The time needed to prepare a BASIX Certificate in NSW depends on the project type, the quality of the available documentation and whether additional assessment work is required. A simple project with complete plans can often move quickly. A more complex project, incomplete documentation, large areas of glazing or a required NatHERS thermal comfort assessment can take longer to review and finalise.
For most clients, the fastest pathway is to provide clear architectural drawings and project details at the beginning of the process. BASIX is part of the NSW planning approval pathway, so the certificate should match the plans and specifications that are submitted with the development application, complying development certificate or other approval documentation.
A BASIX Certificate can often be prepared quickly when the project is straightforward and the required information is complete. The timeframe becomes longer when plans are incomplete, design details are still changing, NatHERS modelling is required or the project needs revisions to meet BASIX targets.
A BASIX Certificate is not always a fixed duration task. The timeframe depends on how much information is already available and how much assessment work is needed before the certificate can be issued. A small alteration with clear documentation may be easier to process than a new custom home, duplex, townhouse project or multi dwelling development with several dwelling types.
The NSW Planning Portal advises users to review the relevant BASIX data input checklist and gather the required information before starting a BASIX assessment. This is good practical advice because missing information is one of the most common causes of delay. The assessment can only move efficiently when the assessor has enough information to understand the project and enter the correct commitments.
A straightforward BASIX Certificate may be faster when the project has clear plans, a simple building form, limited glazing complexity and known system selections. For example, a relatively standard new dwelling or alteration may be easier to assess if the site plan, floor plans, elevations, sections and basic construction details are already available.
However, even simple projects can slow down if key information is missing. If the assessor needs to ask for window sizes, roof details, floor areas, insulation assumptions, hot water selections, rainwater tank information or pool details, the timeframe will depend on how quickly those items can be confirmed.
More complex projects usually need more review time. This can include custom homes, large alterations, secondary dwellings, dual occupancies, townhouses, villas, residential flat buildings and projects with unusual design features. These projects may involve multiple dwelling types, different orientations, several roof forms, repeated window schedules, shared systems or different construction assumptions across the development.
A more complex project may also need closer coordination between BASIX, NatHERS and the architectural drawings. If the thermal comfort assessment shows that changes are needed, the BASIX Certificate may not be ready until the design team confirms how those changes will be handled.
The most common BASIX delays are not caused by the certificate itself. They usually come from missing information, unclear design decisions or changes made after the assessment has started. Common causes of delay include:
For many new residential projects, BASIX is closely connected to NatHERS thermal comfort modelling. NatHERS assesses the thermal performance of the dwelling, including orientation, glazing, insulation, shading, ventilation and construction systems. If the home does not meet the required thermal comfort outcome, the design may need to be adjusted before the BASIX Certificate can be completed.
This does not necessarily mean the process will be slow. It simply means that the timeframe depends on whether the building design already performs well enough, whether the documentation is clear and whether any required adjustments can be confirmed quickly. Early coordination between the designer, client and assessor can reduce the chance of last minute delays.
An urgent BASIX review may be possible if the project documents are complete, the assessment pathway is clear and the project does not require major design changes to meet the required targets. However, urgent turnaround is not only a matter of speed. The certificate still needs to be accurate and consistent with the plans submitted for approval.
If your project has a tight DA, CDC or certifier deadline, it is best to send the documents as early as possible and clearly explain the timing requirement. Certified Energy can then review the scope, identify missing information and advise whether the timeframe is realistic for the project.
The best way to help speed up a BASIX Certificate is to provide complete and current documents at the start. Before requesting a quote or assessment, prepare as much of the following information as possible:
You do not always need to wait until every design decision is final before asking for BASIX advice. In fact, early review can be helpful where the project has large glazing areas, difficult orientation, limited roof space for solar, uncertain rainwater tank locations or a complex renovation scope. Early review can identify issues before the approval set is locked in.
However, the final BASIX Certificate should be based on plans that are sufficiently developed for approval. If the design changes after the certificate is issued, the certificate may need to be amended so that the BASIX commitments continue to match the project documentation.
Certified Energy prepares BASIX Certificates for residential projects across NSW, including new homes, alterations and additions, secondary dwellings, dual occupancies, townhouses and multi dwelling developments. Our team can review the available documentation, confirm what information is still needed and advise the likely assessment pathway before the certificate is prepared.
If your project also requires NatHERS thermal comfort modelling, we can coordinate the BASIX and NatHERS components together so that the certificate, plans and performance requirements remain aligned before lodgement.
Send your available plans and deadline to Certified Energy and our team can review the project scope, identify missing information and confirm the likely next step.
Request a QuoteA BASIX Certificate can often be prepared quickly when the project is straightforward and the required documents are complete. The timeframe can increase when plans are incomplete, NatHERS modelling is required or design changes are needed to meet the targets.
Common delays include missing architectural drawings, unclear glazing information, incomplete construction details, unresolved system selections and project changes after the assessment has started.
An urgent review may be possible if the project documents are complete and the assessment pathway is clear. However, the certificate still needs to be accurate and consistent with the plans submitted for approval.
You can help speed up the process by providing complete plans, elevations, sections, window details, construction information and known system details such as hot water, rainwater tanks, pools, spas and solar panels.