NABERS Energy ratings and Tenancy Lighting Assessments are often discussed together, but they assess different parts of commercial building performance.
A NABERS Energy rating measures how efficiently an office building operates using verified energy-consumption data. A Tenancy Lighting Assessment, or TLA, examines the power density and control capacity of the general lighting installed within relevant office tenancy areas.
For many larger office properties being offered for sale, lease or sublease, these two assessments come together through the Building Energy Efficiency Certificate process.
In Brief
A Building Energy Efficiency Certificate, or BEEC, combines:
The NABERS rating provides a measured view of operational energy performance. The TLA provides a more focused assessment of the general lighting systems expected to remain within the tenancy.
Together, they give prospective buyers and tenants clearer information about the energy performance of a commercial office building or area.
NABERS is Australia’s nationally recognised system for measuring the operational environmental performance of buildings and tenancies.
For office buildings, a NABERS Energy rating uses actual energy-consumption data and relevant building information to compare performance against similar properties. Depending on the assessment boundary, the rating may apply to:
This makes NABERS distinct from design-stage energy modelling and National Construction Code compliance assessments. Rather than predicting how a proposed building should perform, NABERS examines how an occupied building has actually operated over the rating period.
A current rating can help owners, asset managers and tenants understand energy use, establish a reliable performance benchmark and track the effect of operational or capital improvements over time.
A Tenancy Lighting Assessment reviews the general lighting system installed within relevant commercial office tenancy areas.
The assessment considers two principal areas:
The assessment generally focuses on lighting that is expected to remain in the building when a tenant leaves and removes its fit-out. Permanent ceiling-mounted luminaires may therefore be included, while portable desk lamps and other tenant-owned fittings are generally outside the assessment boundary.
A TLA may consider both installed lighting and planned replacement lighting where this is relevant to the certification pathway.
A Tenancy Lighting Assessment does not determine:
Its purpose is specifically to disclose general lighting power density and the capacity of the associated lighting controls.
A Building Energy Efficiency Certificate is part of the Australian Government’s Commercial Building Disclosure program.
In most cases, a current registered BEEC is required before qualifying commercial office space of 1,000 square metres or more is advertised or offered for sale, lease or sublease. The precise obligation depends on matters including the transaction, office area, building use, ownership structure and whether an exemption applies.
The BEEC brings together two complementary forms of information:
Measures actual operational energy performance and compares the result with similar office buildings.
Assesses general lighting power density and the capacity of installed lighting control systems.
The NABERS rating is generally valid for up to 12 months. A certified TLA may remain valid for five years, although lighting changes or alterations to the assessed tenancy areas may make a review or modification necessary. As a result, the BEEC itself is generally valid for no longer than the associated NABERS rating.
The Commercial Building Disclosure program commonly applies where an existing office building or office area:
Additional rules apply to mixed-use properties, strata-titled buildings, newly completed buildings, recently refurbished buildings and shorter leasing transactions.
Because disclosure obligations must generally be addressed before marketing begins, owners and leasing teams should review the likely requirements early. Waiting until advertising is ready to launch can create avoidable pressure if energy records, building-area information, tenancy access or lighting documentation still needs to be assembled.
The exact information required depends on the property and assessment boundary, but the assessor may need access to:
Where drawings or schedules are incomplete, the assessor may need to verify more information during the site survey.
A coordinated assessment process begins by confirming the property, transaction and areas that need to be assessed.
The first step is to determine whether the office building or area is likely to be disclosure affected and whether an existing NABERS rating, TLA, BEEC or exemption is already current.
The assessor confirms which building services, tenancy spaces and lighting systems form part of the assessment.
Energy-consumption records, building-area data, occupancy information, plans, lighting schedules and control details are assembled and reviewed.
The assessor verifies relevant building information and surveys the general lighting system within the applicable tenancy areas.
The NABERS rating and TLA documentation are completed in accordance with the applicable program rules.
Once the required assessment components are available, the CBD Accredited Assessor can lodge the BEEC application on behalf of the owner or lessor.
Lighting upgrades can reduce the nominal lighting power density recorded within an office tenancy. Improved zoning, occupancy sensing, scheduling and other control strategies may also strengthen the control-system assessment.
However, the appropriate response depends on the existing system, tenancy layout and intended use of the space. Replacing luminaires solely to achieve a lower power-density figure may not produce a well-resolved lighting environment unless visual comfort, task requirements, maintainability and control behaviour are considered at the same time.
A TLA can identify how the installed general lighting performs within the disclosure framework. A broader lighting-design or energy-upgrade review may be needed to determine the most appropriate physical improvements.
A common source of confusion is the assumption that a good lighting assessment automatically produces a strong NABERS rating.
The TLA addresses one defined part of the office environment: general tenancy lighting power density and controls. A NABERS Energy rating reflects a much wider operational energy picture, using measured consumption over time.
Efficient lighting may contribute to lower energy use, but the overall NABERS result can also be influenced by central building services, operating hours, equipment loads, tenancy behaviour, control settings and other operational factors.
Similarly, neither assessment replaces National Construction Code compliance for a new building or fit-out. The NCC, NABERS and Commercial Building Disclosure pathways serve different purposes and should be scoped separately.
Early review gives building owners, asset managers and leasing teams time to identify missing records, confirm site-access requirements and understand whether existing assessments can still be relied upon.
It may also reveal opportunities to coordinate lighting upgrades, energy-performance improvements and leasing preparation rather than treating each activity as a separate last-minute task.
The result is a clearer disclosure process and a more reliable picture of the building’s operational and tenancy-level performance.
No. A NABERS Energy rating measures actual operational energy performance. A TLA assesses the power density and control capacity of general lighting within relevant office tenancy areas.
Yes. A BEEC combines a NABERS Energy for Offices rating with a Tenancy Lighting Assessment.
A certified TLA can remain valid for five years. Changes to the lighting systems or assessed tenancy areas may require the assessment to be reviewed or modified.
A certified NABERS rating is generally valid for up to 12 months because it is intended to represent current operational performance.
No. The mandatory disclosure requirements primarily apply to qualifying commercial office buildings and areas of 1,000 square metres or more when they are offered for sale, lease or sublease. Exclusions and exemptions may apply.
No. A TLA does not measure lux levels, lighting quality or suitability for a particular task. Those matters require a separate lighting-design or workplace assessment.
Potentially. Where the TLA remains current and the assessed lighting conditions have not materially changed, it may be used with a new current NABERS Energy for Offices rating. The assessor must confirm that it remains applicable.
Related Knowledge
NABERS Ratings and Measured Building Performance
Building Energy Efficiency Certificates and Tenancy Lighting Assessments
Tenancy Lighting Assessment Services
Project Review
Certified Energy can review the building, transaction and available documentation to help establish the appropriate NABERS, TLA and BEEC pathway.
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