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Why More Australian Builders Fail Each Year Than Businesses in Any Other Industry

Angus
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Three construction workers managing a concrete pump hose during a residential slab pour in Australia, with steel reinforcement mesh, orange formwork, and excavated site visible in the background

Most homeowners choose a builder the way they would choose any service: word of mouth, a few quotes, a good first meeting. What that process rarely includes is an understanding of how the construction business model actually works. The structural conditions that cause builders to fail are not character flaws or bad luck. They are features of how the industry operates, present to varying degrees in every residential building contract. The homeowner who understands them is better placed to choose a builder, interpret the warning signs, and protect their project before problems compound.

Seven structural reasons: at a glance

Seven features of the construction business model make it structurally harder to survive than almost any other consumer industry. None are about dishonesty. Most affect good, experienced builders just as readily as new ones.

  • Fixed-price contracts: Once signed, the builder absorbs every cost increase. There is no repricing mechanism mid-project.
  • Thin net margins: Volume residential builders typically operate at 3-7% net on turnover after overheads. A single cost overrun can eliminate the margin on an entire contract.
  • Lumpy revenue: Payment arrives at five to seven milestone stages, spaced weeks apart. There is no daily income to smooth over a delay.
  • Illiquid work in progress: A half-built house cannot be sold. Capital committed to incomplete projects cannot be converted to cash until the milestone triggers.
  • Long payment cycles and held retention: Average payment times run 32-50 days. Retention money is commonly withheld for 12-24 months after completion.
  • Supply chain cascade: When a subcontractor is not paid they walk. When they collapse, the builder must find a replacement at above-market rates with no lead time.
  • Low barriers to entry: No minimum balance sheet, no minimum capital. A new company registers with ASIC in a day. The rest is a new SUV and a decal on the door.

Construction: an industry that matters

Construction is one of Australia's most important industries. The broader sector contributes approximately 8-9% of national GDP and employs around 1.26 million people. Residential construction alone contributes approximately 5% of GDP.

When you build a home, the money does not stop with your builder. It flows to the timber yard, the steel fabricator, the plumber's supplier, the concrete truck driver, the architect, and the dozens of other businesses that feed into a residential build. A 2020 Australian Government study found that for every dollar spent on residential construction, nearly three dollars circulates through the broader economy. Each new home built supports approximately three jobs across the economy, counting both on-site trades and the supply chain behind them. Residential construction has one of the highest economic multipliers of any industry in Australia (NHFIC, 2020).

Why the insolvency numbers need context

Construction produces more insolvency appointments each year than any other industry in Australia. According to ASIC data, construction accounted for approximately 24% of all corporate external administrations in the first eight months of FY2025-26, and 3,596 construction companies entered external administration for the first time in FY2024-25.

That number demands context before it demands alarm.

With 462,939 actively trading construction businesses at June 2025 (ABS), construction is Australia's largest industry by business count. A sector with more businesses will produce more insolvency appointments in absolute terms. The formal insolvency rate (approximately 0.8% of active businesses per year) is not the highest of any industry. Transport and hospitality show comparable or higher closure rates when all exits are counted.

What makes construction different is not the rate. It is what happens when a builder fails. When a café closes, the customer finds another. When a builder runs out of money mid-project, the customer has a half-built house, a signed contract, and a debt they may never recover. That asymmetry is why the business model matters as much as the business owner.

Construction has held the top insolvency position for four consecutive years. The trend is not driven by a single event or stimulus wind-down. It reflects persistent structural pressure. Most builds complete. The risk concentrates in specific circumstances: where fixed-price contracts meet sharp cost increases, or where a builder's working capital is too thin to absorb a milestone delay.

The seven structural reasons in detail

Each of the seven points below is worth understanding before you sign a building contract.

1. Fixed-price contracts absorb all cost risk. The standard residential building contract commits the builder to deliver at a set price. If material costs rise after signing, or if labour becomes more expensive, the additional cost falls on the builder, not the homeowner. A builder cannot reprice a $600,000 contract mid-project the way a café reprices its menu. Master Builders Australia attributed the elevated insolvency numbers directly to "unanticipated escalations in the cost of labour and materials when so many businesses were locked into fixed-price contracts."

2. Margins are thin by design. Volume residential builders in Australia typically operate on net margins of 3-7% on turnover after overheads, against gross margins of 16-22%. At 5% net on a $600,000 contract, the builder's profit is $30,000. A single cost overrun of $25,000 on that job eliminates the margin entirely and creates a $7,000 loss that must be covered by cash from other projects. IBISWorld puts industry-wide house construction margins at approximately 6.2%, but the volume residential segment sits materially below this figure.

3. Revenue is lumpy, not daily. A standard residential contract pays at five to seven stages: deposit, slab, frame, lock-up, fixing, and completion. Each payment arrives after inspection and certification, often weeks after the work was completed. A business with daily takings can absorb a bad week. A builder who misses a single milestone payment has no equivalent buffer.

4. Work in progress is illiquid. A half-built house cannot be sold. The builder has committed labour, materials, and subcontractor costs to create it, but cannot convert that work to cash until the milestone triggers. A builder with $10 million of active projects may have $3-4 million of capital tied up in work they cannot realise. When credit tightens or milestone payments slow, that illiquidity becomes acute.

5. Payment cycles are long, and retention is held. CreditorWatch data shows that 92% of construction firms experienced overdue invoices in the previous 12 months. Average payment times across the sector run 32-50 days. Retention money held after project completion is commonly withheld for 12-24 months. A builder carrying $200,000 in outstanding retention across completed jobs holds that as a paper asset with no cash value.

6. Supply chain risk cascades downward. When a builder fails, the effects move down the chain. Subcontractors who were owed progress payments become unsecured creditors in the administration. They recover cents in the dollar, if anything. When Probuild entered voluntary administration in February 2022, approximately 2,300 creditors were left with debts and $5 billion worth of projects were in jeopardy. The cascade also runs in reverse: a subcontractor who collapses forces the builder to find a replacement at above-market rates on a tight timeframe.

7. Entry barriers are low, and re-entry is easy. Obtaining a builder's licence in Australia requires meeting minimum statutory requirements: typically a Certificate IV or Diploma in building and construction, plus documented experience. There is no minimum balance sheet requirement at entry level in most states. The visual shorthand is well known: a new SUV, a decal on the door, and you are open for business. A director whose building company fails can register a new company with ASIC in a day. In NSW, however, the failed company's building licence is automatically cancelled, and the director's individual licence may be cancelled too. NSW Fair Trading has discretion to refuse a new licence application, or to impose conditions on it, where a person has been involved in an insolvency within the previous ten years. Re-entry happens, but it requires a new licence application, and there is no guarantee of approval. The previous entity's debts and disputes do not automatically follow. This pattern is the foundation of phoenix activity in construction, the most misunderstood risk in the builder-selection process.

What the data shows

In FY2024-25, 3,596 construction companies entered external administration for the first time nationally, a record high and approximately 24% of all corporate administrations (ASIC Corporate Insolvency Update Issue 37, September 2025). In the first eight months of FY2025-26, construction remained the leading sector at 24% of all appointments (ASIC Corporate Insolvency Update Issue 39, March 2026).

Construction has held this position for four consecutive years. The trend is not driven by a single event or stimulus wind-down. It reflects persistent structural pressure.

The insolvency count is the highest of any industry by number. It is worth noting that it is not necessarily the highest by rate. When insolvency appointments are measured as a proportion of active businesses in the sector, other industries show comparable or higher closure rates. AICM data for the 12 months to November 2025 found that one in twelve transport businesses (8.46%) closed, a 40% year-on-year increase that placed transport closures on par with hospitality for sector volatility. Construction's concentration in absolute insolvency numbers reflects its size as an industry as much as its structural fragility.

What makes construction different in this data is not the rate. It is what happens when a builder fails. An insolvency in most industries is an inconvenience. In construction, it leaves a homeowner with a half-built house, unsecured creditor status, and, where insurance was not current or eligible, limited prospects of meaningful recovery.

These figures describe a structural condition, not a crisis. Most builds complete. The risk is concentrated in specific circumstances: where fixed-price contracts meet sharp cost increases, or where a builder's working capital is too thin to absorb a milestone delay.

Why 2026 conditions are making the underlying risk harder to absorb

The structural vulnerabilities described above have always existed. What changes year to year is how much pressure is placed on them. In 2026, several conditions are applying pressure simultaneously.

The RBA cash rate reached 4.35% in May 2026 after three 25-basis-point increases across January, March, and May. Higher rates raise the cost of any construction finance the builder carries and compress consumer demand for new builds and renovations.

Residential construction costs have risen 30.8% cumulatively since 2020 (CoreLogic Cordell Construction Cost Index). Builders delivering contracts signed in 2024 are doing so at 2026 input costs.

The HIA Trades Availability Index sat at -0.47 in Q4 2025, confirming a persistent structural labour shortage. Bricklaying was the worst-affected trade at -1.02. Skilled trades now compete with major infrastructure projects for the same workforce, pushing subcontractor rates higher.

Payday Super obligations commence 1 July 2026, requiring builders to pay superannuation on each payroll run rather than quarterly. For builders with thin working capital, the timing change adds a direct cash-flow obligation. Research cited by industry sources indicates that approximately 30% of small businesses were unaware of the change as of early 2026.

The 2026 conditions article covers this landscape in full detail.

A builder who looks established may still be under financial stress

One of the most persistent and expensive assumptions in residential construction is that size and longevity equal financial stability. They do not.

Probuild had annual revenues of $1.4 billion and was regarded as one of Australia's premier Tier-1 builders. It entered voluntary administration in February 2022. The collapse left approximately 2,300 creditors with unrecovered debts. A homeowner who had contracted with Probuild and applied every standard consumer heuristic (established company, large team, well-regarded) would have had no basis to anticipate this.

Beechwood Homes (NSW) operated for over 40 years and built more than 15,000 homes. A winding-up application was filed in the Supreme Court of Victoria in February 2026 by unpaid creditors. The company entered voluntary administration in April 2026, with 38 active home builds affected at that time (ASIC Published Notices, ACN 132 370 104). The warning signs that preceded the administration, including security fencing removed from sites because the hire company had not been paid, were visible in the public record. They are not signals a standard pre-contract check would surface.

Busyness is not the same as stability. A full project book, a large team, and decades of trading history are reassuring signals. They are not financial health indicators.

Read more on what actually predicts builder financial stability, and why turnover is not the answer. Similarly, a referral from a trusted source tells you about character and past work quality. It does not tell you about the builder's current financial position. The referral-versus-verification distinction matters more in construction than in almost any other consumer purchase.

What this means for you before you sign

The industry's elevated failure rate is real. It is also not random. The risk is concentrated in builders whose working capital cannot absorb fixed-price losses, who have accumulated debt ahead of a downturn, or who are growing faster than their cash flow allows. Most builders are not in that position. Most builds complete without a crisis.

The right question is not "is construction risky?" The right question is: "How does my specific builder compare on the indicators that matter?"

A licence check is a starting point, not a conclusion. It confirms that the builder holds a current licence in the relevant state. It does not confirm the financial health of the contracting entity, the director's history across prior companies, the currency of their insurance, their payment behaviour with subcontractors, or whether the licensed individual is actually the legal entity signing your contract.

NSW recorded 1,567 construction company collapses in FY2024-25, 44% of the national total. When a builder enters administration mid-project in NSW, homeowners with current HBCF coverage may be able to claim up to $340,000 for incomplete work or deposit loss, subject to policy conditions. Homeowners whose builder failed to arrange current HBCF coverage before accepting payment (or whose projects were not eligible) typically become unsecured creditors and recover significantly less. Those are the consequences of leaving background questions unasked before signing.

TrustSignal is a plain-English Builder Report that helps you check the key background signals on your builder before you sign: ASIC records, court and tribunal history, licence status, director history, and more. It is a decision aid, not a verdict on any specific builder. The complete verification guide explains every step. The NSW pre-contract checklist makes those steps practical before you sign.

Check your builder before you sign or pay a deposit.

Frequently asked questions

Q: Why does construction produce the most insolvencies of any Australian industry? A: Two reasons: scale and structure. Construction has the highest number of active businesses of any sector in Australia, and more businesses means more insolvencies in absolute numbers. But scale alone does not explain it. The seven structural features covered in this article (fixed-price contracts, thin margins, lumpy revenue, illiquid work in progress, long payment cycles, supply chain cascades, and low barriers to entry) make individual construction businesses harder to survive than those in almost any other consumer industry.

Q: Does construction have the highest business failure rate of any industry in Australia? A: By number of insolvency appointments, yes. By rate (insolvencies as a proportion of active businesses), the picture is more nuanced. AICM data for the 12 months to November 2025 found one in twelve transport businesses closed, a rate that rivals construction for sector volatility. Hospitality has long carried similarly high closure rates. Construction's outsized share of formal administration appointments reflects both the structural vulnerability of the business model and the sheer number of construction businesses operating at any time.

Q: Is the building industry getting more or less risky right now? A: The underlying structural risk has not changed. What has changed is the pressure applied to it. Cumulative residential construction cost inflation of 30.8% since 2020, an ongoing skilled trades shortage, three RBA rate increases in 2026, and Payday Super obligations commencing July 2026 are all placing additional pressure on builders whose working capital is already thin. ASIC's most recent data (Issue 39, March 2026) shows construction remains the leading sector for external administration appointments.

Q: Does a current builder licence mean my builder is financially stable? A: No. A builder's licence confirms that the holder has met the minimum statutory requirements to enter a building contract in their jurisdiction. It does not confirm the financial health of the contracting entity, the director's history across prior companies, insurance currency, or payment behaviour with subcontractors and suppliers. A licence check is a starting point, not a conclusion.

Q: What happened to the people whose builder went into administration? A: Outcomes vary depending on the state, the type of insurance held, and the stage of construction. Where Home Building Compensation Fund (HBCF) or equivalent state insurance was in place and current, homeowners may be able to claim for incomplete work or deposit losses, subject to policy limits. Where insurance was not current, or where construction had not yet commenced, homeowners typically became unsecured creditors in the administration and recovered significantly less. The NSW builder insurance article covers what each state's scheme covers and when it applies.

Q: Can a builder's director start a new company and keep working after their business fails? A: They can register a new company with ASIC quickly. But operating as a licensed builder is a separate question. In NSW, when a building company enters external administration or liquidation, the company's building licence is automatically cancelled. The director's individual licence may also be cancelled. NSW Fair Trading has discretion to refuse a new licence application, or impose conditions on it, where a person has been involved in an insolvency within the previous ten years. Re-entry happens, but it is not as straightforward as a new company registration. This is the mechanism behind phoenix activity in construction, and why checking a director's history across prior entities matters before you sign.

Q: What percentage of construction companies fail in Australia? A: In FY2024-25, 3,596 construction companies entered external administration for the first time. According to ABS data, there were 462,939 actively trading construction businesses in Australia at June 2025, the largest count of any industry. Against the 3,596 formal administrations in FY2024-25, that puts the formal insolvency rate at approximately 0.8% of active businesses per year. That formal rate is not the highest of any industry; transport and hospitality show comparable or higher closure rates when all exits are counted. What makes construction's number prominent is its absolute size: with more active businesses than any other sector, it produces more insolvency appointments in raw terms, accounting for approximately 24% of all national corporate administrations in FY2024-25. The more meaningful figure for a homeowner is not the industry rate but what happens when a specific builder fails mid-project, which is covered in the questions above.

Sources

This article is general information, not legal or financial advice. It is a decision aid, not a verdict on any specific builder. Individual circumstances vary. Verify licensing and insurance status directly with the relevant state regulator before entering any building contract.

Angus

20+ years as an information service exec, aggregating data to help people make better decisions.