Builder Licence for Companies: What You Need to Know

Many builders start as sole traders and later move into operating through a company. When this happens, one of the most misunderstood areas is how builder licensing works for companies.

A company cannot simply use an individual builder’s licence. In almost every Australian state, a company must hold its own builder licence to legally contract, invoice, advertise, or carry out building work.

This guide explains how company builder licences work, what is required, and the common mistakes that cause companies to get fined or shut down.

Can a Company Hold a Builder Licence?

Yes, a company can hold a builder licence.

However, the company licence is separate from the individual licence of the director or builder.

This means:
• The company must apply for its own licence
• The company must pay its own fees
• The company must meet financial requirements
• The company must have a nominated individual

You cannot legally trade under a company using only an individual licence.

Why Companies Need Their Own Builder Licence

A builder licence is issued to a legal entity.

If your business entity is:
• A company
• A trust
• A partnership

Then that entity must be licensed.

If your licence is held personally but you trade under a company name, you are operating unlicensed.

This can result in:
• Fines
• Cancelled contracts
• Insurance invalidation
• Regulator penalties

What Is a Nominated Individual?

Every company licence must have a nominated individual.

This is the person who:
• Holds the technical qualifications
• Provides experience evidence
• Is responsible for compliance
• Acts as the licensed builder

The nominated individual must usually:
• Hold the same licence class
• Meet all qualification requirements
• Be actively involved in the business

The company cannot operate without one.

What Qualifications Does a Company Need?

The company itself does not hold qualifications.

The nominated individual must hold:
• Certificate IV in Building and Construction or higher
• Required industry experience
• Site supervision evidence
• Compliance knowledge

If the nominated individual leaves, the company licence becomes invalid until replaced.

Financial Requirements for Company Builder Licences

This is where most companies fail.

Companies must usually provide:
• Company financial statements
• Balance sheets
• Asset and liability breakdowns
• Credit checks
• Cash flow evidence

Regulators want to confirm:
• The company can complete projects
• The company can pay subcontractors
• The company poses low consumer risk

Even if the individual qualifies, the company can still be rejected.

Insurance Requirements for Company Licences

Insurance must be held in the company name.

This includes:
• Public liability insurance
• Home warranty insurance
• Professional indemnity where required

Insurance held in a personal name does not cover a company.

This is one of the most common compliance breaches.

What Happens If the Director Leaves?

If the nominated individual:
• Resigns
• Is removed
• Loses their licence

Then the company:
• Must stop operating
• Cannot sign contracts
• Cannot advertise
• Must appoint a replacement

There is no grace period in most states.

Company vs Individual Builder Licence

Individual licence:
• Linked to a person
• Used for sole traders
• Personal financial assessment

Company licence:
• Linked to the business entity
• Requires nominated individual
• Company financial assessment
• Separate insurance

They are not interchangeable.

Common Company Licensing Mistakes

The most common mistakes include:
• Using personal licence under company name
• Not licensing the company
• No nominated individual
• Insurance in wrong name
• Financials not prepared
• Assuming ASIC registration equals licence

ASIC registration is not a builder licence.

Penalties for Non Compliance

Operating a company without a builder licence can result in:
• Heavy fines
• Contract termination
• Insurance refusal
• Inability to recover payments
• Regulatory enforcement
• Criminal charges in some states

Many builders only discover this when something goes wrong.

In Summary

If you operate through a company, the company must hold its own builder licence.

You cannot rely on a personal licence.

To licence a company, you need:
• A nominated qualified individual
• Company financial approval
• Company insurance policies
• Correct licence class
• Ongoing compliance

A company builder licence is not optional.
It is the legal foundation of your business.




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• Eligibility assessments
• Document preparation
• Financial reviews
• Application submission
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