts”. It involves: a Pre-Completion Inspection (PCI) walk-through with the client to identify defects; a defects list documented and signed by both parties; the Occupation Certificate (OC) issued by the certifier; a handover meeting where the builder briefs the client on maintenance, warranties, and contact points; key transfer to the client; and first-tranche retention release if the contract allows. Practical Completion (PC), handover, and the OC are three related but distinct milestones; contracts often blur them. This process pins them down.

The three milestones (often confused)

MilestoneWhat it meansTrigger
Practical Completion (PC)Build complete enough to occupy; defects acceptableContractually defined; usually requires OC pending or issued
Occupation Certificate (OC)Certifier confirms build complies with NCC + approval conditionsAfter CSI sign-offs, fire safety, OC inspection
HandoverClient takes possession; keys transferredAfter PC + OC, contract-defined

A build can be at PC without the OC issued yet (defects acceptable but OC inspection pending). The client cannot take possession (handover) until OC issued.

Step 1: Pre-Completion Inspection (PCI)

Typically 2-4 weeks before scheduled handover. The PCI is a walk-through with the client to identify any defects, incomplete work, or items needing rectification.

Process:

  1. Schedule the PCI 5-10 working days ahead: client needs to plan their visit.
  2. Site is build-clean: all trades have demobilised, site cleaner has been through.
  3. Builder walks the client through every room systematically.
  4. Client raises defects, incomplete items, finishes concerns.
  5. Builder documents each item on a defects schedule with location, description, severity.
  6. Both parties sign the defects schedule.
  7. Builder commits to a defect rectification date typically 5-10 working days.

Common defects identified at PCI:

  • Touch-ups: paint, plaster, joinery finishes.
  • Joinery defects: doors out of square, drawers sticking.
  • Tile defects: chipped tiles, grout missing.
  • Plumbing: taps not aligned, drains slow.
  • Electrical: lights flickering, GPOs not flush.
  • Finishing carpentry: skirting joints, architrave joints.

Most PCIs identify 20-80 defects. Volume builders typically resolve all in 1-2 weeks; custom builds may take longer.

Step 2: Rectification

Builder works the defects list:

  • Assign each defect to a trade: chippy for joinery, painter for touch-ups, sparky for electrical.
  • Schedule rectification visits to minimise site disturbance after PCI.
  • Photo-document each rectification (before/after).
  • Re-inspect each item before declaring it resolved.
  • Update the defects list as items close.

Step 3: Occupation Certificate (OC)

Once defects are resolved (or the certifier accepts them as minor and not blocking OC), the OC process runs:

  1. OC inspection request to certifier: builder formally requests.
  2. Certifier visits: checks for compliance with approved drawings, NCC, conditions.
  3. Certifier issues OC (or notes outstanding items).
  4. OC is a formal certificate issued under EP&A Act (NSW) or Building Act (Vic) equivalents.

Interim OC (NSW): allows partial occupancy if some work outstanding. Final OC: full occupancy authorised.

Typical timing: 5-10 business days from request.

Step 4: Handover meeting

Once OC is issued, the handover meeting happens. Typical agenda:

TopicDetail
Walk-through (final)One more walk-through with the client to confirm everything is in working order
As-built drawingsHand-over folder with architectural, structural, services drawings
Manufacturer warrantiesAppliance, fixtures, fittings warranties
Statutory warrantiesHBI / DBI / state scheme insurance disclosure
Termite durable noticeShow location, explain inspection schedule
Maintenance manualCare instructions for finishes, joinery, plumbing
Emergency contactsBuilder, plumber, sparky for urgent issues
Defects liability period explanationTypically 6-12 months; what’s covered, how to lodge
Key setAll keys to the property
Final paymentPC payment due

The meeting is typically 60-90 minutes on a custom build, less on volume.

Step 5: Key transfer

  • All keys to the client: front door, back door, garage, security panel, mailbox.
  • Spare keys if standard.
  • Digital access: garage codes, alarm codes, smart lock setups documented.

The client now has possession.

Step 6: First-tranche retention release

If the contract allows retention release at handover (some do, some hold until defects period end):

  • Calculate retention amount: 5% of contract typical, sometimes 2%.
  • Issue retention release invoice if applicable.
  • Document the release in the contract record.

Most contracts hold ALL retention until the defects period ends (6-12 months post-handover) and the builder has completed any defects that emerge.

Step 7: Defects liability period commences

From the handover date, the defects liability period runs:

  • 6 months for cosmetic defects (typical).
  • 12 months for major defects (typical).
  • 2-6 years for structural defects (statutory, varies by state).

Client raises defects via:

  • Email / written notice to the builder.
  • Builder schedules rectification typically within 5-10 working days of notice.
  • Builder documents each defect rectification.

End of defects period: final retention released (if held).

Common builder issues

  • PCI rushed or skipped: defects list incomplete; client raises issues post-handover. Trust erodes.
  • OC delayed by outstanding CSI items: handover slips weeks while CSI is back-checked.
  • Termite durable notice forgotten: certifier may withhold OC.
  • Keys not all collected: client moves in and discovers missing keys.
  • As-built drawings missing: client buys the property in 5 years; new buyer asks for plans; builder still on the hook to produce.
  • No formal handover meeting: client unaware of warranties, maintenance, emergency contacts.

For builders

  1. Schedule PCI 2-4 weeks before contractual handover date: gives time for rectification.
  2. Use a defects-list template: rows for location, item, action, date, status.
  3. Photograph the build at handover: as-built record protects against later disputes.
  4. Hand over a complete pack: as-builts, warranties, maintenance manual, emergency contacts, defects-process explanation, termite durable notice copy.
  5. Get the handover meeting agenda signed: client confirms they received the pack and were briefed.

References

See also

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Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16.