Construction Change Order (Australia)
HIA Contracts / WHS Regulation 2017 — Scope Change, Cost and Programme
Change Order No: [Change Order Number]
Date: [Change Order Date]
Project: [Project Name]
Site Address: [Site Address]
State / Territory: [Governing State]
1. PARTIES
Principal / Client: [Principal Name] (ABN [Principal ABN])
Principal's Representative: [Principal Contact] — [Principal Email]
Contractor: [Contractor Name] (ABN [Contractor ABN], Licence No. [Contractor Licence])
Contractor's Representative: [Contractor Contact]
2. CONTRACT DETAILS
Contract type: [Contract Type]
Date of original contract: [Contract Date]
Original contract sum (including GST): $[Original Contract Sum]
3. SCOPE CHANGE
Type of change: [Change Type]
Initiated by: [Change Initiator]
Description of change:
[Change Description]
4. COST IMPACT
Pricing basis: [Cost Pricing Basis]
Cost of additions (excluding GST): $[Addition Cost Ex GST]
Credit for omissions (excluding GST): $[Omission Credit Ex GST]
Net change amount (excluding GST): $[Net Change Amount Ex GST]
GST (10%): $[GST On Net Change]
Net change total (including GST): $[Net Change Total Inc GST]
Total of all previous approved Change Orders (including GST): $[Previous Changes Total]
Revised contract sum (including GST): $[Revised Contract Sum]
The contract sum is hereby adjusted to $[Revised Contract Sum] (including GST). This adjustment is to be incorporated into the next progress claim by the Contractor after the date of this Change Order.
The cost of this Change Order has been calculated on the basis of [Cost Pricing Basis]. The Contractor warrants that the agreed cost represents a fair and reasonable price for the changed works in accordance with the terms of the [Contract Type].
5. WORK HEALTH AND SAFETY
The Contractor confirms that it has assessed the Work Health and Safety implications of this Change Order in accordance with the Work Health and Safety Regulation 2017 as enacted in [Governing State] and the applicable Code of Practice for Construction Work.
The Contractor must not commence the changed works until all required WHS documentation has been prepared, reviewed, and signed. All workers performing the changed works must be briefed on any new or updated hazard assessments or safe work procedures before commencing work.
6. ATTACHED DOCUMENTS
The following documents are attached to and form part of this Change Order:
[Attachments List]
7. AGREEMENT
By signing below, the Principal and the Contractor agree to the changes to the construction contract described in this Change Order, including the adjustment to the contract sum, the revised payment obligations, and (where applicable) the extension of time to the date for practical completion.
For HIA residential contracts: The Principal (homeowner) acknowledges that this Change Order constitutes a written variation to the contract as required by the applicable home building legislation in [Governing State]. The Principal must sign this Change Order before the Contractor commences the changed works.
This Change Order is subject to the laws of [Governing State], Australia. All payment obligations arising from this Change Order are subject to the Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act as enacted in [Governing State].
PRINCIPAL / CLIENT
Name: [Principal Name]
ABN: [Principal ABN]
Authorised Representative: [Principal Contact]
Signature: _______________________________
Name: _______________________________
Date: _______________________________
CONTRACTOR
Name: [Contractor Name]
ABN: [Contractor ABN]
Licence: [Contractor Licence]
Authorised Representative: [Contractor Contact]
Signature: _______________________________
Name: _______________________________
Date: _______________________________
Principal
________________
Signature
Date: ________________
Contractor
________________
Signature
Date: ________________
What Is a Construction Change Order (Australia)?
A Construction Change Order in Australia sets the scope of works, price, timeframe, and variation and completion procedures between the principal and the builder or contractor under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth).
Change Orders are used across all sectors of the Australian construction industry — from residential new builds and renovations under HIA and Master Builders Association contracts, to major commercial and infrastructure projects under AS 4000-1997 and bespoke contracts. While the underlying legal framework for variations is the same across all these contract forms (all require variations to be in writing and signed by both parties before the changed work commences), the Change Order document provides a more thorough and structured format than a simple variation instruction, making it particularly suited to projects where multiple changes are expected and careful cumulative tracking of cost and programme impacts is required.
The WHS dimension of a Change Order is increasingly important under Australian law. The Work Health and Safety Act 2011 (Cth) and the Work Health and Safety Regulation 2017, as adopted in all Australian states and territories, impose non-delegable duties on all persons conducting a business or undertaking (PCBUs) at a construction site. Every Change Order that introduces new or changed scope of works must be assessed for its WHS implications — particularly whether it introduces any 'high-risk construction work' as defined in WHS Regulation 291. If it does, a Safe Work Method Statement must be prepared before the high-risk work commences, and all workers performing that work must sign the SWMS. Failure to comply is a serious offence, and the penalties under the WHS Acts are substantial.
The Security of Payment Acts in each Australian state and territory also apply to amounts payable under Change Orders. The cost of agreed changes must be included in the Contractor's progress claims, and the respondent must either pay or issue a payment schedule within the prescribed period. Amounts unpaid under a Change Order can be referred to adjudication, and the adjudicator's determination is binding and enforceable as a judgment debt.
The legal framework governing the Construction Change Order (Australia) in Australia draws on several key statutes and regulatory bodies. Under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) regulates companies and financial services. Section 127 of the Corporations Act 2001 governs company execution of documents. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) enforces the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth). The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) administers the Goods and Services Tax under the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999. The Federal Court of Australia and Supreme Courts of each state have jurisdiction over corporate disputes. Parties executing a Construction Change Order (Australia) in Australia should confirm the document reflects current law, including any amendments enacted since the original drafting date. The Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) sets the foundational requirements.
When Do You Need a Construction Change Order (Australia)?
A Construction Change Order should be issued whenever the scope of works, contract price, or construction programme under a building contract is to change — whether the change is requested by the Principal, directed by the Superintendent, imposed by a regulatory authority, or required as a result of unforeseen site conditions.
For residential building projects under HIA or MBA contracts, a Change Order is required by law before the contractor commences any additional or changed work. The home building legislation in each Australian state imposes strict requirements on written variation orders for residential contracts. In New South Wales, the Home Building Regulation 2014 provides that a variation to a residential building contract must be in writing, must describe the change and the price adjustment, and must be signed by the homeowner (or their agent) before the changed work is done — with limited exceptions for urgent work required to avoid damage or safety risk. A builder who performs additional or changed work without a signed written Change Order risks being unable to recover the cost of that work from the homeowner.
For commercial projects, a Change Order is required under AS 4000-1997 and most other standard form contracts before the Contractor commences any varied work (except in emergencies). Even where the Principal or Superintendent has given an oral instruction to proceed with additional work, the Change Order should be executed as soon as practicable to record the agreed scope and price. Delaying the preparation of a Change Order until practical completion — when both parties have competing memories of what was agreed, and the commercial relationship may have become adversarial — is a common cause of disputes about the final account.
A Change Order should also be issued whenever an existing Change Order needs to be modified — for example, if additional scope is identified during the performance of the original change, or if the estimated cost proves to be higher than originally anticipated. Each modification should be recorded as a separate, sequentially numbered Change Order to maintain a clear audit trail.
From a WHS perspective, a Change Order should trigger a fresh WHS assessment of the changed scope of works. If the change introduces high-risk construction work — as defined in WHS Regulation 291 — the Change Order should not be issued or signed until the required SWMS has been identified and the obligation to prepare it before commencement is documented.
What to Include in Your Construction Change Order (Australia)
A well-prepared Construction Change Order for an Australian building project must address the following key elements.
Scope Description — The scope change must be clearly described, identifying what is being added, omitted, or substituted. The description should reference all relevant contract schedule items, drawings, specifications, client instructions, or engineering reports. Ambiguous scope descriptions are the primary cause of disputes about Change Order pricing at practical completion and in the final account.
Cost Impact — The Change Order must show the cost of additions and the credit for omissions separately, together with the net change amount and the GST component at 10%. It must also show the cumulative total of all previous Change Orders and the revised contract sum, so that both parties can track the current financial position of the project against the original budget.
GST Compliance — All construction work performed by a GST-registered entity in Australia is a taxable supply under A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (Cth). The Change Order must show the GST component separately and, when combined with the relevant progress claim invoice, must comply with the tax invoice requirements of the GST Act — including showing the Contractor's ABN, a description of the supply, the date, and the GST amount.
Programme Impact — Where the change will cause delay to the date for practical completion, the Change Order must document the agreed extension of time in calendar days, the current date for practical completion, and the revised date for practical completion. This is essential to protect the Contractor from liquidated damages for delays caused by principal-instructed or authority-imposed changes.
WHS and SWMS — The Change Order must confirm that the WHS implications of the changed scope have been assessed, and must specifically address whether any high-risk construction work within the meaning of WHS Regulation 291 has been introduced. If it has, the SWMS requirements must be documented and the SWMS prepared before the high-risk work commences.
Execution — The Change Order must be signed by both parties (for residential contracts, by the homeowner) before the changed work commences, with the date of signature recorded. The requirement for prior written consent is a condition of the Contractor's entitlement to payment for the changed work under most Australian building contracts and state home building legislation.
Additional compliance elements for a Construction Change Order (Australia) used in Australia include: Under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) regulates companies and financial services. Section 127 of the Corporations Act 2001 governs company execution of documents. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) enforces the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth). The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) administers the Goods and Services Tax under the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999. The Federal Court of Australia and Supreme Courts of each state have jurisdiction over corporate disputes. Forms-legal.com provides this template as a starting point for Australia-compliant documentation.
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Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:
Forms Legal. (2026). Construction Change Order (Australia) (Australia) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/australia/business/construction/construction-change-order-australia
"Construction Change Order (Australia) (Australia)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/australia/business/construction/construction-change-order-australia.
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author = {{Forms Legal}},
title = {Construction Change Order (Australia) (Australia)},
year = {2026},
howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/australia/business/construction/construction-change-order-australia}},
note = {Free legal document template. Based on Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)}
}Also available for these jurisdictions:
Frequently Asked Questions
In Australian construction practice, the terms 'Change Order' and 'Variation Order' are often used interchangeably to refer to a written document that records an agreed change to the scope, price, or programme of a building contract. However, there is a subtle practical distinction. A 'Variation Order' or 'Variation Instruction' is the term used most commonly under Australian standard form contracts such as AS 4000-1997 (clause 36) and HIA contracts, where the Superintendent or Principal instructs the contractor to perform additional, reduced, or modified work. A 'Change Order' (a term more commonly used in the construction industry generally, including in commercial and industrial projects) tends to be a broader document that also addresses the programme impact, WHS implications, and cumulative project accounting consequences of the change — making it the preferred document for more complex projects. Both documents serve the same fundamental legal purpose: to formally record the parties' agreement to a change in the contract scope, price, and/or programme, and to protect both parties in the event of a dispute about what was agreed.
Under the Work Health and Safety Regulation 2017 (Cth) — as adopted in all Australian states and territories except Victoria, which has equivalent provisions under its OHS Regulation — a person conducting a business or undertaking (PCBU) must require that a Safe Work Method Statement (SWMS) is prepared before any high-risk construction work commences. Regulation 291 defines 'high-risk construction work' as construction work that involves a risk of a person falling more than 2 metres, work in or near a trench or shaft deeper than 1.5 metres, work in a confined space, work near energised electrical installations or services, the demolition of a structure, or a range of other specified activities. A Change Order that introduces any of these work types — for example, by adding an external balcony or elevated deck, by requiring excavation near the building, or by adding roof-mounted equipment — triggers the obligation to prepare a specific SWMS for the new high-risk work. The SWMS must be developed in consultation with the workers who will perform the work, must be reviewed and signed by each of those workers before work starts, and must be available at the worksite at all times during the high-risk work. Failing to prepare an SWMS for high-risk construction work is a serious WHS offence in all Australian jurisdictions.
Where a Change Order involves work for which the original contract contains no applicable schedule of rates or unit prices, the Contractor must price the change on a fair and reasonable basis. Under AS 4000-1997 clause 40.4, the Superintendent assesses the value of a variation in the following priority order: first, by reference to the rates or prices in the contract; second, where no applicable rates exist, by reference to reasonable rates or prices; and third, by a fair and reasonable assessment of the cost of performing the varied work. In practice, for new work types not covered by the contract rates, the Contractor typically prepares a cost breakdown comprising: materials at current market cost; labour at the rates or awards applicable in the state for the relevant trade; plant and equipment hire at current market rates; subcontractor costs at quoted prices; and the Contractor's overhead and profit margin at the rate specified in the contract or a reasonable commercial margin. The Superintendent reviews the Contractor's breakdown and assesses whether it represents fair market value. For HIA residential contracts, the price must be agreed and signed by both parties before work commences — there is no provision for the Superintendent to unilaterally assess the value, so negotiation between the homeowner and builder is essential.
When a Change Order extends the date for practical completion, the liquidated damages regime in the contract is correspondingly adjusted. Liquidated damages — the pre-agreed daily or weekly rate payable by the Contractor for each day or week of delay in achieving practical completion — are calculated by reference to the date for practical completion stated in the contract (as varied by any extension of time). When the Change Order sets a new, later date for practical completion, liquidated damages for delay can only be charged if the Contractor fails to achieve practical completion by that new date. The extension of time granted in the Change Order therefore protects the Contractor from liquidated damages for the period of delay attributable to the Change Order. This is why it is important to clearly document the extension of time in the Change Order, and to update the construction programme accordingly. If the parties fail to agree on an extension of time at the time the Change Order is issued, and the change later causes delay, the Contractor must give written notice of a delay claim within the timeframe prescribed by the contract (typically 28 days under AS 4000-1997 clause 35.2) in order to preserve its entitlement to an extension.
Yes. The cost of a Change Order — whether issued by a head contractor to the principal or by a subcontractor to the head contractor — constitutes a progress payment under a construction contract for the purposes of the applicable Security of Payment Act. A subcontractor who has performed additional or varied work in accordance with a signed Change Order may include the cost of that work in a payment claim served on the reference date under the Security of Payment Act. If the head contractor fails to pay the amount claimed or to issue a compliant payment schedule within the prescribed period, the subcontractor may apply for adjudication. This right applies regardless of any 'pay when paid' clause in the subcontract, which is void under section 12 of the Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act 1999 (NSW) and equivalent provisions in other states. The subcontractor should attach the signed Change Order to the payment claim as supporting documentation to demonstrate the head contractor's agreement to the additional scope and price.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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