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The proposed scheme is designed to provide 10 years of cover for relevant defects in major building elements of new residential apartment buildings above three storeys. A key feature is its first-resort, no-fault structure. In practical terms, an owners corporation would be able to claim for covered defects without first having to prove which party was responsible. That is a major shift from the traditional dispute pathway, where owners, builders, developers, consultants and insurers can spend years arguing over liability before rectification funding becomes clear.
For the construction sector, the reform is not simply a consumer protection measure. It is also a risk allocation development that may influence project feasibility, procurement, contract wording and insurance strategy. If decennial insurance becomes embedded in Victoria’s apartment market, builders and developers should expect greater scrutiny of design controls, product selection, workmanship records, subcontractor management, inspection regimes and handover documentation.
The change also arrives at a time when apartment defects, cladding concerns, water ingress and structural remediation remain sensitive issues across Australia’s higher-density housing market. Governments are under pressure to support housing supply, but also to restore confidence among purchasers, financiers and insurers. A more predictable defect insurance pathway may help support confidence, although its effect will depend heavily on the final regulations, pricing, underwriting appetite and eligibility requirements.
Builders should avoid treating this as a distant compliance issue. Even before a scheme is fully operational, insurers are likely to look closely at how businesses manage defect prevention. That means documented quality assurance, clear allocation of design responsibility, strong subcontractor vetting and prompt defect rectification processes may become more valuable at renewal time.
There may also be flow-on implications for professional indemnity, public liability and contract works arrangements. A decennial policy does not remove the need for broader construction insurance coverage; rather, it adds another layer to the risk framework surrounding apartment delivery. Developers and builders will need to understand how different policies interact, where exclusions apply and whether contractual indemnities create gaps.
This is where early advice matters. Project teams considering multi-storey residential work in Victoria should speak with legal advisers and construction insurance brokers before tenders, not after contracts are signed. The more complex the building, the more important it becomes to align insurance, quality systems and contract obligations from the outset.
For Australian construction businesses, the message is clear: defect risk is no longer just a post-completion problem. It is becoming a front-end insurance, governance and project delivery issue.
Published:Friday, 26th Jun 2026
Author: Paige Estritori
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