A record year for construction insolvency
In FY2024–25, 3,490 construction firms entered insolvency in Australia — a record high. Construction now accounts for 26% of all company insolvencies in Australia, more than any other industry. These are not abstract statistics. Behind each number is a homeowner with an unfinished project, a subcontractor unpaid, a family whose savings have disappeared.
The cases that made headlines in 2025
Source: YourLifeChoices / NSW Fair Trading records
Source: Mastt / court records / NSW Building Commission
Source: Mastt / ASIC records
Source: ASIC / VBA / media reporting
What these cases have in common
Every one of these collapses shares the same pattern:
- The builder held a valid licence right up until the collapse
- The builder had no published regulatory action that was visible to consumers
- Financial stress was visible in the background data — credit defaults, court judgements, subcontractor disputes — before the collapse
- Homeowners who checked only the licence register had no warning
The licence register only tells you a builder met minimum requirements at a point in time. It says nothing about whether they are financially viable, how they treat clients, or whether they have a history of disputes and defaults. That information exists — but you have to know where to look.
Victoria responds: the Building Legislation Amendment (Buyer Protections) Act 2025
In direct response to the scale of consumer harm, Victoria passed the Building Legislation Amendment (Buyer Protections) Act 2025, which came into effect on 1 July 2025. The legislation created a new Building and Plumbing Commission with greater powers, stronger insurance requirements, and broader builder accountability. NSW has introduced similar deposit protection measures.
These legislative responses are significant. But new laws take time to be tested, regulators take time to enforce, and by the time the system acts, your project may already have collapsed. The legislation is an acknowledgement that the old system chronically failed consumers — not a guarantee that the new one will protect you.
What you can do right now
The protection that no regulation can replace is pre-contract due diligence:
- Check the licence yourself, on the day you are about to sign — not when you receive the quote
- Order a background report before you commit — credit history, court records, tribunal appearances and company history
- Check deposit limits — most states cap residential deposits at 5–10%; do not pay above the legal limit
- Verify home warranty insurance independently before work begins
- Have a solicitor review the contract — particularly variation clauses and progress payment schedules
A background report costs a fraction of what a building dispute will cost you. The homeowners featured in these cases did not lack resources — they lacked information. That information was available. It just required knowing how to find it.
Check your builder now
A background report from Always Check Your Builder covers everything the licence register won’t show you. Delivered confidentially — your builder never informed.
Order a background report →