• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Rose Litigation Lawyers

Contact us today
Brisbane: (07) 3211 2922
Gold Coast: (07) 5574 0011
  • Expertise
    • Litigation
      • Body Corporate Disputes
      • Class Actions & Representative Proceedings
      • Defamation Lawyers Brisbane & Gold Coast
      • Professional Negligence
      • Trusts Disputes
      • Will Dispute Lawyers
    • Insolvency, Bankruptcy & Debt Recovery
      • Bankruptcy
      • Corporate Insolvency Lawyers Brisbane, Gold Coast
      • Debt Recovery
      • Guarantees
      • PPSA
      • Restructuring
      • Securities
      • Security Enforcement
    • Building, Construction & Infrastructure
      • Adjudication
      • Contract Preparation & Risk Management
      • Dispute Resolution
      • Subcontractors’ Charges & Security of Payment
      • Supply & Trading Terms
    • Business Disputes
      • Consumer Protection & Trade Practices Disputes
      • Contract Disputes
      • Corporate Advisory & Crisis Management
      • Employment Disputes
      • Franchising Disputes
      • Insurance Disputes
      • Intellectual Property Disputes
      • Shareholder Dispute Lawyer Brisbane & Gold Coast
      • Company Director Disputes
    • Regulatory & Government
        • Administrative Appeals
        • ASIC Investigations
        • Government
        • Regulatory Investigations & Licencing
        • Taxation Disputes
    • Property Disputes
      • Commercial Lease & Retail Shop Lease Disputes
      • Conveyancing, Planning & Environment Disputes
  • Team
  • About Us
    • Why Choose Us
    • What our clients say
    • Our Community Stem
    • Join Our Team
    • Current Opportunities
  • Knowledge Centre
  • Contact Us
Obligation Free consultation

Enforcing adjudication decisions in QLD under the Building Industry Fairness Act

Request an obligation free consultation

Fill out the form below and outline your concerns. We’ll get back to you to organise your consultation.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Enforcing adjudication decisions in QLD under the Building Industry Fairness Act

Building, Construction & Infrastructure, Business Disputes

24 Nov 2021

If a claimant makes a payment claim under the Building Industry Fairness (Security of Payment) Act 2017 (Qld), they have, upon receiving the respondent’s payment schedule or the expiration of the time available to the respondent to give one, two (2) options for pursuing that claim. Those options are:

  1. If there is no payment schedule, or if the payment schedule proposes to pay an amount which is not paid by the due date for the progress payment to which the payment schedule relates – give the respondent a warning notice, wait 5 business days, and then recover the amount owed by the respondent by commencing a proceeding in Court of competent jurisdiction; or
  2. Apply for adjudication of their payment claim.

It is always better for a claimant to apply for an adjudication.

This is because the claimant’s decision to approach a Court to recover the amount owed by the respondent, instead of applying for adjudication, limits their options for enforcing their entitlement to payment on an interim basis. If a claimant does not apply for an adjudication and instead goes straight to Court, then they will miss out on their statutory rights to:-

  1. Suspend carrying out construction work, or supplying related goods or services, under section 98(1) of the Building Industry Fairness (Security of Payment) Act 2017 (Qld). If the claimant suspends carrying out construction work, or supplying related goods or services, under that section:
    1. The respondent is liable to pay the claimant the amount of any loss or expense incurred by the claimant because the respondent removes any part of the work or supply from the claimant’s contract; and
    2. The claimant is not liable for any loss or damage suffered by the respondent, or by any person claiming through the respondent, as a result.
  2. Require a higher party for the adjudicated amount to retain a sufficient amount to cover payment of the adjudicated amount, or a charge over that amount. This option is similar to claiming a subcontractor’s charge.
  3. Register a charge over the property that the claimant’s construction work was carried out on, or their related goods and services were supplied to – even if the property is not owned by the respondent, but by their family members, or related body corporates – and then enforce that charge.

These statutory rights only exist if a claimant applies for an adjudication of their payment claim and an adjudicator decides that an adjudicated amount is payable by the respondent. These statutory rights do not exist for a claimant who goes straight to Court, even if they obtain a final judgment for the amount owing by the respondent under the construction contract.

Call Rose Litigation Lawyers for more information about the law relating to progress payments.

SHARE:

Primary Sidebar

Areas of Practice

  • Business Services
  • Sales & Marketing
  • Litigation
  • Insolvency, Bankruptcy & Debt Recovery
  • Building, Construction & Infrastructure
  • Business Disputes
  • Regulatory & Government
  • Property Disputes
Rose Litigation Lawyers

Specialists In

  • Litigation
  • Insolvency, Bankruptcy & Debt Recovery
  • Building & Construction Lawyers Brisbane, Gold Coast
  • Business Disputes
  • Regulatory & Government
  • Property Disputes

Useful Links

  • Why Choose Us?
  • Our Team
  • Knowledge Centre
  • Contact Us

Brisbane

(07) 3211 2922
[email protected]
Level 16
324 Queen Street
Brisbane QLD 4000

Gold Coast

(07) 5574 0011
[email protected]
Level 9, Corporate Centre One
2 Corporate Court
Bundall QLD 4217

Proud member of:

Queensland Law Society logo Law Council of Australia logo CCF Logo 3 ALPMA Logo 4 Queensland Young Lawyers Logo 3 WIRQ Logo

Rose Litigation Lawyers © 2025 Liability Limited by a scheme under professional standards legislation
  • Sitemap
Website by