Home Energy Rating Preparation
Original plans are helpful for a home energy rating, but many existing homes do not have complete documentation.
This is common in established Australian homes. The original drawings may have been lost, never passed on during sale, changed by later renovations or replaced by incomplete real estate floor plans.
In many cases, a home energy rating enquiry can still begin without original plans. The key is to provide the best available information so the assessment pathway can be reviewed.
Quick Answer
Original plans are useful, but they are not always essential. Many existing homes can be reviewed using a combination of available drawings, site data, property photos, assessor observations, system details, renovation history and permitted assumptions under the relevant assessment pathway.
The main question is whether enough reliable information can be gathered to describe the dwelling, its construction, windows, systems, orientation and energy-related features.
If you do not have original plans, start with the property address, any available photos or documents, and the reason for the rating. Certified Energy can then review the likely assessment pathway.
Original plans can make a home energy rating easier because they show the layout, room sizes, orientation, elevations, construction details and sometimes window information.
They can also help identify which parts of the dwelling are original and which parts have been extended or renovated. This matters because different parts of the home may have different construction standards, insulation levels or glazing types.
Plans reduce uncertainty, but they do not remove the need to understand the home as it exists now.
It is very common for established homes to have missing or incomplete records. A house may have changed owners several times, been extended over decades or had renovations completed without the full documentation being kept with the property.
In some cases, the only available plan is a marketing floor plan from a real estate listing. In other cases, there may be council records, renovation drawings or informal sketches, but not the original construction documentation.
This does not automatically stop the enquiry. It simply means the assessment review needs to identify what information is available and what may need to be collected or confirmed.
If original plans are unavailable, other information may still help the assessment pathway review.
Useful alternatives may include:
The assessor does not need every document before an enquiry can start. The first step is usually to understand what information exists and whether the missing information can be addressed through the assessment process.
For existing homes, site data collection can help provide information that is missing from drawings. This may include layout, dimensions, windows, shading, system information and visible construction details.
Depending on the pathway, data collection may involve an assessor or trained data collector recording the dwelling as it currently exists. In some NatHERS existing homes trial delivery models, data could be collected in the home and then used by assessors off-site to produce a rating.
For more detail about the assessment process, see How Does a NatHERS Existing Home Assessment Work?
Photos do not replace the assessment, but they can help Certified Energy understand the property before confirming the likely pathway or quote requirements.
Useful photos may include:
Photos should only be taken from safe and accessible areas. Do not enter roof spaces, subfloor areas or unsafe locations just to gather information.
Renovated homes can be assessed, but the missing documentation question becomes more important. A renovation may have changed the dwelling’s layout, construction, insulation, windows, systems or roof form.
Helpful renovation information may include:
Even partial information can help. The goal is to reduce uncertainty where possible.
Even without original plans, the assessor will still need enough information to describe the dwelling and its energy-related features.
Useful starting information includes:
For a broader preparation checklist, see What Information Do You Need for a Home Energy Rating?
A missing plan does not automatically prevent a rating, but it can create uncertainty. Some details may be hidden, difficult to verify or only partly known.
This may affect how the assessor records information, what assumptions can be used and whether additional site data or clarification is needed before the rating can be completed.
The right approach depends on the property, the assessment pathway and the quality of the information available.
A real estate floor plan can be helpful as a starting point, especially if it shows room layout, approximate dimensions and the relationship between rooms.
However, real estate plans are usually not designed for energy assessment. They may not show construction details, glazing type, insulation, shading, roof form or system information.
Treat a real estate plan as useful supporting information, not as a complete replacement for assessment data.
Yes. If you do not have original plans, you can still request a pathway review or quote. The important thing is to provide the information you do have.
Start with the property address, available photos, any drawings or floor plans, renovation history, system information and the reason for requesting the rating.
Certified Energy can then review whether a rating pathway is suitable and what further information may be needed.
Original plans are helpful, but they are not always essential for a home energy rating. Many existing homes can still be reviewed using available drawings, site data, photos, observations, system information and permitted assumptions under the relevant assessment pathway.
Useful alternatives may include current floor plans, renovation drawings, real estate plans, site measurements, property photos, system details, renovation history, council records and on-site data collection.
Plans can support a NatHERS Existing Homes assessment, but existing homes often have incomplete documentation. The assessor needs enough reliable evidence and data to complete the assessment under the relevant pathway and technical requirements.
If a home has been renovated without available drawings, provide any information you have, such as approximate dates, photos, invoices, product details, council records or descriptions of what changed. The assessor can confirm what else may need to be checked.
Yes. Photos can help clarify the dwelling before the assessment pathway is confirmed. Useful photos may include elevations, rooms, windows, shading, heating and cooling systems, hot water, solar equipment and safely visible insulation or access areas.
Yes. You can usually begin by sending the property address, available photos, any documents you do have and the reason for the rating. The assessment pathway can then be reviewed.
Assessment Pathway Review
Send your property address, available photos and any documents you have so Certified Energy can review whether a home energy rating pathway is suitable.