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Demolition / Asbestos · salvage · site preparation

Demolition is one of the few trades where the cheapest quote is often the most expensive one.

Surprise asbestos. Unlicensed work. Skip bins half-full. Boundary damage. The cheap demo quote routinely lands as a $40,000 problem on the slab. This is what to specify, what to verify, and how to budget for the legal disposal of materials you didn't know your house contained.

Median cost
$18k–$38k
Standard 3-bed home, slab-to-grass, no asbestos
Asbestos uplift
+$8k–$25k
Cost of licensed removal & disposal, pre-1990 homes
Notice required
5+ days
WorkSafe notification before licensed asbestos work
Sources
52 verbatim buyer accounts; WorkSafe codes of practice (NSW SafeWork, WorkSafe VIC); state demolition licensing registers; council development application data
Verification
Pricing cross-checked against three demolition contractor quotes per state (Sept 2025–Apr 2026). Asbestos costs verified against licensed removalist tariffs.
Funding
Independent. We don't take fees from contractors or removalists. How this works.
Before we start

Demolition is regulated more tightly than almost any other trade in Australia — not because the work is dangerous to do (machines do it), but because of what's in the materials being demolished. Any home built before 1990 likely contains asbestos somewhere: eaves, fences, kitchen splashbacks, vinyl tiles, electrical backing. A quote that doesn't address this isn't a real quote.

01

What demolition actually costs

The headline number on a demolition quote covers the machine days, the dump fees, and the labour. What it usually doesn't cover, and where surprise bills come from: asbestos, service disconnections, root and stump removal, and tip-fee variations as the job uncovers what's actually in the walls.

2026 price bands · standard 3-bed home
Structure demolition only$12,000–$22,000
+ Slab break-out and removal$4,000–$9,000
+ Tree & stump removal$800–$3,500
+ Service disconnections (water, gas, power, sewer)$1,200–$3,000
+ Tip fees (excess)$500–$2,500
+ Asbestos identification & removal$8,000–$25,000
Typical total (no asbestos)$18,000–$38,000
Typical total (with asbestos)$28,000–$60,000
Two-storey adds 30–50%. Heritage overlays, contaminated soil, or restricted access can add $10k–$30k.

The asbestos question

Any quote on a pre-1990 home that doesn't include an asbestos pre-demolition survey is not complete. The legal requirement in every Australian state is that asbestos is identified before demolition begins — not discovered mid-job. A survey costs $400–$900. Skip it and you'll either get a stop-work order or a $25,000 emergency invoice when the machine punches through fibrous cement.

02

How to vet a demolition contractor

"
They quoted $19k. Started the job, found asbestos in the eaves, told me I had to pay $22k more or they'd walk and leave it. I had no leverage. The next contractor wouldn't touch a half-demolished asbestos site.
— Buyer, Outer Brisbane QLD

The story above is the single most common demolition disaster. The defence is simple: never accept a quote that doesn't itemise asbestos contingency, and never sign with a contractor who refuses to commission a pre-demolition survey.

Green flags
  • · State demolition licence visible on quote
  • · Class A asbestos removal licence (if pre-1990 home)
  • · Pre-demolition asbestos survey included or commissioned
  • · WorkSafe / SafeWork notification process explained
  • · Fixed-price asbestos clause with proper allowance
Red flags
  • · "We'll handle asbestos if we find any" with no price clause
  • · No public liability insurance or under $20M
  • · Refuses to register the demolition notice themselves
  • · Cash payment required up-front
  • · No salvage / recycling plan

The five-minute check

  1. 1. Demolition licence number on state register (NSW SafeWork, WorkSafe VIC, WHSQ).
  2. 2. Asbestos removal licence (Class A required for friable, Class B for non-friable bonded).
  3. 3. Public liability $20M+ — ask for current certificate of currency.
  4. 4. Three recent demolition jobs with addresses (drive past).
  5. 5. ABN check on ASIC + state register; check no cancelled licences.
03

The licence and the WorkSafe paperwork

Demolition licensing varies by state but all states require: (a) a demolition licence for the contractor, (b) WorkSafe / SafeWork notification before commencement, and (c) Class A or B asbestos licensing if asbestos is present. The notification window is typically 5–7 days — meaning you can't book a Monday start on Saturday morning.

State-by-state licensing
StateDemolition licenceAsbestos licence
NSWDemolition AD / DE class (SafeWork NSW)Class A (friable) / Class B (bonded)
VICRegistered Demolisher (WorkSafe VIC)A / B class
QLDDemolition open / restricted (WHSQ)A / B class
WAHigh Risk Work licence + builder regRestricted / unrestricted
SADemolition contractor licence (CBS)A / B class

What you're signing for

The homeowner is liable for environmental and WHS breaches if work proceeds unlawfully — even if a licensed contractor was hired. Confirm the contractor lodges the WorkSafe notification, holds current licences, and provides you a copy of the asbestos report and disposal certificates.

Part Two · Specifying the job
04

Demolish or renovate? The threshold

The rule of thumb in the industry: if renovation cost approaches 60% of a full rebuild, demolish. Below that, renovate. The factors that push toward demolition aren't always financial — structural integrity, asbestos exposure during partial works, and what you actually want at the end all weight the decision.

Demolish if:

  • · Major structural damage (failed slab, termite-eaten frame, fire damage)
  • · Renovation would touch >60% of walls/roof anyway
  • · Asbestos throughout requires staged removal to renovate
  • · Floor plan fundamentally wrong for needs
  • · Land value >70% of total — the house is the cheap part

Renovate if:

  • · Bones are sound — brick, hardwood frame, recent roof
  • · Character / heritage value matters
  • · Council won't permit a rebuild at current footprint
  • · Original orientation, ceiling height, windows work
  • · Asbestos isolated to one area (eaves, fence) — removable without demo
05

What happens between yes and bare slab

A standard 3-bed demolition takes 5–10 working days. The first three days are paperwork and disconnections — not machines. Here's the actual sequence.

  1. 1
    Asbestos survey. Licensed assessor walks the property, takes samples, lab tests, returns a Hazardous Materials Report.
  2. 2
    Service disconnections. Water (utility company), gas (Energex/Multinet), electricity (network distributor), sewer (council). Each requires separate booking, 5–15 days lead time.
  3. 3
    WorkSafe notification. Contractor lodges notice of intent to demolish. 5+ business days before commencement.
  4. 4
    Neighbour notification. Council typically requires letter to neighbours within 20m. Some councils require formal acknowledgement.
  5. 5
    Site setup. Fencing, signage, dust suppression water connection, traffic management if needed.
  6. 6
    Asbestos removal. Class A/B removalist strips asbestos first, double-bagged, disposed at licensed facility. Clearance certificate issued.
  7. 7
    Salvage. Doors, fittings, copper, bricks pulled before machine work.
  8. 8
    Mechanical demolition. Excavator with grab. 1–3 days for single-storey, 3–5 days for two-storey.
  9. 9
    Slab and footings. Concrete broken out, rebar separated, removed for recycling.
  10. 10
    Site clean & level. All debris removed, soil graded, ready for next stage.
06

Full demo vs strip-out vs deconstruction

"Demolition" is three different services depending on what you want next. Confusing them is how budgets blow out by 40%.

Strip-outFull demolitionDeconstruction
What it isInterior to studsEverything downHand-dismantle for salvage
Typical cost$8k–$18k$18k–$38k$35k–$70k
Duration3–5 days5–10 days4–8 weeks
Used forMajor renovationKnockdown rebuildHeritage / character
Salvage valueMinimal$500–$2k$8k–$30k+

Deconstruction (hand-dismantle for material salvage) is gaining traction for heritage and Federation-era homes — bricks, hardwood floors, leadlight windows, vintage fittings have genuine resale value. The trade-off is time and cost.

07

Asbestos — the line you can't cross

Australia has one of the highest asbestos legacies in the world. Any home built before 1990 should be assumed to contain asbestos until proven otherwise. The list of places it hides is longer than most buyers realise: eaves, fence sheets, kitchen splashbacks, bath surrounds, electrical switchboard backing, vinyl floor tiles, textured ceiling coatings, pipe lagging, fibrous cement guttering.

The legal reality

Removing more than 10m² of bonded asbestos requires a Class B licensed removalist (Class A for friable). DIY removal of larger quantities is illegal in every state. Penalties include $50,000+ fines per offence and criminal prosecution for negligent exposure.

The clean process

  1. 1. Pre-demolition Hazardous Materials Survey (licensed assessor)
  2. 2. Removal plan submitted to WorkSafe / SafeWork
  3. 3. Site enclosure, negative air pressure if friable
  4. 4. Removal by licensed contractor, double-bagged, sealed
  5. 5. Transport to licensed asbestos disposal facility (not standard tip)
  6. 6. Disposal certificates returned to homeowner
  7. 7. Clearance certificate from independent hygienist (Class A jobs)

Keep all certificates. If you sell the land later, the new owner's lawyer will ask. If you don't have them, the sale will get harder.

08

Council permits, neighbours, boundaries

A demolition permit is separate from a building permit. You need it even if you're not rebuilding. Most councils require it, the local heritage overlay can complicate it, and your neighbours can object.

Permit requirements

Most councils require a demolition consent. Application typically requires structural engineer report, asbestos survey, dilapidation report of neighbours' properties, dust & noise management plan.

Heritage overlays

If your property is in a heritage overlay or character precinct, demolition may be refused outright. Apply for advice before signing anything — demolitions have been knocked back at the consent stage.

Dilapidation reports

A dilapidation report photographs neighbours' properties before demolition. Protects you from later claims that demo caused cracks in their wall. Cost: $400–$900. Insist on this.

Boundary damage

Shared fences, retaining walls, trees overhanging boundaries — agree in writing what happens to each before work starts. Verbal "we'll put it back later" loses court cases.

09

Salvage, tip fees, what gets recycled

A modern demolition is also a deconstruction-for-recycling exercise. Concrete is crushed and reused as road base. Steel is melted. Bricks have a second life. Copper has substantial value. The proportion of material that ends up in landfill should be under 30% on a well-run job.

What gets recycled (typical proportions)

Concrete & brick85–95% recovered
Steel (rebar, frames, roofing)95%+ recovered
Timber (hardwood frame, floors)60–80% (chipped or reclaimed)
Copper (pipes, wiring)100% (high scrap value)
Asbestos0% (specialist disposal only)
Plasterboard, carpet, insulation5–20% (mostly landfill)

Ask your contractor for a Waste Management Plan. It should state the percentage targeted for landfill diversion and which recycling facilities the material will go to. Many councils now require this with the permit application.

10

Site handover — the slab and the soil

The most contested point in demolition contracts is what "complete" looks like. "Slab gone" doesn't mean the same thing to everyone. Spell it out before the machines arrive.

The handover checklist

  • · Slab and footings removed to specified depth (typically 600mm below natural ground level)
  • · All concrete debris and rebar removed from site (not buried)
  • · Service connections capped at correct legal depth, marked
  • · Site graded — final levels per specification (not "approximately level")
  • · Boundary fences reinstated or stated explicitly as new-build responsibility
  • · All certificates handed over: asbestos disposal, dilapidation, WorkSafe completion notice
  • · Soil contamination report if required (oil tanks, old septic, industrial use)

The site you receive is the site your next builder works on. Buried concrete becomes their problem and your cost. Make every line of "complete" explicit before signing.

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