process Health and safety (WHS) 10 min read

Asbestos removal: legal pathways for residential builders

Licensed vs unlicensed asbestos removal in Australia. Class A covers friable, Class B covers non-friable over 10m². ACT requires a licence for any removal.

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TL;DR

Asbestos removal in Australia splits into three legal pathways: Class A licensed removal (all friable and any non-friable), Class B licensed removal (non-friable over 10m²), and unlicensed removal (non-friable 10m² or under, except in the ACT where any removal requires a licence). Friable asbestos (the crumbly, powder-forming type found in pipe lagging, sprayed coatings, ceiling insulation and some old floor tiles) is the high-risk form and always needs a Class A licence. Getting the pathway wrong means fines, stop-work orders, and personal liability for fibre exposure; asbestos-related disease has a latency of 10 to 40 years so regulators treat non-compliance seriously. If you are unsure of the material type, test before you touch.

When you do this

Any time a pre-1990 residential building (or a building renovated pre-1990) is demolished, altered, or repaired in a way that disturbs suspected asbestos-containing material (ACM). Asbestos use in building materials was effectively banned from 31 December 2003 in Australia, but buildings renovated before that date may also contain ACM (verified 2026-05-07, Safe Work Australia).

Common discovery points on a residential site:

  • Fibro (AC sheet): eaves, external cladding, internal linings, wet area sheeting
  • Vinyl floor tiles and backing: kitchens, bathrooms, laundries pre-1990
  • Pipe lagging and rope seals: around hot water services, flues
  • Roofing: super-six corrugated sheets, flat eave soffits
  • Textured ceilings: “popcorn” or stipple ceilings containing chrysotile
  • Mastic adhesives: used under floor tiles and wall tiles

Do not disturb suspect material until a competent person has identified it. Identification may require laboratory analysis of a sample.

Who’s involved

PartyRole
Person conducting a business or undertaking (PCBU)Duty holder under WHS Act; must ensure licensed removal where required
Class A licensed removalistRemoves friable asbestos (any quantity) and non-friable asbestos (any quantity)
Class B licensed removalistRemoves non-friable asbestos where area exceeds 10m²
Licensed asbestos assessorConducts air monitoring and issues clearance certificates for Class A work; optional but available for Class B
Competent personMay issue clearance certificates for Class B (non-friable) removal
WHS regulator (state or territory)Receives 5-day advance notification; enforces licence requirements

Steps

Step 1: Identify the material

Before any work starts, determine whether the suspect material is ACM, and if so, whether it is friable or non-friable.

  • Friable ACM: crumbles or can be reduced to powder by hand pressure when dry. Examples: pipe lagging, sprayed fireproofing, some loose-fill ceiling insulation (loose-fill asbestos insulation has its own state-specific programs, notably the ACT and NSW Mr Fluffy schemes).
  • Non-friable ACM: fibres bonded in cement or other hard matrix; cannot be crumbled by hand. Examples: fibro cladding sheets (asbestos cement), vinyl floor tiles, roof tiles, compressed asbestos panels.

If non-friable ACM is damaged, weathered, or cut with power tools it can release fibres and must be treated as friable for removal purposes.

See asbestos identification for the full identification process.

Step 2: Determine the correct pathway

ScenarioRequired pathway
Any friable asbestos (all states/territories)Class A licensed removal
Non-friable ACM, area > 10m² (all states/territories)Class B (or Class A) licensed removal
Non-friable ACM, area ≤ 10m² (NSW, VIC, QLD, WA, SA, TAS, NT)Unlicensed removal permitted; strict controls apply
Any asbestos removal in the ACTClass A or Class B licensed removal; no 10m² exemption
Loose-fill asbestos insulation (Mr Fluffy) in ACT/NSWSpecialist scheme rules apply; contact your state regulator

ACT note: The Work Health and Safety Regulation 2011 (ACT) removes the 10m² non-friable exemption that applies in other model-law jurisdictions. Any removal of ACM in the ACT requires a licensed removalist (verified 2026-05-07, WorkSafe ACT).

Victoria note: Victoria operates under the Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004 (VIC) and OHS Regulations 2017, not the model WHS law. The 10m² threshold for unlicensed non-friable removal applies in Victoria, but unlicensed work is also subject to a time cap: total asbestos removal work must not exceed one hour in any seven-day period (verified 2026-05-07, asbestos.vic.gov.au).

Step 3: Notify the regulator (licensed work only)

For all licensed asbestos removal work (any friable, or non-friable > 10m²): the licensed removalist must notify the state or territory WHS regulator at least 5 days before commencing work (verified 2026-05-07, WHS Regulation 2017 (NSW) reg 466).

Emergency exemption: if removal is required immediately due to a sudden event (equipment failure, severe weather damage) that creates risk of fibre exposure, the removalist contacts the regulator by phone first, then lodges a written notification within 24 hours.

Victoria: notification is also required for non-friable removal of 10m² or less (residential), but with a 24-hour minimum lead time rather than 5 days (verified 2026-05-07, WorkSafe Victoria).

Notification methods vary by jurisdiction:

  • NSW: SafeWork NSW online notification portal or form
  • VIC: WorkSafe Victoria online notification
  • QLD: WorkSafe QLD phone (1300 362 128) or Form 65
  • WA: WorkSafe WA (1300 307 877) or online
  • SA: SafeWork SA notification form

Step 4: Set up the work area

For Class A (friable) removal:

  • Establish a containment enclosure under negative pressure (air pressure inside lower than outside to prevent fibre escape)
  • Install decontamination facilities: airlocks, change-out areas
  • Erect signage and barricades; notify adjacent occupants/neighbours before work starts (required under WHS Reg 2017)
  • Air monitoring is mandatory: an independent licensed asbestos assessor must conduct monitoring before removal starts, throughout the work, and before the enclosure is dismantled

For Class B (non-friable) removal:

  • Erect signage and barricades
  • Wet the material before disturbing to suppress dust
  • Use hand tools where possible; avoid grinding, cutting, or drilling that creates dust
  • Decontamination procedures apply to workers and equipment

For unlicensed removal (≤ 10m² non-friable):

  • Read and follow the Safe Work Australia Code of Practice: How to Safely Remove Asbestos (verified 2026-05-07, Safe Work Australia)
  • Appropriate PPE: minimum P2 (half-face) respirator, disposable coveralls, gloves, safety glasses
  • Wet the material before work; avoid mechanical cutting or grinding
  • Dispose of PPE as asbestos waste after work

Step 5: Remove and package the waste

Wrapping requirements (apply to all removal work):

  • Wet down the ACM before handling
  • Place in double-layer polyethylene plastic sheeting, minimum 0.2mm (200 µm) thickness, or double-bagged in specialised asbestos waste bags
  • Seal each layer separately with heavy duct tape
  • Label each package with the asbestos warning symbol and the words “CAUTION ASBESTOS: DO NOT INHALE DUST”

Do not break up sheets or crush material; keep it as intact as possible for transport.

Step 6: Clearance inspection

After Class A (friable) removal:

  • An independent licensed asbestos assessor must carry out a visual inspection of the removal area and surrounding area
  • Air monitoring clearance is mandatory: asbestos fibre concentration must be below 0.01 fibres/ml for a clearance certificate to be issued
  • The enclosure must remain in place and the area must not be reoccupied until the clearance certificate is issued
  • The assessor must be independent of the removal contractor (cannot be employed by or affiliated with the removalist)

After Class B (non-friable) removal:

  • A clearance certificate is required before the area is reoccupied
  • May be issued by either an independent licensed asbestos assessor or a qualified competent person
  • Visual inspection for residual contamination is the primary method; air monitoring is at the assessor’s discretion

(Verified 2026-05-07, SafeWork NSW)

Step 7: Dispose of asbestos waste

  • Asbestos waste must go to a landfill licensed to accept it. Not all landfills accept asbestos; confirm before transporting.
  • NSW: if transporting more than 100 kg or 10m² of asbestos waste yourself (homeowner), notify the NSW EPA using the disposing of household asbestos form within 24 hours of delivery. Licensed contractors must use the Integrated Waste Tracking Solution (verified 2026-05-07, asbestos.nsw.gov.au).
  • VIC: asbestos waste is regulated by the EPA under the Environment Protection Act 2017 (VIC). Double-wrap requirements apply; disposal to EPA-authorised sites only (verified 2026-05-07, EPA Victoria).
  • Dumping asbestos waste is illegal across all jurisdictions. Fines for illegal dumping are substantial; in NSW the EPA can issue penalty notices of $15,000 for individuals and refer for prosecution.

Documents needed

DocumentWho preparesWhen
Asbestos removal notificationLicensed removalistAt least 5 days before licensed work
SWMS (Safe Work Method Statement)PCBU / removalistBefore work starts; asbestos removal is HRCW under WHS Regulations
Asbestos register updatePCBU with management/control of workplaceAfter removal
Clearance certificateLicensed asbestos assessor (Class A) or competent person (Class B)After removal, before reoccupation
Waste tracking documentationRemovalist / transporterOn transport and delivery to landfill

Common holds

  • Material untested: removal stopped by regulator because no lab confirmation ACM was obtained before work started
  • Notification not lodged: 5-day notice missed; work stopped on site
  • Assessor not independent: clearance certificate rejected because the assessor is employed by the removalist or a related business
  • Non-friable treated as friable: project cost blowout when the removalist discovers material is in worse condition than expected and upgrades to Class A procedures mid-job
  • Unlicensed work over 10m²: homeowner or trade attempts removal; regulatory response can include mandatory remediation at owner’s cost
  • Disposal at wrong facility: ordinary skip bin or non-licensed landfill; EPA notification and potential prosecution
  • ACT site, interstate licence only: interstate Class A or B licence holders working in ACT must notify WorkSafe ACT within 20 working days; applicants from non-WHS jurisdictions (VIC and WA) must hold an ACT-specific licence

References

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-07. Verified: 2026-05-07. Quarterly review for currency.