Building standards frozen under housing speed-up plan

August 24, 2025 03:30 | News

The federal government says it has the balance right between sustainability and energy standards and removing red tape to speed up building approvals.

A suite of changes to construction guidelines aimed at reducing delays comes after Treasurer Jim Chalmers confirmed alterations to the national code at the conclusion to last week’s productivity summit.

Under the plan, updates to the 2000-page construction code will be frozen until mid-2029 once the 2025 changes are finalised. The code normally updates every three years.

Economic Reform Roundtable
Jim Chalmers confirmed alterations to the national code at last week’s productivity summit. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)

The freeze excludes essential safety and quality changes and maintains the strong residential standards adopted in 2022, including 7-star energy efficiency.

The government will use the pause to streamline the code, including improving its usability with artificial intelligence, removing barriers and encouraging modern methods of construction, such as prefab and modular housing, and improving how code additions are developed.

Removing building red tape to speed up housing construction won’t cut corners on standards, Housing Minister Clare O’Neil said.

“It’s too hard to build a home in this country. We want builders on site, not filling in forms to get their approval,” she said.

The government will also fast-track environmental assessment applications for more than 26,000 homes by creating a specialised environment department team, prioritising robust development applications and looking to use AI tools to simplify and hasten approvals.

A housing estate in Canberra
The government will fast-track environmental assessment applications for more than 26,000 homes. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)

Environment Minister Murray Watt said fast-tracked projects will still need to meet all environmental requirements, but developers will be incentivised to provide required information up front.

“This approach will ensure strong national environmental protections, while also leading to faster decision making, more certainty for industry and more homes for Australians,” he said.

Removing impediments for superannuation investment in new housing and working with the states and territories to accelerate planning, zoning and approvals are also slated under the changes.

At the government’s Economic Reform Roundtable in Canberra last week, a simplification and tidy-up of the code attracted broad support, with few disputing the need for standards that work together better and are easier to navigate.

Environment Minister Murray Watt speaks to journalists
Murray Watt: new measures will deliver faster decisions and unlock new homes more quickly. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)

As a “floor” for quality and performance, some saw it as a necessary tool to keep the next generation of homes safe, comfortable and not wasting energy.

The Property Council of Australia’s Mike Zorbas said the measures will help unlock tens of thousands of new homes while ensuring a regular improvement cycle for vital safety and sustainable upgrades to housing.

“The necessary residential code recalibration will achieve the national consistency we all know is the key to an efficient housing production pipeline,” he said.

Master Builders Australia chief executive Denita Wawn applauded the government, saying the constant churn of regulatory change had added pressure to a complex and costly system.

Australian Council of Social Service chief executive Cassandra Goldie, at the summit, warned a construction code freeze could mean households least able to afford home retrofits for a changing climate and energy future could lose out if reforms miss the mark.

AAP News

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