A B C D E F G H I L M N O P Q R S T U V W Z

Purchasing Process 🤝

glossary guide
Read the Before You Sign Guide →

Finance & Lending 💰

glossary guide
Read the Finance Fundamentals Guide →

New Property Laws 2026 ⚖️

glossary guide
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →

Property & Ownership 🏡

glossary guide
Read the Understanding Title Guide →

Building & Approvals 🏗️

glossary guide
Read the New Builds & Renovations Guide →

Planning & Zoning 📋

glossary guide
Read the Buying in the Hinterland Guide →

Environmental & Land Constraints 🌿

glossary guide
Read the Buying in a Hazard Area Guide →

Flooding Terms 💧

glossary guide
Read the Buying in a Hazard Area Guide →

Bushfire Terms 🔥

glossary guide
Read the Buying in a Hazard Area Guide →

Waterfront & Marine

glossary guide

Energy & Sustainability ☀️

glossary guide
A
Acceptable Outcome (AO)
A prescriptive standard set out in a planning scheme code that, if met, is deemed to satisfy the corresponding Performance Outcome. Acceptable Outcomes provide a clear, measurable way to demonstrate compliance with the planning scheme without the need for judgement. If a proposed development meets the Acceptable Outcome, it satisfies the code requirement. If it does not meet the Acceptable Outcome, it may still comply if it can demonstrate it achieves the corresponding Performance Outcome through an alternative solution.
Accepted Development
A category of development under the Planning Act 2016 (Qld) that does not require a development approval. Accepted development can be carried out without applying to the council, provided it complies with any applicable accepted development requirements. Common examples include minor building works and certain uses that are consistent with the zone. Buyers should not assume that because something has been built it was assessable, some works are accepted development and required no approval at all.
Accepted Development (Subject to Requirements)
A sub-category of accepted development that does not require a development approval, but must still comply with specific requirements set out in the planning scheme or a regulation. These requirements may relate to setbacks, height, materials or other development standards. Failure to comply with the requirements does not make the development unlawful in the same way as unapproved assessable development, but it can create complications for future approvals or resale.
Acid Sulfate Soils
Soils containing iron sulfides that, when disturbed and exposed to oxygen, produce sulfuric acid. Common in low-lying coastal and estuarine areas of Noosa, particularly around the Noosa River, Lake Weyba and Noosaville. Disturbing acid sulfate soils during construction or earthworks can trigger significant management obligations, remediation costs and environmental harm. Always check acid sulfate soil mapping before purchasing low-lying land with development or earthworks intentions.
Adjustments at Settlement
Costs such as council rates, water charges or body corporate levies are adjusted between buyer and seller at settlement so each party only pays for the period they own the property.
Airtightness
A measure of how much uncontrolled air leaks through gaps, cracks and openings in a building's envelope. Poor airtightness allows hot or cold outside air to enter and conditioned air to escape, forcing heating and cooling systems to work harder. In subtropical climates like Noosa, airtightness works in tandem with deliberate cross ventilation — the goal is to control airflow rather than eliminate it entirely. Passivhaus certification requires rigorous airtightness testing. Relevant when assessing the energy efficiency and comfort of any home.
All Electric Home
A home with no gas connection that relies entirely on electricity for cooking, hot water, heating and cooling. Increasingly common in new builds as gas prices rise and solar PV systems make self-generated electricity more viable. An fully electric home paired with solar and battery storage can significantly reduce or eliminate energy bills. Buyers assessing new builds or recently renovated properties should confirm whether the home is fully electric and whether the electrical capacity supports future solar and battery installation.
Amalgamation
The process of combining two or more separate lots into a single lot. The opposite of subdivision. Amalgamation requires a development approval in most circumstances and results in a single title replacing the individual titles. Common reasons include combining adjoining lots to create a larger development site, or resolving a situation where a dwelling straddles two separate titles. In Queensland, amalgamation is a form of reconfiguring a lot and is assessed under the planning scheme.
AML/CTF
The abbreviation for Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing. From 1 July 2026, AML/CTF obligations apply to all Australian real estate professionals for the first time under the AML/CTF Amendment Bill 2024 — a national Commonwealth law applying in every state and territory. If your selling agent or buyer's advocate has asked for your identity documents before starting work, this is why. See also: Anti-Money Laundering, Counter-Terrorism Financing, AUSTRAC, Tranche 2, Customer Due Diligence.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Anti-Money Laundering (AML)
The process of detecting and preventing criminals from disguising illegally obtained money as legitimate income. Money laundering typically moves funds through a series of transactions — often through high-value assets like property — to obscure where the money came from. Real estate has long been identified as one of the highest-risk channels for money laundering in Australia because transactions involve large sums, complex ownership structures, and can move significant wealth in a single deal. From 1 July 2026, all Australian real estate professionals must take active steps to detect and prevent their services being used for money laundering. This is why your agent will ask for identity documents before acting on your behalf. New Zealand introduced the same requirement for real estate agents in January 2019. See also: AML/CTF, AUSTRAC, Tranche 2, Customer Due Diligence, Suspicious Matter Report.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
AUSTRAC
The Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre — Australia's financial intelligence regulator and the government body responsible for overseeing compliance with anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing laws. AUSTRAC regulates banks, financial institutions and, from 1 July 2026, real estate professionals including selling agents, buyer's advocates, conveyancers and property developers. Real estate businesses must enrol with AUSTRAC before providing designated services. If a transaction raises serious concerns, agents are legally required to file a Suspicious Matter Report with AUSTRAC. AUSTRAC has broad enforcement powers and civil penalties for non-compliance can reach up to 100,000 penalty units for a corporate entity. See also: AML/CTF, Tranche 2, Suspicious Matter Report, Reporting Entity.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Approval Risk
The uncertainty around whether a development application will be approved, and on what conditions. Approval risk exists whenever a buyer is purchasing a property with the intention to develop, subdivide, change the use or carry out works that require a development permit. Factors that increase approval risk include impact assessable development categories, complex overlay constraints, community opposition, referral agency requirements and inconsistency with the planning scheme. Buyers should assess approval risk carefully before purchasing a property where the value or utility of the purchase depends on obtaining an approval.
As Constructed Plans
Drawings that record the actual dimensions, layout and construction details of a building or structure as it was built, which may differ from the original approved plans. As constructed plans are sometimes required by council for final inspection certificates and are useful when purchasing a property with additions or alterations. They confirm what was actually built rather than what was approved, and can be important when assessing whether structures comply with the original development approval.
Assessable Development
Development that requires a development approval before it can be carried out. Assessable development is divided into code assessable and impact assessable categories, depending on the level of assessment required. In the Noosa region, many common property activities, including extensions, dual occupancy, short stay accommodation and subdivision, are assessable development. Buyers planning any of these activities should confirm the assessment category and likely approval pathway before purchasing.
Assessment Benchmarks
The standards against which assessable development is assessed under the Planning Act 2016 (Qld). Assessment benchmarks may include zone codes, overlay codes, local government infrastructure plans and state planning policies. For code assessable development, the assessment benchmarks are the relevant codes in the planning scheme. For impact assessable development, the assessment benchmarks are broader and may include strategic policies and the overall intent of the planning scheme. Understanding the applicable assessment benchmarks helps predict the likely outcome of a development application.
Assessment Manager
The entity responsible for assessing and deciding a development application under the Planning Act 2016 (Qld). In most circumstances, the Assessment Manager is the local government, in Noosa, that is Noosa Council, and for properties in the Sunshine Coast local government area, Sunshine Coast Council. For certain types of development, a private certifier may act as Assessment Manager for building work. The Assessment Manager is responsible for deciding whether to approve or refuse a development application, and for imposing conditions on any approval. Understanding who the Assessment Manager is for a given development proposal is important when assessing approval timelines, likely conditions and appeal rights.
Asset Protection Zone (APZ)
A managed buffer zone between a building and surrounding vegetation, designed to reduce fire intensity reaching the structure. APZ requirements are determined by the Bushfire Attack Level and must be maintained by the property owner.
Auction
A public sale where buyers bid competitively. In Queensland, properties purchased at auction do not have a cooling-off period and contracts are unconditional from the moment the hammer falls.
Full guide: Buying at Auction →
B
BAL Construction Requirements
The mandatory construction standards that apply to buildings based on their Bushfire Attack Level rating. Higher BAL ratings require progressively more stringent measures, including ember guards, metal window frames, sealed roof cavities, non-combustible cladding and toughened glass. These requirements are not optional and can add materially to construction costs. Buyers planning to build or extend in bushfire prone areas should obtain a BAL assessment and cost estimate before purchasing.
Battery Storage
A home battery system that stores electricity generated by solar PV panels for use when the sun is not generating — evenings, overcast days or during grid outages. Common systems include the Tesla Powerwall and similar products. Battery storage increases self consumption of solar energy and provides backup power capability. Buyers of homes with existing solar should confirm whether a battery is installed or whether the electrical system is battery ready. Battery systems typically add significant upfront cost but reduce ongoing grid electricity bills.
Berth
A designated space for mooring a vessel, either at a private pontoon or jetty, within a marina, or at a shared facility. In Noosa, berths at the Noosa Marina and along the river are sought after and can add significant value to a property or be purchased separately. A property advertised as having a berth may refer to a space at a shared facility rather than a private structure, always confirm the nature of the berth, any associated fees, and whether the right to use it transfers with the property.
Beneficial Owner
The natural person who ultimately owns or controls a property, company, trust or other entity — even if the legal title is held by another party. Under Australia's new AML/CTF laws from 1 July 2026, real estate professionals must identify and verify the beneficial owner of any entity purchasing property, not just the person signing the contract. This is particularly relevant for purchases made through companies, trusts, self-managed super funds (SMSFs) or foreign structures, where the legal buyer and the real beneficial owner may be different people. Failure to disclose beneficial ownership accurately is a serious compliance matter. See also: AML/CTF, Customer Due Diligence, Source of Funds, Tranche 2.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Best & Final Offer
A request from the selling agent for buyers to submit their strongest offer upfront. Buyers usually have only one opportunity to submit their price and conditions in a competitive situation.
Biodiversity Overlay
A planning overlay that identifies land with significant biodiversity values including habitat for threatened species, wildlife corridors and areas of high ecological sensitivity. Common across the Noosa hinterland and areas adjoining national parks and state forests. Can restrict clearing, earthworks and development. Noosa Shire's commitment to environmental protection means biodiversity overlays are taken seriously in the assessment of development applications.
Boat Ramp (Private)
A privately constructed ramp providing vessel access from a property to a navigable waterway. Private boat ramps on tidal land require Tidal Works Approval from Maritime Safety Queensland and, where the works are assessable development, a development permit from the local government. In the Noosa region, private boat ramps are most commonly found on larger waterfront lots along the Noosa River and its tributaries. Buyers should confirm that any existing boat ramp has been properly approved and that approvals are current and transferable.
Body Corporate
The governing body for units, townhouses or apartments in a community titles scheme. Manages common areas and levies ongoing fees. Always request a body corporate disclosure statement before purchase.
Full guide: Body Corporate →
Boundary Setback (Fire Related)
The minimum distance a building or structure must be set back from a property boundary to meet fire separation requirements under the NCC. In bushfire-prone areas, setback distances may also be governed by BAL requirements and the AS 3959 construction standard. Buyers assessing renovation or extension potential on properties with a BAL rating should confirm how boundary setback rules interact with fire safety requirements before assuming a build is feasible.
Bridging Finance
A short term loan used when buying a new property before selling an existing one. Typically more expensive than standard lending and carries risk if the existing property takes longer to sell than anticipated.
Building and Pest Inspection
A professional inspection conducted before settlement to identify structural defects, safety issues, termite activity or damage. Most Queensland contracts include a building and pest condition allowing the buyer to renegotiate or withdraw if significant issues are found.
Building and Pest Inspector
A licensed professional engaged to assess the structural condition of a property and identify evidence of pest activity, particularly termites. In Queensland, building inspectors must hold a QBCC licence and pest inspectors must hold a pest management licence. The two inspections are often conducted simultaneously and reported together, though they are technically separate assessments. A building and pest inspection is one of the most important steps in any property purchase and should always be conducted by an independent inspector engaged by the buyer, not recommended by the selling agent.
Full guide: Building and Pest Inspection →
Building Approval (BA)
Approval confirming proposed building work complies with the National Construction Code. Required before construction begins and issued by a licensed building certifier.
Building Approval Notice
The formal decision notice issued by the Assessment Manager, either the local council or a private certifier, approving assessable building work. The Building Approval Notice confirms that the proposed work complies with the Building Act 1975 and the National Construction Code, and sets out any conditions that must be met. It is the document that authorises construction to commence. Buyers of properties with recent construction or alterations should confirm that a Building Approval Notice was issued and that the work was completed in accordance with its conditions.
Building Certifier (Private Certifier / Building Surveyor)
The licensed professional who assesses and approves building work against the NCC and local planning requirements. In Queensland, certifiers operate either privately or through council — both are licensed under the QBCC and perform identical functions, including issuing building approvals, conducting inspections and issuing final certificates. Also known as a building surveyor; all three terms refer to the same role. Private certifiers are commonly engaged by builders and owner builders for speed and flexibility. Relevant when assessing renovation potential, verifying previous building approvals or coordinating new building work.
Building Code of Australia (BCA)
The former name for the National Construction Code (NCC), still commonly referenced by builders, inspectors and certifiers. The two terms are largely interchangeable in practice.
Building Designer / Draftsperson
A licensed professional who prepares architectural drawings and documentation for residential building work. A building designer is not a registered engineer and cannot certify structural elements — for anything requiring structural sign-off, a structural engineer must be engaged separately. In Queensland, building designers must hold a QBCC licence. They prepare the plans submitted for building approval, coordinate with engineers where required, and ensure the design meets the NCC and any relevant planning scheme requirements. On complex sites — steep slopes, reactive soils, or flood-affected land — the relationship between the building designer and the structural engineer is critical to getting a buildable, approvable design.
Building Development Approval (BDA)
A combined approval that incorporates both a development permit (for the planning aspects of development) and a building approval (for the building work aspects) into a single decision. Building Development Approvals are issued where a proposed development requires assessment under both the planning scheme and the Building Act 1975. In practice, most residential building work in Queensland involves separate building approvals rather than combined BDAs, but the term appears in planning documentation and historical approvals.
Building Envelope
The three-dimensional space within which a dwelling or structure must be located on a lot, defined by setback requirements, height limits and site cover controls. The building envelope represents the outer limits of where and how large a building can be. Understanding the building envelope for a given lot is essential for buyers planning to build or significantly extend, as it directly determines what is achievable before any construction begins.
Full guide: Building Envelope →
Building Line
A designated line on a plan or in a planning scheme that establishes the minimum distance a building must be set back from a road boundary or other feature. Building lines are similar to setbacks but are sometimes applied as a specific condition of a development approval or as a registered covenant on title. A building line registered on title is binding on all future owners and cannot be varied without the consent of the relevant authority.
Building Over Boundary
A situation where a structure, such as a wall, eave, deck, roof or outbuilding, is built on or across a property boundary line. Building over a boundary without the consent of the adjoining owner and, where required, a development approval is not permitted. In practice, building over boundary situations are discovered during survey or title searches and can create legal complications for both the property owner and the adjoining neighbour. Buyers should check for any structures that appear close to or on boundary lines and confirm their status through a survey or council records search.
Building Unit Plan (BUP) / Group Title Plan (GTP)
Legacy forms of title used in older strata and community title schemes in Queensland, predating the Body Corporate and Community Management Act 1997. Building Unit Plans applied to multi-storey buildings where individual units were separately titled. Group Title Plans applied to groups of buildings, typically townhouses, on a single parcel. These titles are still encountered on older units and townhouses, particularly those built in the 1970s to 1990s. Buyers purchasing in older complexes should confirm the title type and understand any differences in governance and levy structures compared to modern community titles schemes.
Bushfire Assessment
A formal site-specific assessment carried out by an accredited bushfire consultant to determine the Bushfire Attack Level (BAL) for a particular property. Required before new building work in bushfire prone areas. The cost sits with the owner or applicant. The resulting BAL rating determines the construction standards that must be met, and can significantly affect build costs.
Bushfire Attack Level (BAL)
A rating system that measures the risk a building faces from bushfire, ranging from BAL-LOW through to BAL-12.5, BAL-19, BAL-29, BAL-40 and BAL-FZ (Flame Zone). Higher ratings require more stringent construction standards and can affect insurance costs and availability.
Full guide: Bushfire Attack Level (BAL) →
Bushfire Hazard Overlay
A Noosa Plan overlay that identifies land subject to bushfire risk under local planning rules. Distinct from the state-level Bushfire Prone Area mapping, both can apply simultaneously. Triggers additional assessment requirements for development applications and can constrain building design, siting and materials. Check the Noosa Plan interactive mapping before purchasing any hinterland or bushland-fringe property.
Bushfire Management Plan
A plan that may be required for development in high-risk bushfire areas, outlining how bushfire risk will be identified and managed on a property. Required by some councils as part of the development approval process.
Bushfire Prone Area
Land identified by the state government as being at risk from bushfire. Triggers additional planning and building requirements in Queensland. Properties in Noosa's hinterland, including Doonan, Tinbeerwah, Cooroibah and Black Mountain, are commonly affected.
Buyer's Advocate (Buyer's Advocate)
A licensed property professional appointed exclusively by the buyer to act in their interest throughout the purchasing process. Also called a Buyer's Advocate, the two terms mean the same thing. A buyer's advocate sources properties (including off market), assesses value, conducts due diligence, negotiates on price and conditions, and manages the purchase from search to settlement. Their fee is paid by the buyer, not the seller, which means there is no conflict of interest with the vendor. In a market like Noosa where local knowledge, agent relationships and timing matter, independent buyer representation can be the difference between securing the right property at the right price and missing it entirely.
C
Cadastral Surveyor (Land Surveyor)
A licensed professional who surveys and confirms the legal boundaries of a property as recorded on title. A cadastral survey physically marks or verifies the corners and boundaries of a lot, and identifies any encroachments, boundary discrepancies or fencing that does not align with the legal title. Particularly important for acreage, hinterland and rural properties where boundary positions are unclear, where fencing has shifted over time, or where structures near the boundary need to be verified. In Noosa, where irregular lot shapes, sloping terrain and older surveys are common, a land survey before committing to purchase can prevent significant and costly disputes post-settlement. Typically costs $1,500–$3,000 depending on the property and complexity.
Caveat
A legal notice placed on the title by someone claiming an interest in the property. A caveat prevents the property from being transferred or mortgaged until the claim is resolved.
Certificate of Classification
A certificate issued under the Building Act 1975 confirming that a Class 2–9 building (such as an apartment, commercial or mixed use building) is classified for a particular use and may be occupied. Equivalent to the Form 11. For Class 1a residential dwellings, the equivalent document is the Form 21 Final Inspection Certificate. The Certificate of Classification confirms that the building complies with the approved plans and the National Construction Code and is fit for occupation in its designated classification.
Certificate of Occupancy
A general term used to describe the formal certification that a building is complete and fit for occupation. In Queensland, this concept is captured by the Form 11 (Certificate of Classification) for Class 2–9 buildings, and the Form 21 (Final Inspection Certificate) for Class 1a residential dwellings. The term Certificate of Occupancy is widely used by buyers and in general conversation, though technically the applicable form depends on the building class. Buyers should confirm that the appropriate certificate has been issued for any residential dwelling before purchasing.
Certificate of Title
The official document issued by the Queensland Land Registry that records ownership of a property and any interests registered against it, including mortgages, caveats, easements and covenants. In Queensland, the Certificate of Title has largely been superseded by electronic title records held in the Land Registry, but the term remains in common use to refer to the official record of a property's ownership and encumbrances. A title search accesses this record and produces a current copy showing the registered owner, any mortgages, caveats or other dealings, easements and covenants. Buyers should obtain a current title search as part of their due diligence — the Certificate of Title confirms who legally owns the property and reveals any interests that may affect use, transfer or financing. See also: Title Search, Easement, Caveat, Understanding Title.
Character Overlay
A Noosa Plan overlay applied to areas with recognised streetscape or neighbourhood character that council seeks to protect. Properties within a character overlay may face restrictions on demolition, significant renovation or new construction that would alter the established character of the area. Relevant for buyers purchasing older homes in established Noosa suburbs who intend to demolish and rebuild or undertake major alterations.
Class 1a
The NCC building classification for a single dwelling house or one of a group of attached dwellings. Useful to know when reviewing building approvals or verifying permitted uses under the planning scheme.
Class 1b
The NCC classification for a boarding house, guest house or hostel, or a dwelling used for short stay accommodation with more than 4 guests. Relevant in Noosa where short stay zoning and building classification are common buyer considerations.
Class 10a
The NCC classification for a non-habitable building, including garages, carports, sheds, farm buildings and private bushfire shelters. A Class 10a structure cannot legally be used as a dwelling or place of accommodation. This is commonly misunderstood on rural and hinterland properties where a shed, cabin or converted outbuilding may appear liveable but has never been approved for habitation. Always check the building approval classification of any structure before assuming it can be used, or marketed, as accommodation.
Class 10b
The NCC classification for structures that are not buildings in the traditional sense, including fences, retaining walls, masts, antennas, flagpoles and swimming pools. Relevant to buyers because pool safety compliance, retaining walls near boundaries and fencing can all be subject to building approval requirements. A swimming pool on a property requires both a building approval (as a Class 10b structure) and a current pool safety certificate.
Class 2
The NCC building classification for a multi-unit residential building where people live in separate dwellings above each other, typically apartments and flats. Each individual apartment is a separate lot, but the building itself is classified Class 2. Relevant when reviewing building approvals or body corporate records for unit purchases in Noosa.
Class 3–9
Under the National Construction Code, Classes 3 through 9 cover a broad range of non-residential and higher density buildings. Class 3 covers residential buildings used by unrelated people, such as boarding houses, hostels and backpacker accommodation. Classes 4 and 5 cover sole-occupancy dwellings within commercial buildings and general office buildings respectively. Class 6 is retail, Class 7 is car parks and warehouses, and Class 8 is factories and laboratories. Class 9 covers public-use facilities: Class 9a is healthcare buildings including hospitals, Class 9b is assembly buildings such as schools, theatres and sports facilities, and Class 9c is aged care buildings. For Noosa buyers, the most commonly relevant distinction is Class 1a (standard house), Class 1b (small guesthouses), Class 2 (apartments), and Class 9 where a property has any community or commercial use.
Climate Zone 2 (Subtropical)
The climate zone classification assigned to the Noosa region and much of coastal subtropical Queensland under the National Construction Code (NCC) and NatHERS rating system. Australia is divided into eight climate zones based on temperature, humidity and solar radiation patterns. Climate Zone 2 is defined as warm humid summer, mild winter — characterised by high summer humidity, warm to hot temperatures year round and relatively mild, dry winters. The zone classification directly affects building design requirements including minimum insulation R-Values, glazing specifications, ventilation standards and the NatHERS star rating methodology. A home rated or designed for Climate Zone 2 will perform differently to one designed for cooler southern zones — insulation levels, glazing specifications and passive design priorities all differ. Buyers comparing new build specifications or sustainability credentials should confirm they are being assessed against Climate Zone 2 standards. See also: NatHERS Rating, Passive Design, Insulation R-Value.
Coastal Hazard Overlay
A planning overlay that identifies land subject to coastal hazards including storm tide inundation, coastal erosion and sea level rise. Applies to properties near Noosa's beaches, estuaries and foreshore areas. Can restrict development, require additional engineering assessment and affect insurance. Always check coastal hazard mapping when purchasing near the coast or Noosa River.
Full guide: Coastal Hazard Overlay →
Code Assessable Development
A category of assessable development that is assessed against the relevant codes in the planning scheme, without requiring public notification or community consultation. Code assessable development is generally considered lower impact and more straightforward to approve than impact assessable development. Assessment is against specific performance outcomes and acceptable outcomes in the applicable code. Most residential extensions, dual occupancies and minor development in established residential zones falls into this category.
Combustible Cladding
External cladding material that can ignite and contribute to the spread of fire. Following several high-profile building fires in Australia and overseas, Queensland introduced mandatory cladding audits and rectification programs for affected buildings. Buyers of apartments or units in buildings constructed or clad between 1994 and 2017 should request the cladding checklist outcomes and any rectification status from the body corporate before purchasing. Unresolved cladding issues can result in significant special levies and may affect finance approval.
Community Title
A form of ownership where individual lots are held separately but share common property such as roads, shared facilities or open space. Common in estates, resorts and some residential developments in Noosa.
Compaction Certificate
A certificate issued by a geotechnical engineer or qualified testing laboratory confirming that fill material placed on a site has been compacted to the required density. Required by building certifiers before a slab or footing can be poured on filled ground. Without a compaction certificate, a certifier cannot confirm that the fill will adequately support the structure. For buyers looking at properties built on filled land — including many Noosa hinterland sites and properties on former flood plains — the absence of a compaction certificate for fill placed during construction is a red flag. It may indicate the fill was placed without oversight and could be subject to settlement or movement over time.
Comparable Sales
Recent sales of similar properties in the same area used to estimate market value. Reviewing comparable sales helps buyers determine whether an asking price or auction result is reasonable.
Counter-Terrorism Financing (CTF)
The process of identifying and preventing funds from being used to support terrorist activity. While less common in everyday property transactions than money laundering, terrorism financing is treated with equal seriousness under Australian law — in part because the methods used to move money are often identical. Property transactions can be used to transfer value across borders or between parties in ways that are difficult to trace. CTF obligations sit alongside anti-money laundering obligations under the same legislation — the AML/CTF Amendment Bill 2024 — and are regulated by AUSTRAC. When your real estate professional asks for identity documents and monitors transactions, they are meeting both AML and CTF obligations simultaneously. See also: AML/CTF, Anti-Money Laundering, AUSTRAC, Suspicious Matter Report.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Compliance Assessment
A type of assessment under the Planning Act 2016 (Qld) used for specific matters such as plan sealing for reconfiguration of a lot or subdivision. Compliance assessment is not a full development assessment, it confirms that a document, plan or other matter complies with specified standards or requirements. In a property purchase context, compliance assessment is most commonly encountered during the subdivision or titling process.
Concurrence Agency
A state government agency that must be consulted during the development assessment process because the proposed development may affect matters within that agency's jurisdiction. Common concurrence agencies include the Department of Transport and Main Roads, the Department of Environment and Science and Queensland Urban Utilities. A concurrence agency can impose conditions on a development approval. Buyers of development sites should be aware that state agency referrals can significantly influence approval conditions and timelines.
Condensation Risk
The potential for moisture to form on cold surfaces or within wall cavities when warm humid air meets a cooler surface. In Noosa's subtropical climate, condensation risk is particularly relevant in air-conditioned homes where cold internal surfaces meet humid external air. Condensation inside wall cavities — known as interstitial condensation — can lead to mould growth, timber rot and insulation degradation without being visible. A building inspector should assess vapour barriers, insulation placement and ventilation when inspecting properties in high-humidity environments.
Contract Conditions
Additional terms included in a property contract beyond the standard clauses. These may include finance approval, building and pest inspections, due diligence periods or the sale of another property.
Contract of Sale
The legally binding agreement between buyer and seller. Always have a solicitor or conveyancer review this before signing, not after.
Conveyancer
A licensed professional who manages the legal and administrative steps involved in transferring property ownership from seller to buyer. In Queensland, conveyancing is commonly handled by either a licensed conveyancer or a solicitor. Core tasks include reviewing the contract of sale, conducting searches, liaising with the lender, preparing transfer documents and coordinating settlement. It is strongly recommended to engage a conveyancer or solicitor before signing the contract, not after. Contract review at the offer stage can identify unfavourable terms before they become binding.
Full guide: Conveyancer vs Solicitor →
Cooling Off Period
A statutory right that allows a buyer to withdraw from a residential property contract within a set timeframe after signing, without needing to provide a reason. In Queensland, the cooling off period is 5 business days from the date the buyer receives a copy of the signed contract. If the buyer withdraws within this period, a penalty of 0.25% of the purchase price is payable to the seller — on a $1 million purchase, that is $2,500. The cooling off period applies to residential properties only and cannot be waived by the buyer in the contract. It does not apply to properties purchased at auction, properties purchased on the same day as an auction where the property passed in, or commercial properties. The 5-business-day period begins the day after the buyer receives the signed contract — understanding exactly when the clock starts is important, as missing the deadline means the buyer is bound to the contract on its existing terms. Buyers should not rely on the cooling off period as a substitute for proper due diligence before signing. It is a safety net, not a research period. See also: Contract of Sale, Unconditional Contract, Before You Sign Guide.
Full guide: Cooling Off Period →
Covenant
A legal restriction placed on a property title that limits how the land can be used or developed. Common in new estates where developers impose building or design guidelines.
Customer Due Diligence (CDD)
The process a real estate professional must follow to verify who they are dealing with before providing a service. From 1 July 2026, CDD is a legal requirement for all Australian real estate professionals under the new AML/CTF laws. In practice, it means verifying the identity of both buyers and sellers using government-issued photo ID and other documents, understanding the nature and purpose of the transaction, assessing whether the person or entity poses a money laundering or terrorism financing risk, and — for higher-risk transactions — conducting Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD). If you are purchasing through a company, trust or SMSF, CDD extends to identifying the beneficial owners of those structures. Your real estate professional cannot legally begin work on your behalf until initial CDD is complete. See also: AML/CTF, Beneficial Owner, Enhanced Due Diligence, Source of Funds, Tranche 2.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Cross Ventilation
Natural airflow created by positioning openings — windows, doors and louvres — on opposite or adjacent sides of a building so that prevailing breezes pass through the interior. Highly effective for passive cooling in subtropical climates like Noosa, where natural breezes can significantly reduce reliance on air conditioning. Effective cross ventilation depends on correct floor plan layout, window placement and orientation. Buyers should assess whether a home's layout allows breezes to flow through living areas, and whether windows on multiple aspects can be opened simultaneously. A home with good cross ventilation will feel noticeably cooler and more comfortable in warm weather.
D
Days on Market
The number of days a property has been publicly listed for sale. Days on market is a useful indicator of buyer demand and pricing, properties that sell quickly typically reflect strong demand or competitive pricing, while properties with high days on market may indicate pricing above market value, property-specific issues or limited buyer demand at that price point. In Noosa, days on market can vary significantly between suburbs and property types. When researching comparable sales, comparing days on market alongside sale price gives a more complete picture of market conditions.
Debt to Income Ratio (DTI)
A lending metric that measures a borrower's total debt obligations relative to their gross income. Expressed as a multiple, for example, a DTI of 6 means total debts are six times annual income. Australian regulators and lenders use DTI as one measure of borrowing risk. Higher DTI ratios can limit borrowing capacity or result in more restrictive loan conditions. Buyers with significant existing debts should discuss DTI with their mortgage broker as part of assessing their borrowing position.
Deemed to Satisfy (DTS)
A building solution that meets the NCC by following its prescriptive requirements. The alternative is a Performance Solution, which achieves the same outcome through a different method assessed by a certifier.
Deep Draft
The depth of water required at low tide to safely accommodate a vessel without grounding. Draft depth is a critical consideration for buyers with larger vessels or yachts, as many canals, rivers and waterways in the Noosa region are shallow in parts, particularly at low tide. Before purchasing a waterfront property with the intention to berth a vessel, buyers should verify the water depth at the mooring location at low tide and confirm it is sufficient for their specific vessel. The Noosa River, Lake Weyba and the North Shore waterways all vary in depth, and local knowledge is invaluable.
Deep Water Access
The ability to access navigable water from a property regardless of tide. A property with deep water access can accommodate larger vessels at all times, which is a significant premium feature in Noosa's waterfront market. Not all waterfront properties have deep water access, some canal and river frontages become too shallow at low tide for anything but a small dinghy. Buyers purchasing with a specific vessel in mind should confirm water depth and tidal range at the property's frontage before purchasing.
Defendable Space
The area around a property that can be managed to give firefighters or occupants a reasonable chance of defending the structure during a bushfire. Includes the Asset Protection Zone and Inner Protection Area.
Defined Flood Level (DFL)
The flood level used by council to set minimum floor heights for new buildings. Properties in flood-affected areas must build their habitable floor above this level. The DFL is determined by flood modelling and varies by location.
Deposit
The upfront payment made when signing the contract, usually 5–10% of the purchase price in Queensland. This is held in a trust account (usually by the selling agent) until settlement.
Full guide: Deposit →
Deposit Release
In some contracts, the seller may request early access to the buyer's deposit before settlement. Buyers should seek legal advice before agreeing, as the funds may be harder to recover if the contract falls through.
Development Approval (DA)
Approval from council required before most building work or changes to land use. Separate from a building approval. Checking existing DAs on a property can reveal what has been approved, refused or conditioned in the past.
Development Permit
The formal approval issued by a local government or referral agency that authorises assessable development to be carried out. A development permit sets out the conditions under which development may proceed and specifies any requirements that must be met. Development permits are generally tied to the land rather than the owner, meaning they transfer with the property. Buyers of development sites should review any existing development permits carefully, including conditions, currency periods and any infrastructure charges notices attached.
Development Potential
The capacity of a property to accommodate additional or alternative development beyond its current use, based on its zoning, lot size, overlays and planning scheme requirements. Development potential may include the ability to subdivide, build a secondary dwelling, add additional units, change the use or redevelop entirely. Buyers purchasing with development potential in mind should have the specific potential assessed by a town planner before purchasing, as what appears possible in principle may be constrained by overlay requirements, minimum lot sizes, infrastructure charges or site-specific limitations.
Dew Point
The temperature at which moisture in the air condenses into liquid water on a surface. Understanding dew point helps explain why mould forms on walls, ceilings and window frames in humid climates — when surface temperatures drop below the dew point of the surrounding air, condensation occurs and moisture accumulates. In Noosa's humid subtropical climate, dew point temperatures are frequently high during summer months, making adequate insulation, ventilation and air movement important factors in preventing moisture-related building problems.
Double Glazing / Triple Glazing
Window systems using two or three panes of glass separated by an air or gas-filled gap to improve thermal insulation and reduce heat transfer. Double glazing significantly reduces heat gain in summer and heat loss in winter compared to single pane glass, and also reduces condensation on internal window surfaces. Triple glazing offers superior performance and is standard in Passivhaus construction. In Noosa's subtropical climate, double glazing on west and north facing windows can meaningfully reduce solar heat gain and cooling loads. Low-E coatings are often applied to glazing units for additional performance.
Drainage Plane / Weather Barrier
The layer within a wall assembly designed to intercept any water that penetrates the outer cladding and direct it back out of the wall before it can reach the structural framing or insulation. Also referred to as a weather barrier or water resistive barrier. In a correctly detailed wall, the drainage plane sits between the external cladding (weatherboards, render, cladding panels) and the structural frame, allowing any moisture that gets past the outer surface to drain harmlessly down and out at the base of the wall. Without an effective drainage plane, water that penetrates cladding joints, gaps or cracks can reach the timber framing, insulation and internal linings — leading to rot, mould and structural damage. In Queensland's high-rainfall subtropical climate, drainage plane detailing is particularly important. Building inspectors should check flashing, window reveals and cladding junctions where the drainage plane is most commonly compromised. Relevant for buyers assessing older homes with render or fibre cement cladding, and for anyone commissioning new construction or cladding replacement. See also: Sarking, Vapour Barrier, Stormwater Management, Mould and Moisture Risk.
Designated Service
The legal term under the AML/CTF Amendment Bill 2024 that defines which activities trigger anti-money laundering compliance obligations. For real estate, the key designated services are: acting as an agent to buy, sell or transfer property on behalf of a client (selling agents and buyer's advocates); and selling property directly to purchasers as a developer. Property management, leasing and holiday letting are generally not designated services and are not captured by the new laws. The distinction matters: a buyer's advocate triggers AML/CTF obligations from the moment a formal engagement agreement is signed. A general market conversation does not. See also: AML/CTF, AUSTRAC, Tranche 2, Customer Due Diligence, Reporting Entity.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Dual Occupancy
A development where two separate dwellings are built on a single lot, either attached (duplex) or detached. Common as a strategy to maximise land use or generate rental income from a granny flat or secondary dwelling. Whether dual occupancy is permitted depends on the zone and lot size under the applicable planning scheme. In Noosa Shire, secondary dwellings are permitted in some residential zones subject to minimum lot size, setback and infrastructure requirements. Always confirm with the planning scheme before purchasing with dual occupancy intent.
Full guide: Dual Occupancy →
Due Diligence
The investigation period where buyers confirm the property meets their expectations before the contract becomes unconditional. This typically includes finance approval, building and pest inspections, title searches, council checks and reviewing body corporate records.
Full guide: Due Diligence →
E
Easement
A right held by a third party to use part of the land for a specific purpose, such as a drainage easement or access easement. Shown on the title and can affect what you can build or do on that portion of land.
Full guide: Easement →
Engineer's Report
A written assessment prepared by a registered engineer covering a specific aspect of a property or proposed development. In a property purchase context, engineer's reports are most commonly obtained for structural concerns identified during a building inspection — cracking, movement, subsidence, retaining wall condition or footing problems. An engineer's report is not the same as a building inspection report; it is a specialist assessment by a registered professional who can certify findings and recommend remediation. The cost of obtaining an engineer's report during due diligence is modest compared to the cost of discovering a structural problem after settlement. Always ask your building inspector whether any findings warrant referral to a structural engineer.
Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD)
A higher level of identity and background checking required in property transactions that carry elevated money laundering or terrorism financing risk. Standard Customer Due Diligence applies to all transactions, but EDD is triggered in specific circumstances including: purchases by foreign persons or entities; purchases through complex trust or company structures; transactions where the source of funds is unclear or unusual; and dealings with Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs). Enhanced Due Diligence may require evidence of where the funds are coming from and how the wealth was accumulated — questions that can feel intrusive but are a legal requirement under the AML/CTF laws. See also: AML/CTF, Customer Due Diligence, Beneficial Owner, Politically Exposed Person, Source of Funds, Source of Wealth.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Eaves
The section of a roof that overhangs beyond the external wall of a building. In passive solar and subtropical design, eaves are one of the most important and cost effective shading tools available. Correctly sized eaves on north facing windows block the high summer sun while allowing the lower winter sun to penetrate and warm interior spaces. In Noosa's climate, deep eaves on north and west facing walls significantly reduce solar heat gain and cooling loads. Eaves also protect wall cladding and windows from rain, extending the life of external materials. When assessing a home's passive design credentials, eave depth and orientation are among the first things to check. Note that eaves form part of the outermost projection (OMP) for setback measurement purposes. See also: Shading Design, Passive Solar Design, Outermost Projection (OMP).
Electric Vehicle Charging / Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (EV Charging)
The electrical infrastructure required to charge an electric vehicle at home, typically a dedicated circuit with a hardwired EV charger (Level 2 charger) installed in a garage or carport. As EV adoption accelerates in Australia, buyers are increasingly factoring in whether a home has existing EV charging infrastructure or whether the electrical panel has sufficient capacity to support future installation. A standard EV charger requires a dedicated 32A circuit. Homes with solar PV systems can charge EVs using self-generated electricity, significantly reducing running costs. For buyers purchasing older homes, an electrician can assess the switchboard capacity and installation requirements. New builds and major renovations are increasingly including EV-ready conduit as a low cost future proofing measure. See also: Solar PV System, All Electric Home, Battery Storage.
Full guide: EV Charging at Home →
Electronic Conveyancing / PEXA
The digital platform used in Queensland (and nationally) for completing property settlements electronically. PEXA (Property Exchange Australia) allows solicitors, conveyancers and financial institutions to exchange documents and funds digitally at settlement, replacing much of the traditional paper-based process. Most Queensland property settlements now occur through PEXA. Buyers should be aware that their solicitor or conveyancer will typically use PEXA, and that settlement occurs electronically rather than at a physical location. Settlement proceeds are disbursed digitally, and title transfer is registered electronically with the Queensland Titles Registry.
Ember Attack
The most common way buildings are lost in bushfire, burning embers carried by wind can ignite homes well ahead of the fire front. Construction standards address ember attack through requirements for ember guards, sealed gaps and non-combustible materials.
Embodied Carbon
The carbon dioxide emissions associated with manufacturing, transporting, installing and disposing of building materials — distinct from the operational carbon produced by running the home. Concrete, steel and aluminium have high embodied carbon; timber, particularly mass timber, has significantly lower embodied carbon. As buildings become more energy efficient in operation, embodied carbon represents a growing proportion of a building's total lifetime emissions. Increasingly relevant for buyers, developers and architects considering sustainability beyond energy ratings.
Full guide: Embodied Carbon in Buildings →
Embodied Energy
The total energy consumed in producing, transporting and installing building materials, from raw material extraction through to completion of construction. Distinct from operational energy, which is the energy used to run the home over time. High embodied energy materials include aluminium, steel and concrete. Lower embodied energy alternatives include timber, recycled materials and local stone. Relevant for buyers and builders considering the full environmental impact of new construction or significant renovation.
Embodied vs Operational Carbon
Two distinct categories of carbon emissions associated with a building. Embodied carbon covers the emissions generated in producing, transporting and installing the building materials — the carbon cost of construction before anyone moves in. Operational carbon covers the emissions generated by running the building over time through energy consumption for heating, cooling, hot water, lighting and appliances. Historically, operational carbon dominated a building's lifetime emissions. As buildings become more energy efficient and electricity grids shift toward renewables, embodied carbon represents a growing share of total lifetime emissions — for a very high performance home powered by solar, construction emissions may eventually exceed cumulative operational emissions over the building's life. For buyers, the practical implication is that material choices matter alongside energy efficiency: a poorly insulated home with high operational carbon is a poor outcome, but so is a building constructed from unnecessarily high embodied carbon materials when lower embodied alternatives were available. See also: Embodied Carbon, Embodied Energy, Operational Energy, Lifecycle Costing (LCC).
Encroachments
Structures, fences, buildings or vegetation that extend beyond a property's legal boundary and into a neighbouring property, a road reserve or public land. Encroachments are identified through a cadastral survey and can affect the value, use and future development potential of a property. They can also create legal liability for the property owner. Common encroachments include fences built on the wrong alignment, overhanging eaves, retaining walls and outbuildings. Buyers of properties with boundary-sensitive structures should consider commissioning a survey to confirm boundary positions before purchasing.
Encumbrance
Any legal claim or restriction attached to a property's title, including easements, covenants, caveats or mortgages. These may limit how the land can be used or transferred.
Enforcement Notice
A formal notice issued by a local government under the Planning Act 2016 requiring the recipient to remedy a breach of the planning scheme or a development approval. An Enforcement Notice may require the removal of an unapproved structure, cessation of an unlawful use, or rectification of non-compliant works within a specified timeframe. Failure to comply with an Enforcement Notice can result in significant penalties and council-ordered works at the owner's expense. Buyers should conduct a council search during due diligence to confirm whether any Enforcement Notices have been issued against the property.
Environmental Overlay
A planning overlay that identifies land with significant ecological, biodiversity or environmental values, including koala habitat, waterway corridors, wetlands and remnant vegetation. Properties subject to an environmental overlay may face restrictions on clearing, earthworks and development. Common across much of the Noosa hinterland and areas near the Noosa River system. Check the Noosa Plan interactive map before purchasing land with development or clearing intentions.
Environmentally Sustainable Design (ESD)
An umbrella term for building and design practices that reduce environmental impact over a building's lifecycle. ESD encompasses passive design (orientation, ventilation, shading), energy efficiency (insulation, glazing, solar), water efficiency (rainwater harvesting, WELS rated fixtures), sustainable materials and indoor environment quality. In planning and development contexts, ESD is increasingly referenced in local government policies and development approval conditions. For buyers, a home described as having ESD principles applied should be assessed on specifics rather than the label alone — there is no single certification that defines it. See also: NatHERS Rating, Passive Solar Design, Lifecycle Costing (LCC).
Erosion Prone Area
Land identified as being at risk from coastal or riverine erosion. In Noosa, erosion prone areas are common along beachfronts, dune systems, headlands and the Noosa River foreshore. Building setbacks, restrictions on coastal protection works and development constraints apply. Always check whether a property falls within an erosion prone area before purchasing near the coast or river.
Exchange of Contracts
The moment when both buyer and seller have signed the contract and the other party has been notified, making it legally binding. In Queensland there is no formal exchange ceremony as in some other states, the contract is binding once both parties have signed and notification has occurred. The cooling off period begins from this point for private treaty sales.
Exclusive Use Area
A designated area of common property in a community titles scheme, or an area of leased public or tidal land, set aside for the exclusive use of a particular lot owner. In the context of waterfront and canal properties, exclusive use areas are commonly applied to pontoons and jetties located on public or inundated land adjoining a property. The rights, obligations and maintenance responsibilities for an exclusive use area should be clearly documented in the body corporate by-laws or a lease agreement. Buyers should confirm the terms of any exclusive use area before purchasing, particularly in relation to ongoing costs, renewal rights and transferability.
Exempt Development
Development that is entirely exempt from the planning scheme and does not require any form of development approval. Exempt development is typically minor in nature, such as small sheds, garden structures or internal works that do not affect the building's envelope. The list of exempt development varies by council area and is set out in the planning scheme or state regulations. Buyers should not assume that all minor works fall into this category, always check before carrying out any building or site works.
Existing Use Rights
A legal protection that allows a use or development to continue even though it no longer complies with the current planning scheme, provided it was lawfully established under the rules that applied at the time. In Queensland, existing use rights are protected under the Planning Act 2016. They do not automatically transfer to a new owner in all circumstances and can be lost if the use ceases for an extended period. Buyers purchasing a property with a non-conforming use, such as a commercial activity in a residential zone or a short stay operation in an area now restricted, should seek legal advice on the status and transferability of any existing use rights before purchasing.
Expression of Interest (EOI)
A sale method where buyers submit written offers by a specified closing date. The seller reviews all offers and chooses whether to negotiate with one or more buyers. Common for premium properties in Noosa.
Expression of Interest Campaign
A method of sale where buyers submit written offers by a specified closing date, without a fixed asking price. Expressions of Interest campaigns are commonly used for premium, unique or development properties where the market value is difficult to determine or where the vendor wishes to test the market. Unlike an auction, EOI campaigns are not subject to the same public bidding process, and the vendor is not obligated to accept any offer received. Buyers participating in an EOI campaign should seek legal advice before submitting an offer, as conditions and terms vary significantly between campaigns.
F
Fill (Engineered Fill vs Uncontrolled Fill)
Material added to a site to raise the ground level, level an uneven surface, or build up a platform for construction. Engineered fill is placed and compacted in controlled layers to a specified density, overseen by a geotechnical engineer, and documented with a compaction certificate — it can be built on with confidence. Uncontrolled fill is material dumped without oversight, compaction testing or documentation. It may contain variable material including rubble, organic matter or clay, and is unsuitable as a foundation for structures without further investigation. Many properties in Noosa's hinterland and coastal fringe have been cut and filled to create building platforms. Always ask whether any fill on a site is engineered and whether a compaction certificate exists — your building inspector and a geotechnical engineer can help assess this during due diligence.
Finance Clause
A condition in the contract that allows the buyer to withdraw if finance is not formally approved by a set date. Pre approval is not the same as formal approval, always have a finance clause in your contract until approval is confirmed.
Full guide: Finance Clause →
Finished Ground Level (FGL)
The actual ground level at a particular point after all earthworks, filling, excavation and landscaping have been completed. Distinct from natural ground surface, which is the original pre-development ground level. Finished ground level is used to measure elements such as the height of retaining walls, pool coping above ground, deck heights and the clearance of structures above the ground. Where a property has been filled or cut, the finished ground level may be significantly different from the natural ground surface. Both terms appear in Queensland's building regulations and planning documents, and understanding the difference is relevant when assessing the compliance of existing structures or planning new building work. See also: Natural Ground Level, Setbacks.
Fire Egress / Means of Escape
The NCC-required pathways that allow occupants to safely exit a building in a fire emergency. Requirements vary by building class and cover door widths, corridor lengths, stair widths, travel distances to exits and illuminated exit signage. Relevant for buyers assessing apartment buildings, dual occupancies or any attached multi-dwelling buildings. Non-compliant egress in older buildings can be a significant defect and a costly remediation item.
Fire Resistance Level (FRL)
A measure of a building element's ability to resist a fire for a specified period, expressed as three time values in minutes for structural adequacy, integrity and insulation. For example, an FRL of 90/90/90 means the element must maintain structural adequacy, prevent the passage of flames and hot gases, and limit heat transfer for 90 minutes each. FRL requirements are set by the NCC based on building class, height and construction type. Relevant when assessing the construction standard of attached or multi-storey buildings.
Fire Safety System
The combination of passive and active fire protection measures required in a building under the NCC and relevant Australian Standards. Includes smoke alarms, sprinkler systems, fire doors, hydrant systems, emergency lighting and exit signage. For buyers of apartments and units, the adequacy and maintenance status of the fire safety system is a body corporate responsibility but a due diligence item. Annual fire safety inspections are required for most Class 2 buildings in Queensland.
Fire Separation / Fire Rated Wall
A wall, floor or ceiling assembly with a specified Fire Resistance Level (FRL) designed to contain the spread of fire between parts of a building or between adjoining buildings. Required by the NCC between attached dwellings, between units in a building, and between certain rooms or occupancies. The adequacy of fire separation between dwellings is a relevant building inspection item, particularly in older dual occupancies, townhouses and apartment buildings where construction standards may predate current requirements.
First Home Buyer Concessions
Queensland offers transfer duty concessions and grants for eligible first home buyers. The First Home Concession provides a full or partial exemption from transfer duty on properties valued up to a specified threshold. The First Home Owner Grant (FHOG) provides a cash grant for eligible new home purchases. Thresholds, eligibility criteria and grant amounts are set by the Queensland Revenue Office and updated periodically. Buyers purchasing their first home in Noosa should check current thresholds, as median prices in some suburbs exceed eligibility limits. Always confirm current concession thresholds with the Queensland Revenue Office or your solicitor before proceeding.
Flame Zone (BAL-FZ)
The highest Bushfire Attack Level, where direct flame contact with a structure is considered possible. Extremely stringent construction requirements apply and some insurers will not cover properties in this zone. Always check BAL rating before purchasing in bushfire prone areas.
Flood Immunity
Whether a property's habitable floor level sits above the Defined Flood Level. A property described as having flood immunity has its floor built above the DFL, reducing risk and typically making it easier to insure and finance.
Flood Overlay
A planning overlay that identifies land subject to flood risk. In Noosa, flood overlays affect parts of Noosaville, Tewantin, Cooroy and some hinterland areas. Properties affected by a flood overlay may face restrictions on building height, floor levels and use.
Full guide: Flood Overlay →
Flood Resilient Design
A design approach for buildings and structures that minimises flood damage and allows for faster recovery after a flood event. Flood resilient design principles include elevating habitable floor levels above defined flood levels, using flood-compatible materials in lower areas, designing for easy clean-up, and ensuring critical services are located above flood levels. In the Noosa region, flood resilient design is increasingly relevant for properties in flood-affected areas and may be required as a condition of development approval. Buyers of flood-affected properties should understand what flood resilient design measures are in place or required.
Foreign Buyer Surcharge
An additional transfer duty surcharge payable by foreign persons acquiring residential property in Queensland. As at 2026, the surcharge is 8% of the dutiable value, applied on top of standard transfer duty. Foreign persons include non-residents and certain visa holders. Temporary residents on some visa categories may be exempt. The surcharge applies to both direct purchases and indirect acquisitions through trusts and companies. Buyers who are not Australian citizens or permanent residents should seek specific advice from a Queensland solicitor before entering into a contract.
Foreshore
The area of land between the high water mark and the low water mark of a tidal waterway. In Queensland, the foreshore is Crown land, it is owned by the state, not by the adjoining private landowner. Buyers of ocean-front, river-front and estuarine properties in Noosa should understand that their title does not extend below the high water mark. Any structures built on or over the foreshore, including pontoons, jetties and boat ramps, are located on Crown land and require separate approval from the state. The foreshore cannot be fenced off or treated as private land.
Form 2 - Seller's Disclosure Statement
A statutory disclosure document that Queensland sellers must provide to buyers before or at the time of signing a contract. The Form 2 is one of the most important documents in a Queensland property transaction. It discloses known material facts about the property including outstanding charges, drainage and sewerage notices, contaminated land notices, heritage listing, body corporate levies and any orders or requirements affecting the property. Buyers should read it carefully before signing. If a Form 2 is not provided at all, or contains a serious omission or misrepresentation, the buyer may have grounds to terminate the contract or seek compensation. A conveyancer or solicitor can identify any items in the Form 2 that warrant further investigation.
Form 6 - Agent Appointment
The Queensland statutory agreement used to formally appoint a real estate agent. When signed by a seller, it appoints the selling agent and sets out the agent's authority, commission structure, marketing obligations and appointment period. Importantly, buyer's advocates also operate under a Form 6, but one signed exclusively by the buyer. This is a meaningful distinction: a selling agent's Form 6 binds them to act in the seller's interest, while a buyer's advocate's Form 6 binds them to act solely in the buyer's interest. If you are engaging a buyer's advocate, you will be asked to sign a Form 6 before they can act on your behalf. Always read it carefully and clarify the fee structure, scope of service and any exclusivity period before signing.
Form 11 - Certificate of Occupancy
Issued by the building certifier upon completion of a Class 2–9 building (including apartments and commercial buildings) to confirm all work complies with the building approval. The equivalent document for a standard residential dwelling (Class 1a) is the Form 21 Final Inspection Certificate. Buyers purchasing apartments or units in a new development should confirm the Form 11 has been issued before settlement.
Form 12 - Aspect Inspection Certificate
Issued by a competent person, such as a structural engineer or specialist certifier, to certify that a specific technical aspect of building work complies with the approval. Common aspects include glazing, structural steel and specialist engineering elements. For buyers, Form 12 certificates in a property's records indicate that specialist work was independently verified during construction.
Form 15 - Compliance Certificate for Building Design
Issued by an engineer or building designer to certify that a design or structural specification complies with the NCC and relevant standards. Typically provided before construction starts. For buyers of new or recently built properties, Form 15 certificates in the records indicate that the design was independently certified before work commenced.
Form 16 - Inspection Certificate (Stage of Work)
Issued by a building certifier or competent person to certify that a stage of construction, such as footings, slab or frame, has been inspected and complies with the building approval. A property with complete Form 16 records indicates each construction stage was properly signed off. Missing stage certificates on a recently built property can be a red flag worth investigating.
Form 17 - Pool Safety Inspection Certificate
Issued by a licensed pool safety inspector to certify that a swimming pool's fencing and barrier meets Queensland's pool safety standard. Required to be provided to buyers as part of any property sale that includes a pool. A Form 17 must be current, an expired certificate means the pool has not been recently inspected and the safety barrier may not comply.
Form 21 - Final Inspection Certificate
Issued by the building certifier upon completion of a residential dwelling to confirm all work has been inspected and complies with the building approval. The Form 21 marks the formal end of the building approval process for Class 1a and 1b buildings. Buyers of newly built homes should always confirm the Form 21 has been issued before settlement, without it, the building approval process is technically incomplete.
Form 43 - Aspect Certificate (QBCC Licensee)
Issued by a QBCC-licensed contractor to certify that specialised trade work complies with the building approval. Common examples include waterproofing, termite protection, fire systems and certain mechanical installations. For Noosa buyers of new or recently renovated properties, Form 43 certificates provide evidence that licensed specialists certified their own work, an important layer of compliance documentation.
Freehold Title
Outright ownership of land and any structures on it, registered on the Queensland title register. The owner holds the land indefinitely with no obligation to pay ground rent or lease fees to a superior landowner. Freehold is the most common and most secure form of land ownership in Queensland. Torrens Title is the system used to record and transfer freehold ownership. Distinguished from leasehold title, where the land is owned by a third party and the occupant holds a long term lease.
G
Gazumping
When a seller accepts a higher offer from another buyer after having already verbally agreed to sell to someone else. In Queensland, no binding contract exists until both parties have signed, meaning a seller can legally accept another offer right up until exchange. Gazumping is legal but considered poor practice. Having your offer accepted in writing and moving quickly to a signed contract is the best protection against it.
Gazundering
When a buyer drops their offer price at the last minute, typically just before contracts are signed, knowing the seller has few alternatives. More common in slower markets where the seller may already be committed to another purchase. Considered poor practice and damaging to the negotiation relationship. Ethical buyer advocacy focuses on fair negotiation, not pressure tactics.
Geotechnical Engineer
An engineer who specialises in the behaviour of soils, rock and groundwater and their interaction with structures. In a property purchase context, a geotechnical engineer is engaged when there are concerns about the ground conditions — reactive soils, filled land, steep slopes, landslip risk, or sites where the soil classification is unknown or uncertain. A geotechnical investigation typically involves soil testing, laboratory analysis and a written report recommending appropriate footing types and construction methods. In Noosa's hinterland, where many properties sit on sloping terrain with variable soil conditions, a geotechnical assessment can be essential before committing to a build or major renovation. The cost of a geotechnical investigation is far less than the cost of rectifying footing problems after construction.
Going Concern
Primarily a commercial property concept, though relevant in residential contexts where a property includes an active business component. A going concern refers to a business that is operational and expected to continue operating. In property transactions, the sale of a going concern can have significant GST implications — under certain conditions, the sale of a property plus an ongoing business (such as a motel, serviced apartments or established short stay letting operation) may be GST-free if both parties are registered for GST and meet the ATO's going concern requirements. Buyers purchasing a property with any active business component should seek specific advice from their accountant or solicitor on whether going concern treatment applies and what conditions must be met. Incorrectly assuming going concern status can result in an unexpected GST liability at settlement.
Green Star
A voluntary sustainability rating system administered by the Green Building Council of Australia (GBCA) that assesses the environmental performance of buildings across categories including energy, water, indoor environment quality, materials and land use. Green Star ratings range from 4 stars (best practice) to 6 stars (world leadership). More commonly applied to commercial and multi-residential buildings than individual houses. Buyers assessing apartment or mixed-use developments may encounter Green Star ratings as part of a developer's marketing, though independent verification of the rating should be confirmed. Distinct from NatHERS, which specifically measures the thermal performance of the building's design. See also: NatHERS Rating, 7 Star Energy Rating.
Greywater Recycling
The collection, treatment and reuse of wastewater from household sources such as showers, baths, bathroom basins and laundry — excluding toilet waste, which is classified as blackwater. Treated greywater can be reused for garden irrigation and, in some systems, toilet flushing. In Queensland, greywater systems are regulated — untreated greywater cannot be used on gardens or discharged to stormwater, and systems must comply with the Plumbing and Drainage Act. Buyers of properties with existing greywater systems should confirm the system has appropriate council approval and is compliant with current standards. Increasingly relevant in the context of water conservation, particularly for properties with established gardens. See also: Rainwater Harvesting.
H
Habitable Floor Level
The minimum height a floor must be above the Defined Flood Level to be considered liveable under council planning rules. Non-habitable areas such as garages or storage may be permitted at a lower level, but bedrooms, living areas and kitchens must meet the habitable floor level requirement.
Habitable Room
A room used for normal domestic activities, including bedrooms, living rooms, dining rooms, studies and similar spaces. Under the Building Code of Australia, a habitable room must meet minimum requirements for floor area, ceiling height, natural light and ventilation. Bathrooms, laundries, toilets, pantries, walk-in wardrobes, corridors and garages are not classified as habitable rooms. The distinction is relevant for buyers assessing whether a room marketed as a bedroom or study legally qualifies as one — a room that does not meet the habitable room standard cannot be counted as a bedroom for building classification purposes, and may affect what the property can lawfully be advertised as. This is particularly relevant when assessing converted spaces, attic rooms, basement rooms or structures built without approval.
Height Limit
The maximum building height permitted under the planning scheme for a given zone or location. Height limits in Noosa are strictly enforced and vary by zone. Low Density Residential areas typically have lower limits than commercial or mixed-use zones. Specific areas such as Noosa Heads and Hastings Street have particularly stringent height controls to preserve view corridors and the low-rise coastal character. Always check the applicable height limit before purchasing with plans to build upwards or add a second storey.
Heritage Overlay
A planning overlay that identifies places of cultural heritage significance, including buildings, structures, sites and landscapes, and applies specific requirements to development affecting those places. In the Noosa Planning Scheme, the Heritage Overlay aims to protect the heritage values of identified places. Development affecting a heritage-listed property or its setting may require development approval regardless of whether it would otherwise be accepted development. Buyers of heritage-listed properties should understand what constraints apply before purchasing, particularly if they intend to renovate, extend or demolish any part of the property.
Full guide: Heritage Overlay →
High Water Mark (Mean High Water Mark)
The boundary line that defines the landward edge of Crown tidal land and, in most cases, the seaward boundary of a waterfront property title in Queensland. Properties fronting tidal waterways, including the ocean, the Noosa River, tidal canals and estuaries, typically have their lot boundary defined by the high water mark rather than a fixed line. This means the legal boundary of the property can shift over time as a result of natural erosion or accretion of the shoreline. Buyers of tidal waterfront properties should understand the implications of a moving boundary, particularly in erosion-prone areas where the lot may effectively shrink over time.
Home Based Business
A business activity carried out from a residential property by a resident of that property. Under the Noosa Planning Scheme, home-based business is a defined use with specific requirements relating to the scale of the activity, the number of employees, signage, client visits and the preservation of the residential character of the property. Some forms of home-based business are accepted development; others may require approval. Buyers intending to operate a business from their home should confirm what is permissible under the applicable zone and whether any approval is required before purchasing.
Home Hosted Accommodation (Bed and Breakfast)
A form of short stay accommodation where the owner or permanent resident hosts guests within their primary place of residence — the host must reside on the property during every stay. This is the key distinction from short stay letting, where the owner is not required to be present. Under Noosa Council's local law (effective February 2022), home hosted accommodation requires a one-off Council approval plus annual renewal, in the same way as short stay letting. Under the Noosa Planning Scheme, home hosted accommodation may also be code-assessable depending on the scale of operation, with criteria including that the host is a permanent resident, guest numbers are limited and the residential character of the property is maintained. Buyers considering operating a home hosted accommodation arrangement should confirm both the planning scheme requirements and the local law approval process before purchase. See also: Short Stay Letting, Short Stay Accommodation Area.
Hot Water System
The system used to heat and store water for domestic use. The main types relevant to Noosa buyers are: gas storage (a tank heated by gas burner), gas instantaneous or continuous flow (heats water on demand with no storage tank), electric resistance storage (a tank with an electric heating element, the least efficient option), heat pump water heater (uses refrigeration technology to extract heat from surrounding air, making it 3 to 4 times more efficient than electric resistance), and solar hot water with electric or gas boost (roof-mounted collectors with a storage tank). From a sustainability and running cost perspective, a heat pump water heater is generally the preferred choice for fully electric homes. Solar hot water is also effective but requires dedicated roof space. Gas systems have lower upfront cost but ongoing fuel bills and higher emissions. For buyers assessing an existing system, age matters — most hot water systems have a lifespan of 10 to 15 years and replacement should be factored into the purchase assessment for older systems. An aging gas system presents a natural opportunity to switch to a heat pump water heater at replacement time. See also: All Electric Home, Solar PV System, Operational Energy, Lifecycle Costing (LCC).
Full guide: Hot Water System Types →
Hygrothermal Performance
The combined behaviour of heat and moisture movement through a building's walls, roof and floor assemblies. Heat and moisture do not act independently — humid air carries heat, moisture within insulation reduces its thermal effectiveness, and temperature gradients drive moisture movement through building materials. Hygrothermal analysis is used by building designers to predict whether a wall or roof assembly will accumulate moisture over time (a condition known as interstitial condensation), which can lead to mould growth, timber decay and progressively degraded thermal performance. In Noosa's humid subtropical climate, hygrothermal performance is particularly relevant for tightly constructed or heavily insulated homes where moisture cannot easily escape through natural air movement. The specification of breathable membranes, vapour control layers and ventilated cavities within wall and roof assemblies are all hygrothermal design responses. Relevant for buyers assessing high performance new builds or commissioning Passivhaus or near-Passivhaus construction. See also: Interstitial Condensation, Relative Humidity, Vapour Barrier, Airtightness, Sarking.
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Impact Assessable Development
The highest category of assessable development, requiring public notification and the opportunity for independent submissions as part of the assessment process. Impact assessable development is typically reserved for higher-impact proposals, such as major subdivisions, commercial development in residential zones, or uses that are not contemplated by the planning scheme. The assessment process is more complex and time consuming than code assessment, and outcomes are less certain. Buyers considering development that falls into this category should seek planning advice before purchasing.
Inclusions and Exclusions
What is and isn't included in the sale. Fixtures (items permanently attached, such as light fittings and built-in wardrobes) are generally included unless specifically excluded. Chattels (moveable items such as appliances or furniture) are excluded unless specifically listed. Always check the contract carefully.
Induction Cooking
A cooking method that uses electromagnetic energy to heat cookware directly, rather than heating a burner or element that then transfers heat to the pot. Induction cooktops are faster than gas or conventional electric, more energy efficient (less heat is lost to the surrounding air), easier to clean and produce no combustion byproducts indoors — a meaningful indoor air quality advantage in a tightly designed home. Induction requires magnetic cookware: cast iron and most stainless steel work, but aluminium and copper do not. Induction cooking is a core component of fully electric home design and is increasingly standard in new builds and quality renovations as gas connections are phased out. For buyers transitioning from gas, switching to induction typically involves replacing some cookware alongside the cooktop. Running costs are significantly lower than gas in most scenarios when paired with solar. See also: All Electric Home, Hot Water System, Operational Energy.
Infrastructure Agreement
A formal agreement between a developer or property owner and a local government relating to the provision or funding of trunk infrastructure, such as roads, water supply, sewerage, drainage or parks, beyond what is covered by standard infrastructure charges. Infrastructure Agreements are negotiated where development triggers infrastructure requirements that are not addressed by the standard charges resolution. They are most commonly encountered for larger developments or sites with unusual infrastructure needs. Buyers of development sites should check whether any Infrastructure Agreement is in place and understand the obligations it creates.
Infrastructure Charges
Contributions levied by local government on new development to fund public infrastructure, including roads, water supply, sewerage, stormwater drainage and open space. In Queensland, infrastructure charges are calculated using a council-adopted charges resolution and are typically triggered by new builds, extensions adding additional bedrooms or bathrooms, and subdivision. In Noosa Shire, infrastructure charges can add $20,000 to $60,000 or more to the cost of a new home or subdivision, depending on the type and scale of development. Buyers intending to subdivide, build or significantly extend a property should request a charges estimate from council during due diligence.
Inner Protection Area (IPA)
The zone immediately around a building, typically within 10 metres, where fuel loads such as leaf litter, bark and long grass must be kept low. Part of the defendable space strategy around a property in a bushfire prone area.
Insulation R Value
A measure of a material's resistance to heat flow — the higher the R-Value, the better the insulating performance. R-Values are assigned to individual insulation products (batts, boards, spray foam) and are also calculated for composite assemblies such as a complete wall or roof system. The NCC specifies minimum R-Values for different climate zones. Queensland's subtropical climate zones require different R-Value targets than cooler southern states. Buyers of new builds should confirm the insulation specification meets or exceeds NCC minimums for the climate zone. In older homes, checking whether ceiling insulation is present and its condition is a standard building inspection item.
Insulation Types (Batts, Rigid Board, Spray Foam)
The three main categories of insulation used in residential construction, each with different performance characteristics and applications. Batts (also called blanket insulation) are the most common — flexible fibreglass or polyester panels installed between wall studs and ceiling joists. Rigid board insulation (polystyrene or polyisocyanurate) provides higher R-Values per millimetre and is used in walls, under slabs and in roof systems. Spray foam insulation expands to fill cavities and provides both insulation and air sealing in one application, offering superior airtightness but at higher cost. In Noosa's subtropical climate, ceiling insulation is the highest priority — roofs are the primary source of heat gain and loss. Buyers of older homes should confirm whether ceiling insulation is present, its type and condition, as degraded or missing insulation is a common cause of poor thermal performance. See also: Insulation R-Value, Thermal Envelope, Airtightness.
Insurance Broker
A licensed professional who sources and arranges insurance cover on behalf of the buyer, accessing policies from multiple insurers rather than representing a single provider. For property buyers in Noosa, engaging an insurance broker is particularly valuable when purchasing in flood-affected, bushfire prone or coastal hazard areas, where standard online quotes may be inaccurate, unavailable or subject to significant exclusions. Building insurance should be arranged from the point the contract goes unconditional, not at settlement, the buyer bears the risk of loss or damage from that point.
Interstitial Condensation
Condensation that forms within the layers of a building's wall, roof or floor assembly — between the internal lining and external cladding — rather than on visible surfaces. It occurs when warm, humid air penetrates the building envelope and meets a surface cool enough to cause moisture to condense, typically within insulation, timber framing or cavity spaces. In Noosa's humid subtropical climate, interstitial condensation is most relevant in air-conditioned homes where the temperature differential between cool interior surfaces and the warm humid exterior is significant. Left undetected, interstitial condensation leads to mould growth, timber decay and degradation of insulation performance — all without visible signs on interior surfaces. Prevention relies on correct placement of vapour barriers, appropriate insulation specification and adequate ventilation of wall and roof cavities. A building inspector cannot typically detect interstitial condensation directly, but signs of unexplained mould or wall damage may indicate it. See also: Condensation Risk, Vapour Barrier, Mould and Moisture Risk, Airtightness.
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Koala Conservation Overlay
An overlay under the Noosa Planning Scheme and state vegetation mapping that identifies land supporting koala habitat or koala movement corridors. Properties within the Koala Conservation Overlay are subject to constraints on vegetation clearing, fencing design, pool and dam siting and certain development activities. The overlay is most commonly encountered in hinterland suburbs including Black Mountain, Doonan, Verrierdale, Lake Macdonald and parts of Tewantin and Noosaville. Buyers of hinterland properties should check whether the overlay applies and understand the constraints before purchasing, particularly if they intend to clear vegetation, install fencing or build new structures near bushland.
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Land Tax
A Queensland state government tax levied on investment properties where the total taxable value of land exceeds a set threshold. Principal places of residence are generally exempt. Seek advice from an accountant before purchasing an investment property.
Lawful Use
A use of land or a building that has been lawfully established, either because it was approved by development permit, it was accepted development at the time it commenced, or it pre-dates the requirement for approval. The lawful use of a property is an important consideration in due diligence, particularly for properties with a history of commercial, short stay or mixed activity. A use that appears to be operating does not necessarily mean it is lawfully established. Buyers should confirm the lawful use status of any non-standard activity through a planning search or advice from a town planner.
Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI)
Insurance charged by lenders when a buyer borrows more than 80% of the property's value. LMI protects the lender, not the buyer, if the loan defaults. It can add tens of thousands of dollars to the cost of a purchase.
Lifecycle Costing (LCC)
An assessment method that accounts for all costs associated with a building or asset over its entire useful life, rather than focusing solely on the initial purchase or construction cost. Lifecycle costs include acquisition costs, ongoing operating costs (energy, water, maintenance), scheduled repair and replacement costs, and end of life or disposal costs — all typically discounted to present value using a discount rate so that future costs can be meaningfully compared to costs incurred today. In residential property, LCC reframes the question from what a home costs to buy to what it costs to own over a defined period, typically 20 to 30 years. A home with a higher purchase price but lower annual energy, maintenance and repair costs may have a significantly lower lifecycle cost than a cheaper property requiring ongoing remediation or energy-intensive operation. LCC is well established in commercial property, infrastructure and government procurement but rarely applied in residential purchase decisions. Buyers comparing properties with different sustainability specifications, age or condition can use a simplified LCC approach — estimating annual cost differences and multiplying by expected ownership period — to assess whether a price premium is justified on financial grounds. See also: Operational Energy, NatHERS Rating, Passivhaus.
Loan to Value Ratio (LVR)
Your loan amount expressed as a percentage of the property's value. An LVR above 80% typically triggers Lenders Mortgage Insurance. A lower LVR generally means better interest rates and a stronger borrowing position.
Lot and Plan
The legal description of a property as recorded on title, for example, Lot 42 on RP123456. Used to identify properties precisely in contracts, title searches and planning documents.
Low Emissivity Glass (Low-E Glass)
Glass with a microscopically thin metallic coating that reduces heat transfer through the window by reflecting infrared radiation while allowing visible light to pass through. In subtropical climates like Noosa, Low-E glass is primarily used to reduce solar heat gain — keeping interiors cooler without blocking daylight. Often used in combination with double glazing units. Relevant for buyers assessing new builds or considering window upgrades as part of a renovation, particularly on north and west facing elevations where solar heat gain is most significant.
Low Volatile Organic Compounds (Low VOC Materials)
Building and finishing materials that emit low levels of volatile organic compounds — chemicals that evaporate at room temperature and can affect indoor air quality. Common sources of VOCs in buildings include paints, varnishes, adhesives, flooring finishes, particleboard and MDF products, and sealants. High VOC concentrations indoors are associated with health effects including headaches, eye irritation and respiratory issues. Low-VOC or zero-VOC paints and finishes are now widely available at similar cost to conventional products. In humid subtropical climates like Noosa where windows are frequently open, VOC build-up is generally less of a concern than in tightly sealed homes in cooler climates — but the specification of low-VOC materials is still a meaningful indicator of a thoughtful approach to indoor environment quality. Relevant for buyers assessing new builds, recently renovated properties or homes with significant new joinery and flooring.
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Marine Access Structure
A general term for any structure that provides vessel access from a property to a navigable waterway, including pontoons, jetties, boat ramps, gangways, piles and floating platforms. Marine access structures on tidal land require Tidal Works Approval from Maritime Safety Queensland and, where assessable development is involved, a development permit from the local government. In Noosa, marine access structures are a significant value driver for waterfront properties and are closely scrutinised by buyers of luxury river and canal properties. Approvals, licences and maintenance obligations should all be verified during due diligence.
Maritime Safety Queensland (MSQ)
The Queensland state government body that regulates structures on tidal waterways, including pontoons and private jetties. MSQ issues waterway licences for the installation and ongoing use of waterfront structures. Buyers purchasing waterfront properties in Noosa Waters, along the Noosa River or on tidal canals should confirm that any existing pontoon or jetty has a current MSQ waterway licence, and understand the process for transferring or reapplying for that licence at settlement.
Material Change of Use (MCU)
A formal development approval required when changing how land or a building is used, for example, converting a house to a short stay accommodation business, or changing a commercial tenancy to a different use class. An MCU application is assessed against the planning scheme and involves a council decision process. Buyers planning to change the use of a property after purchase should confirm whether an MCU is required before committing.
Matters of National Environmental Significance (MNES)
Environmental values protected under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (Cth) that trigger a requirement for federal government assessment and approval. MNES include threatened species and ecological communities, migratory species, wetlands of international importance, Commonwealth marine areas and world heritage properties. Development that is likely to have a significant impact on MNES requires referral to the federal Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water, regardless of whether state or local government approval is also required. Buyers of rural, coastal or hinterland properties should check whether any MNES values are present on or near the site.
Matters of State Environmental Significance (MSES)
Environmental values identified under Queensland state legislation that must be considered in land use planning and development assessment. MSES include regulated vegetation, wetlands, waterways, fish habitat areas, biodiversity corridors, koala habitat and other ecological features protected under state environmental law. Development that may affect MSES may require referral to the relevant state agency and can trigger additional assessment requirements or conditions. In the Noosa region, MSES mapping is relevant for many hinterland, coastal and waterfront properties. Buyers should check MSES mapping through the Queensland Globe and relevant state agency mapping tools.
Mechanical Ventilation (HRV / ERV)
A controlled fresh air system that replaces stale indoor air with filtered outside air, maintaining indoor air quality without relying on opening windows. Heat Recovery Ventilation (HRV) systems recover warmth from outgoing air to pre-heat incoming air — most relevant in cooler climates. Energy Recovery Ventilation (ERV) systems also transfer moisture, making them more suitable for humid subtropical climates like Noosa where controlling indoor humidity is a priority. Mechanical ventilation is standard in Passivhaus construction and increasingly specified in high performance custom homes. Relevant for buyers with respiratory health considerations or those assessing tightly constructed new builds.
Mechanical Ventilation with Heat Recovery (MVHR)
A mechanical ventilation system that continuously supplies fresh filtered air to a building while recovering heat from the outgoing stale air to pre-condition incoming air. In cooler climates, MVHR is highly effective at maintaining fresh air quality without losing the warmth built up inside a well-insulated home. In subtropical climates like Noosa, an Energy Recovery Ventilator (ERV) is generally more suitable — it transfers both heat and moisture between incoming and outgoing airstreams, helping to control indoor humidity rather than simply recovering warmth. MVHR and ERV systems are standard features of certified Passivhaus buildings and are increasingly specified in high performance custom homes where airtight construction limits natural ventilation. For buyers assessing a home with mechanical ventilation, confirm the system type, maintenance history and filter condition. See also: Mechanical Ventilation (HRV / ERV), Passivhaus, Airtightness.
Minimum Lot Size
The smallest lot area permitted under the planning scheme for a given zone. Relevant when assessing subdivision potential, a property must generally meet or exceed the minimum lot size for each new lot created. Minimum lot sizes vary across Noosa zones and are set out in the Noosa Plan. A large property does not automatically mean it can be subdivided, always check the applicable minimum lot size for the zone before purchasing with subdivision in mind.
Minor Building Work
Low-impact building work that, depending on its nature and scale, may not require a building approval or may qualify as accepted development under the planning scheme. The definition of minor building work varies depending on the applicable state regulation and local planning scheme. Common examples include small sheds under a certain floor area, non-structural internal alterations and minor repairs. Buyers carrying out work described as minor building work should still confirm the applicable requirements, as the threshold for what qualifies varies and some works that appear minor still require inspection or certification.
Mooring
A permanent anchor point in a waterway to which a vessel is secured, as an alternative to anchoring. In Queensland, placing a mooring on a tidal waterway requires approval from Maritime Safety Queensland. On the Noosa River and Lake Weyba, moorings are regulated and the number of permitted moorings is limited. A property advertised as having a mooring should be verified, confirm the mooring has a current MSQ approval and that the approval is transferable to the new owner.
Mortgage Broker
A licensed credit adviser who sources and arranges home loans on behalf of borrowers, accessing products from a panel of lenders rather than representing a single bank. A mortgage broker assesses your borrowing capacity, recommends suitable loan structures and manages the application process through to formal approval. In Queensland, mortgage brokers are nationally licensed through ASIC and are required to act in the best interests of the borrower under responsible lending obligations. Engaging a broker before you begin inspecting seriously allows you to understand your borrowing capacity, pre approval status and the distinction between pre approval and formal approval, which is critical when buying at auction or in competitive markets.
Mould and Moisture Risk
A property assessment consideration in subtropical climates like Noosa and the Sunshine Coast, where high humidity, heavy seasonal rainfall and inadequate ventilation create favourable conditions for mould growth. Mould can establish in wall cavities, subfloor spaces, roof spaces, bathroom areas and behind wall linings where moisture accumulates undetected. Remediation can be costly and recurring if the underlying moisture source — poor ventilation, water ingress, inadequate subfloor drainage — is not addressed. Buyers should ask building inspectors to specifically assess subfloor ventilation, bathroom sealing, roof space moisture, and any evidence of past or current water ingress. Properties that have been closed up for extended periods, particularly holiday rentals, are higher risk. See also: Subfloor Ventilation, Condensation Risk, Dew Point.
Multiple Offer Situation
When several buyers submit offers on the same property at the same time. The selling agent may ask all interested parties to submit their best and final offer, often without revealing competing prices.
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NatHERS Rating (Nationwide House Energy Rating Scheme)
The Australian system for measuring the thermal performance of a home's design, expressed as a star rating from 0 to 10. A higher rating means the home requires less artificial heating and cooling to maintain comfortable temperatures. Since May 2024, new homes in Queensland must achieve a minimum 7 Star NatHERS rating under the updated NCC. The rating is based on factors including orientation, insulation, glazing, shading and ventilation — all highly relevant in Noosa's subtropical climate. Buyers of new or recently built homes should confirm the NatHERS rating was achieved and ask for the energy assessment report. See also: 7 Star Energy Rating.
Full guide: NatHERS Rating →
National Construction Code (NCC)
The primary technical standard for the design and construction of buildings in Australia, formerly known as the Building Code of Australia (BCA). Sets minimum requirements for structural integrity, fire safety, energy efficiency and habitability. Relevant when assessing renovation potential, building approvals and construction quality.
Natural Ground Level (NGL)
The original ground level of a lot at the time the first plan of survey showing the lot was registered. Used as the reference datum for measuring building heights, floor levels and earthworks under Queensland's building and planning regulations. Where the original ground level at that date is not known or cannot be established, the natural ground surface is determined by the building certifier. The distinction matters for buyers assessing properties where significant filling, cut and fill work or earthworks have been carried out — building height and setback compliance is measured from the natural ground surface, not the modified ground level. If a property has been substantially filled, the original ground surface may be considerably lower than what is visible today, which can affect what is permissible to build. See also: Finished Ground Level, Setbacks, Outermost Projection (OMP).
No Bank Waterfront
A waterfront property where the land transitions directly to the water without a significant drop-off, steep bank or retaining wall. No-bank waterfront is highly desirable in the luxury waterfront market because it provides easy, level access to the water for swimming, fishing, launching kayaks and operating pontoons. Properties with a steep bank, rock wall or significant height differential between the land and water level have limited practical water access despite technically being waterfront. In Noosa, no-bank waterfront properties on the river and canals command a premium. Buyers should assess the nature of water access physically, not just from photographs.
Non Combustible Construction
A construction type under the NCC where the primary structural elements and external walls are made from non-combustible materials such as concrete, masonry, steel or fibre cement. Required for certain building classes, heights and BAL ratings. The opposite is combustible construction, which uses timber framing and cladding. In bushfire-prone areas with high BAL ratings, non-combustible construction may be required or strongly advisable. Buyers of properties in BAL-29, BAL-40 or BAL-FZ zones should confirm the construction type meets the required standard.
Non Conforming Use
A use of land or buildings that was lawfully established under a previous planning scheme but no longer conforms to the current planning scheme requirements. Also referred to as a pre-existing use right or existing use right. A non-conforming use may continue, but its ongoing operation can be subject to limitations, including restrictions on expansion, intensification or re-establishment if it ceases. Buyers relying on a non-conforming use for income or lifestyle purposes should obtain legal advice on the extent and durability of those rights before purchasing.
Not Assessable Building Work (Accepted Development)
Some types of building work don't require a building approval, including accepted development, previously known as self-assessable development and exempt building work. Common examples include minor structures such as small sheds, fences under 2m and low retaining walls, subject to applicable size and setback requirements. While no approval is required, the work must still comply with applicable standards and codes including the National Construction Code and Queensland Development Code.
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Off Grid
A property or home that operates independently of the electricity grid and, in some cases, mains water supply. A fully off grid home generates its own electricity (typically via solar PV and battery storage), manages its own water supply (rainwater tanks, bores or dams) and handles its own wastewater treatment (septic or AWTS systems). Partial off grid arrangements are more common — for example, a home connected to the grid but generating enough solar and storing enough battery capacity to function independently for extended periods. Off grid living is most relevant for rural and hinterland properties in the Noosa region where grid connection may be limited or expensive. Buyers assessing off grid or partial off grid properties should verify the capacity, condition and reliability of all independent systems as part of their due diligence. See also: Solar PV System, Battery Storage, Rainwater Harvesting.
Off Market Property
A property that is available for sale but not publicly advertised on major property portals. Buyers agents often access these opportunities through agent networks, developer relationships and private seller enquiries.
Full guide: Off Market Property →
Off the Plan Purchase
A contract to purchase a property that has not yet been constructed, based on plans, renders and a specification document. The buyer commits to the purchase price at signing but does not settle until construction is complete, which may be 12 to 36 months later. Key risks include: the lender valuing the completed property at settlement (which may be below the contract price if the market has fallen), builder insolvency before completion, changes to specifications during construction and sunset clause risks. In Noosa, off the plan purchases are more common in unit and townhouse developments. Contract review by a solicitor before signing is essential. See also: Sunset Clause.
Full guide: Off the Plan Purchase →
Offset Account
A transaction account linked to your home loan where the balance reduces the interest charged on the loan. For example, a $500,000 loan with a $50,000 offset account means you only pay interest on $450,000.
Operational Energy
The energy consumed by a building in use over time — for heating, cooling, lighting, hot water and appliances. Distinct from embodied energy, which is the energy used to construct the building. Operational energy is what drives ongoing electricity and gas bills. A home's operational energy performance is influenced by its design (orientation, insulation, glazing), its mechanical systems (air conditioning efficiency, hot water system) and occupant behaviour. NatHERS ratings measure the thermal component of operational energy. Buyers should consider a home's likely operational energy costs alongside purchase price, particularly as energy prices continue to rise.
Operational Work
A category of development under the Planning Act 2016 (Qld) that relates to works on land, such as earthworks, vegetation clearing, road construction, drainage works and utility installation. Operational work may be assessable or accepted development depending on its nature and location. In the Noosa region, operational work involving vegetation clearing is commonly subject to assessment requirements, particularly in areas with environmental or vegetation overlays. Buyers planning significant earthworks, landscaping or clearing should confirm whether the works constitute operational work requiring approval.
Operational Work (Tidal)
Operational work that involves structures on or over tidal land, including pontoons, jetties, boat ramps, rock walls, revetments and other waterfront structures. In Queensland, tidal operational work requires both a development permit from the local government (where it is assessable development) and approval from Maritime Safety Queensland in the form of a Tidal Works Approval or Waterway Licence. In the Noosa region, where waterfront properties on the Noosa River, Lake Weyba and tidal canals are common, buyers should confirm that any existing tidal operational work has been properly approved and that approvals are transferable. Unapproved tidal structures can be costly to regularise and may be required to be removed.
Outermost Projection (OMP)
The furthest point that any part of a building or structure extends from the main wall face, used as the reference point for measuring setbacks from property boundaries. For roofs, the OMP is measured to the outside face of the fascia — or the roof structure itself where there is no fascia — and includes attached sunhoods or similar projections. Eaves, balconies, pergolas, roof overhangs and awnings all form part of the OMP calculation. Notably, retractable blinds, fixed screens, rainwater fittings and ornamental attachments are excluded from the OMP measurement under Queensland's building regulations. Setbacks are measured to the OMP, not the wall line — a distinction that catches buyers and renovators out when planning building works close to a boundary. A wall that appears to comply with the required setback may still breach requirements if projecting eaves or a balcony bring the OMP within the setback zone. Always confirm what counts as the OMP for a specific structure with your building certifier or town planner before proceeding. See also: Setbacks.
Overland Flow
Stormwater runoff that flows across land rather than through drainage infrastructure. Can affect properties well away from rivers or creeks and is a separate flood risk to riverine flooding. Common in parts of Noosa's hinterland during heavy rainfall events.
Overlay
A layer of the planning scheme that applies additional requirements to specific areas of land, over and above the base zone requirements. Overlays identify areas with particular sensitivities or constraints, such as flood risk, bushfire hazard, coastal erosion, biodiversity, heritage or character, and impose additional assessment triggers or development standards in those areas. A single property can be subject to multiple overlays simultaneously. In the Noosa region, overlay mapping is detailed and can significantly affect what can be built and how. Always check all applicable overlays for a specific property address before purchasing.
Overlay Code
A planning scheme code that sets out the specific performance outcomes and acceptable outcomes that apply to development within a particular overlay area. Where an overlay applies to a property, the relevant overlay code must be satisfied as part of any development assessment. Overlay codes address matters such as flood immunity levels, bushfire attack level requirements, setbacks from coastal hazard areas and biodiversity protection measures. Understanding which overlay codes apply to a property is an important part of assessing its development potential and construction costs.
Owner Builder
A person who constructs or renovates a residential property themselves rather than engaging a licensed builder. Owner builders in Queensland must obtain an owner builder permit from the QBCC for projects over a certain value, but they are not subject to the same licensing, training and oversight requirements as registered builders. Importantly, properties built by owner builders are not covered by QBCC Home Warranty Insurance, the insurance that protects buyers of homes built by licensed builders against structural defects and incomplete work. A title search will reveal whether a property was built by an owner builder. If so, buyers should factor in the absence of warranty coverage and the unknown quality of the works when assessing the property. A thorough building and pest inspection is particularly important in this situation.
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Passed In
The outcome when a property offered at auction does not reach the reserve price and is not sold to any bidder. When a property is passed in, the highest bidder typically has the right to negotiate with the vendor immediately after the auction before the property is offered to other parties. Being passed in does not mean the property cannot be sold, many properties pass in and are subsequently sold through negotiation. In Queensland, where auctions are unconditional, buyers who successfully bid above the reserve are immediately bound to the contract with no cooling off period.
Passive Design
An approach to building design that uses a home's orientation, form, materials and natural airflow to maintain comfortable temperatures without relying on mechanical heating or cooling. Passive design principles include solar orientation (north facing living areas to manage sunlight), eaves and shading (to block summer sun while allowing winter sun), cross ventilation (openings on opposite sides to draw breezes through), thermal mass (dense materials that absorb and slowly release heat), insulation (to reduce heat flow through the building envelope) and appropriate glazing (window size, placement and specification). In Noosa's subtropical climate, passive design prioritises cooling and humidity management over heat retention — deep eaves, cross ventilation and shading are more critical than thermal mass. A home with good passive design will be comfortable with minimal air conditioning use. Passive design is a design philosophy, not a certifiable standard — it can be applied at any level of rigour. Passivhaus is a certifiable high performance standard that takes passive design principles to their logical extreme. See also: Passive Solar Design, Passivhaus, Solar Orientation, Cross Ventilation, Eaves, Thermal Mass.
Passive Solar Design
A design approach that uses a building's orientation, form and materials to naturally regulate internal temperature — reducing reliance on mechanical heating and cooling. Key principles include north facing living areas to maximise winter sun, deep eaves or shading devices to block high summer sun, thermal mass to store and release heat, cross ventilation for cooling, and high performance insulation and glazing. Passive solar design is not a certifiable standard — it is a design philosophy applicable at any budget level. In Noosa's subtropical climate, the emphasis shifts toward natural cooling: cross ventilation, shading and ceiling height become more important than thermal mass. Buyers assessing existing homes should look at orientation, eave depth and window placement as indicators of passive solar thinking in the original design. See also: Solar Orientation, Cross Ventilation, Thermal Mass.
Passivhaus (Passive House)
A rigorous international building standard for very low energy buildings, originating in Germany and increasingly adopted in Australia. A certified Passivhaus achieves exceptional thermal comfort through high levels of insulation, airtight construction, high performance windows, mechanical ventilation with heat recovery, and elimination of thermal bridges — rather than relying on active heating and cooling systems. Energy consumption for heating and cooling is reduced by up to 90% compared to a conventional home. Passivhaus is distinct from passive solar design — it is a certifiable standard with specific measurable performance targets, not a general design philosophy. Rare in the Noosa market currently, but increasingly relevant as construction costs fall and buyer awareness grows. Buyers considering a new build to Passivhaus standard should engage a certified Passivhaus designer early in the design process.
Full guide: Passivhaus in Australia →
Performance Outcome (PO)
A statement in a planning scheme code that describes the outcome a development must achieve to comply with the code, expressed as an objective rather than a prescriptive standard. Performance Outcomes are paired with Acceptable Outcomes, if the Acceptable Outcome is met, the Performance Outcome is deemed satisfied. If the development does not meet the Acceptable Outcome, it can still comply by demonstrating it achieves the Performance Outcome through an alternative solution. Performance Outcomes give assessors flexibility to approve development that achieves the same planning intent through different means.
Performance Solution
An alternative building solution that achieves the same safety and amenity outcomes as the NCC's prescriptive requirements, but through a different method. Assessed and approved by a licensed building certifier. Common for unusual builds or heritage-affected properties.
Politically Exposed Person (PEP)
An individual who holds or has held a prominent public position — such as a government minister, senior politician, judge, military official or executive of a state-owned enterprise — or a close family member or associate of such a person. PEPs are considered higher risk in property transactions because their position may provide opportunities for corruption or misuse of public funds. Under Australia's new AML/CTF laws from 1 July 2026, real estate professionals must screen all clients against PEP databases and apply Enhanced Due Diligence where a match is identified. Being a PEP does not prevent someone from buying property — it simply means additional checks are required before the transaction can proceed. See also: AML/CTF, Customer Due Diligence, Enhanced Due Diligence, Source of Funds, Source of Wealth.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Planning Risk
The risk that the planning controls applying to a property, including zoning, overlays, codes and state planning policies, will prevent, restrict or add cost to a buyer's intended use or development. Planning risk is relevant wherever a buyer's plans for a property depend on obtaining a development approval or rely on an assumed use being permissible. Common planning risks in Noosa include overlay constraints limiting construction, short stay accommodation restrictions, minimum lot sizes preventing subdivision and environmental protections restricting clearing. Buyers should assess planning risk through a town planner or planning search before purchasing with any development or use intent.
Planning Scheme
The statutory document prepared by a local government that sets out the rules for land use and development within its local government area. In Queensland, planning schemes are prepared under the Planning Act 2016. The Noosa Planning Scheme applies to all land within Noosa Shire, while the Sunshine Coast Planning Scheme applies to surrounding areas. The planning scheme contains the zoning map, overlay maps, zone codes, overlay codes and use definitions that determine what can be built and how on any given property. It is the primary reference for planning due diligence.
Pontoon
A floating platform attached to the bank or seawall of a waterfront property, used for boat mooring and water access. Common on Noosa River, Noosa Waters canals and Lake Weyba frontages. A pontoon on a tidal waterway requires a current waterway licence from Maritime Safety Queensland (MSQ). Critically, this licence is issued to a person, not the property, and does not automatically transfer to a new owner at settlement. Buyers purchasing a waterfront property with a pontoon should confirm the licence status and factor the reapplication process into their due diligence. Council approval may also be required separately.
Pool Safety Certificate
A certificate issued by a licensed pool safety inspector confirming that a swimming pool or spa meets Queensland pool safety standards under the Building Act 1975. A valid pool safety certificate is required when selling or leasing a property with a pool. Buyers should receive a current pool safety certificate at or before settlement. If the certificate is not current, a new inspection is required. In Queensland, pool safety certificates are valid for two years for properties being sold. Buyers should confirm the certification status of any pool during due diligence. Note that Form 17 is the Pool Safety Inspection Certificate issued by the inspector as part of this process.
Pre Approval
An indication from a lender of how much you may be able to borrow, based on preliminary financial checks. Pre approval is not a guarantee of finance and should not replace a finance clause in a contract.
Full guide: Pre Approval →
Preliminary Approval
A type of development approval that sets the framework for future development on a site without approving the specific development itself. A Preliminary Approval can override the planning scheme for the site, establish the assessment benchmarks for subsequent development applications and define what uses and development may occur. Preliminary Approvals are most commonly used for larger or staged developments. They can significantly affect the development potential of a site, positively or negatively, and buyers of development sites should check whether any Preliminary Approval is in place and understand its implications.
Prescribed Accepted Development
A specific category of accepted development prescribed by state regulation rather than the local planning scheme. Prescribed accepted development does not require a development approval and is not subject to local government assessment. It is most commonly encountered in relation to certain infrastructure works, minor building activities and state-controlled matters. Buyers carrying out works that may fall into this category should confirm the applicable requirements, as conditions still apply even without a formal approval process.
Prescribed Tidal Works
Certain tidal structures, including private jetties, pontoons and boat ramps, that are constructed on state-owned tidal land and require development approval under the Coastal Protection and Management Act 1995 (Qld) in addition to any local government approvals. Prescribed tidal works are assessed by the Department of Environment, Science and Innovation on behalf of the state, and approval is not automatic. In the Noosa region, most private pontoons and jetties on the Noosa River and tidal canals constitute prescribed tidal works. Buyers should confirm that all tidal structures have received both the relevant local government and state approvals before purchasing.
Price Guide
An indicative price range used by agents to market a property. It is not a guaranteed selling price, and properties may sell above or below the guide depending on demand and competition.
Price Withheld
A notation on sold property records indicating that the sale price has not been publicly disclosed. In Queensland, vendors and agents are not legally required to disclose the sale price. Price withheld listings can make comparable sales analysis more difficult, as the actual transacted price is unknown. When researching recent sales, a high proportion of price withheld results in a suburb or price range may indicate limited comparable sales data and should be taken into account when assessing market value.
Principal Place of Residence (PPR)
The property that a person occupies as their main or primary home. The principal place of residence designation has significant financial and legal implications in Queensland. For transfer duty (stamp duty) purposes, owner-occupiers purchasing their principal place of residence pay a lower rate of duty than investors purchasing additional properties. For land tax purposes, a principal place of residence is exempt from Queensland land tax. For short stay letting, the owner residing at their principal place of residence during guest stays is what distinguishes Home Hosted Accommodation from standard short stay letting. For first home buyer grants and concessions, the purchased property must become and remain the buyer's principal place of residence for a specified period. Buyers should understand how the PPR designation affects their duty liability, land tax position and any short stay or rental intentions before settlement. See also: Transfer Duty, Land Tax, Home Hosted Accommodation, First Home Owner Grant.
Private Jetty
A fixed structure extending from a waterfront property into a waterway, providing boat access and mooring. Unlike a pontoon, a jetty is a permanent structure built on piles. Private jetties on tidal waterways in Noosa require both a Maritime Safety Queensland waterway licence and typically a Development Approval from council. Maintenance is the owner's responsibility and can be significant, timber jetties in particular require regular inspection and repair. Buyers should verify the approval and licence status of any jetty, and obtain a structural inspection, before purchasing a property where the jetty is a material part of the value.
Private Treaty
The most common method of sale in Queensland, where the property is listed with an asking price or price range and buyers submit offers through negotiation rather than public auction.
Property Accountant
An accountant with specialist knowledge of property investment, taxation and ownership structures. Relevant for buyers purchasing as an investment, considering a self-managed superannuation fund (SMSF) purchase, buying in a company or trust structure, or assessing the tax implications of a purchase. Key areas include depreciation schedules, capital gains tax planning, land tax obligations and the most appropriate ownership structure for the buyer's situation. Engaging a property accountant before signing a contract can prevent costly structural decisions that are difficult to unwind after settlement.
Property Manager
A licensed real estate professional who manages a rental property on behalf of the owner, including finding and screening tenants, collecting rent, conducting inspections, arranging maintenance and managing tenancy compliance under Queensland residential tenancy legislation. In Noosa, property managers typically specialise in either long term residential rentals or short stay holiday accommodation, with different regulatory requirements applying to each. Buyers planning to rent a property after purchase should engage a local property manager during due diligence to understand realistic rental income, vacancy rates and management fees before committing.
Property Map of Assessable Vegetation (PMAV)
A state government mapping layer that identifies regulated vegetation on rural and regional properties in Queensland, classifying land into Category A (high value endangered or remnant vegetation, no clearing), Category B (of concern, restricted clearing) and Category R (other regulated vegetation). For rural, hinterland and large residential lots in the Noosa region, the PMAV determines what vegetation can legally be cleared and what permits may be required. Buyers of acreage properties who intend to clear land for any purpose should check the PMAV for their specific property before committing. Available through the Queensland Globe and the Department of Environment and Science vegetation management mapping tools.
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Q100 Flood Event
A flood with a 1% chance of occurring in any given year, commonly called a "1 in 100 year flood." Used as the standard planning benchmark in Queensland for setting floor levels, assessing flood risk and determining overlay mapping. The name can be misleading; such events can and do occur in consecutive years.
Queensland Building and Construction Commission (QBCC)
The state government body that regulates the building and construction industry in Queensland. The QBCC licences builders, building designers, certifiers and other trade contractors; investigates complaints about building work; and administers the Home Warranty Insurance scheme. A builder who holds a current QBCC licence is referred to as a licensed or registered builder, only licensed builders can legally carry out residential construction work in Queensland. For buyers, the QBCC is relevant in two key ways: confirming a builder holds a current and appropriate licence before engaging them, and understanding the warranty protections that apply to newly constructed residential buildings. QBCC Home Warranty Insurance covers structural defects for 6 years and 6 months, and non-structural defects for 1 year, from the date of practical completion. Licence status can be verified at any time on the QBCC website.
Queensland Home Warranty Scheme (QHWS)
A mandatory statutory insurance scheme administered by the QBCC, covering residential building work in Queensland valued above $3,300. Builders are required by law to take out a policy before commencing work; coverage is attached to the property, not the original owner, and transfers automatically on sale with the remaining period intact. The scheme is a first-resort scheme — meaning a homeowner can claim directly from QBCC without first exhausting legal action against the builder. Standard coverage is $200,000; an optional additional premium (payable within 30 days of contract) could increase this to $300,000 — worth confirming via an insurance search whether it was elected. Structural defects are covered for 6 years and 6 months from the earliest of the contract date, premium payment date, or commencement of work. Non-structural defects are covered for 6 months from practical completion only. The coverage limits are a ceiling on eligible claims, not a guaranteed payout — claims are assessed by QBCC and are frequently disputed. Feedback from homeowners who have navigated the process is that real-world outcomes often fall well short of expectations; one will hope the scheme continues to improve. Owner-builder work and work by unregistered contractors carries no QHWS coverage. Buyers of properties built or substantially renovated within the last 8 years should confirm the warranty position — whether a policy exists, its expiry, whether the optional uplift was taken out, and whether prior claims have reduced the available amount — before going unconditional. A formal insurance search can be lodged via the myQBCC portal ($53.05 for prospective buyers).
Full guide: Queensland Home Warranty Scheme →
Queensland Development Code (QDC)
A mandatory state code that sets out standards for certain aspects of residential building work in Queensland, including site access, stormwater, on site sewerage and other matters not fully addressed by the National Construction Code. The QDC is made under the Building Act 1975 and applies alongside the NCC. Compliance with the QDC is required as part of obtaining building approval for relevant residential work. Builders and private certifiers check compliance with both the NCC and the QDC as part of the building approval process.
Queensland First Home Owner Grant
A Queensland Government grant of $30,000 available to eligible first home buyers who purchase or build a new home valued up to $750,000. The grant is administered by the Queensland Revenue Office and is separate from the transfer duty First Home Concession. To be eligible, the buyer must be a natural person (not a company or trust), be an Australian citizen or permanent resident, not have previously owned a home in Australia, and the property must be a new home that has not been previously occupied or sold as a place of residence. Buyers should confirm current eligibility criteria and grant amounts with the Queensland Revenue Office or their solicitor, as thresholds and conditions are subject to change.
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Rainwater Harvesting
The collection and storage of rainwater from roof surfaces for on site use. In Queensland, rainwater tanks are commonly used to supply garden irrigation, toilet flushing, laundry and, where appropriately treated and filtered, potable (drinking) water supply. In Noosa, where annual rainfall is significant, rainwater harvesting can substantially reduce mains water consumption. Queensland's Plumbing and Drainage Act regulates the connection of rainwater tanks to household plumbing, and systems connected to internal fixtures require a licensed plumber and compliance with relevant standards. Buyers of rural and hinterland properties should also confirm whether rainwater is the primary potable water source and assess tank capacity, filtration and water quality. See also: Greywater Recycling, WELS Rating.
Rate Notice
The quarterly or half-yearly notice issued by the local council setting out the rates and charges payable by a property owner. Rate notices are checked during due diligence to confirm the current rates amount, identify any outstanding arrears and understand any special charges that may apply to the property. Outstanding rates become the responsibility of the new owner at settlement if not addressed in the contract. Your solicitor will conduct a rates search as part of conveyancing to confirm the balance outstanding and arrange for adjustments at settlement.
Real Estate Institute of Queensland (REIQ)
The peak industry body for real estate professionals in Queensland. The standard REIQ contract is the most commonly used contract of sale for Queensland residential property. REIQ membership indicates a real estate professional has committed to the institute's code of conduct.
Reconfiguring a Lot (ROL)
The formal development approval process required to subdivide, amalgamate or otherwise reconfigure land in Queensland. Involves a council application assessed against the planning scheme, including minimum lot size requirements, infrastructure contributions and road access. Buyers purchasing land with subdivision potential should confirm an ROL is achievable, and at what cost, before purchasing on that basis.
Reactive Soil / Soil Classification (AS2870)
Reactive soils shrink and swell with changes in moisture content — typically clay-rich soils that expand when wet and contract when dry. This movement can cause significant damage to footings, slabs and structures built without appropriate design. Australian Standard AS2870 sets out the system for classifying residential sites by their reactivity, from Class A (stable, non-reactive, typically sand or rock) through Classes S, M, H1, H2, E (increasingly reactive) to Class P (problem sites requiring individual engineering design). The site classification determines the minimum footing and slab design required for any structure. In Noosa, reactive soils are common in certain hinterland and low-lying areas. Always confirm the site classification for any property where building or extension work is planned — the classification should be documented in any existing building approval or geotechnical report.
Recycled Content Materials
Building materials that incorporate a proportion of recycled or reclaimed material in their manufacture, reducing the demand for virgin resources and the embodied energy associated with raw material extraction. Common examples in residential construction include recycled content steel (most Australian steel contains significant recycled content), recycled aggregate in concrete, reclaimed timber, recycled brick and recycled glass products. Fully reclaimed materials — salvaged timber, used brick, recycled roofing — carry the lowest embodied energy of all, as their original manufacturing energy has already been expended. Buyers assessing a property's sustainability credentials should look for evidence of recycled content materials in the construction, particularly in structural elements and cladding where material volumes are significant. Relevant for buyers commissioning new builds or significant renovations who want to reduce the embodied carbon footprint of the project. See also: Embodied Carbon, Embodied Energy, Embodied vs Operational Carbon.
Redraw Facility
A loan feature that allows a borrower to access any extra repayments they have made above the minimum required repayment. If a borrower has paid more than the scheduled amount, the excess builds up as available redraw. Redraw is different from an offset account, redraw reduces the loan balance directly, while an offset sits in a separate account. Not all home loans include a redraw facility, and some lenders impose conditions or fees on redraw access. Buyers should discuss redraw facilities with their mortgage broker as part of assessing loan features.
Referral Agency
A government entity, state or local, that must be consulted as part of the development assessment process because the proposed development triggers a referral under the Planning Act 2016 or a related regulation. Referral agencies may be either concurrence agencies (whose requirements are binding on the approval) or advice agencies (whose input is advisory only). Common referral agencies in the Noosa region include the Department of Transport and Main Roads for access onto state-controlled roads, and state environment agencies for development near waterways or in sensitive ecological areas.
REIQ Contract
The standard form residential property contract used in Queensland, jointly published by the Real Estate Institute of Queensland (REIQ) and the Queensland Law Society (QLS). The REIQ Contract, formally the REIQ/QLS Contract of Sale, is the most common contract form used for residential property transactions in Queensland, including houses, units and vacant land. It includes standard terms for deposit, settlement, conditions (finance, building and pest), inclusions and exclusions, and adjustments. While it is a standard form, the terms are negotiable and buyers should always have the contract reviewed by their solicitor before signing.
Relative Humidity (RH)
A measure of how much moisture the air holds relative to the maximum it could hold at that temperature, expressed as a percentage. At 100% relative humidity, the air is fully saturated and condensation forms on surfaces. The generally accepted comfort range for indoor environments is 40 to 60% RH — below 40% air can feel dry and irritating to airways, above 60% it feels muggy and creates conditions favourable for mould growth, dust mites and structural moisture problems. In Noosa's humid subtropical climate, outdoor relative humidity frequently exceeds 70 to 80% during summer months, and indoor humidity can rise to similar levels in homes that are not adequately ventilated. High indoor humidity is the primary driver of mould growth, condensation on surfaces and interstitial condensation within wall and roof cavities. Effective ventilation — cross ventilation in naturally ventilated homes, or energy recovery ventilation in tightly constructed homes — is the primary tool for managing indoor relative humidity. Air conditioning also dehumidifies as it cools. Understanding relative humidity helps explain why passive design choices like subfloor ventilation, eaves depth and cross ventilation matter so much in this climate. See also: Condensation Risk, Interstitial Condensation, Mould and Moisture Risk, Cross Ventilation, Subfloor Ventilation.
Reporting Entity
The legal term under Australia's AML/CTF laws for any business that is required to comply with anti-money laundering obligations. From 1 July 2026, real estate professionals — including selling agents, buyer's advocates (Buyer's Advocates), conveyancers and property developers — become reporting entities for the first time. As a reporting entity, a business must enrol with AUSTRAC, implement a documented AML/CTF program, conduct Customer Due Diligence on clients, and report suspicious transactions. Before 2026, Australia had approximately 19,000 reporting entities, mostly banks and financial institutions. Tranche 2 adds an estimated 70,000–90,000 more. See also: AML/CTF, AUSTRAC, Tranche 2, Customer Due Diligence, Designated Service.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Reserve Price
The minimum price a seller will accept at auction. Not disclosed to buyers. If bidding does not reach the reserve, the property is passed in and the highest bidder has first right to negotiate with the vendor.
Retaining Wall (and Approval Requirements)
A structure designed to hold back soil and prevent movement on sloped or excavated sites. Retaining walls are common on Noosa's hinterland properties and steeply sloping coastal lots. In Queensland, retaining walls over 1 metre in height generally require a building approval and must be designed by a structural engineer. Walls over 1.5 metres or walls supporting surcharges — driveways, structures, or additional fill — require engineering design regardless of height. Unapproved retaining walls are a common issue found during building inspections on hinterland properties, particularly older walls that were built without permits. A failing or inadequately designed retaining wall is a serious structural risk and can be very expensive to rectify. Always check the condition and approval status of any retaining walls on a property during due diligence, and engage a structural engineer if there are concerns about integrity or movement.
Retrospective Building Approval
An approval sought after building work has already been completed without the required approvals. The process requires demonstrating that the unapproved structure meets current building standards or the standards that applied at the time of construction. Not all unapproved work can be retrospectively approved, and the process involves assessment by a private building certifier and potentially a structural engineer. It is not simple, not guaranteed and not cheap. Buyers should never assume retrospective approval will be available for unapproved structures. Get a building certifier and structural engineer's advice on the specific building or structure before purchasing on that basis. See also: Unapproved Building Work.
Riparian Rights
The rights of a landowner whose property adjoins a non-tidal waterway, such as a creek, river or lake, to access and make reasonable use of the water. Riparian rights differ from the rules applying to tidal waterways, where the foreshore is Crown land. In Queensland, riparian rights are limited and do not automatically grant the right to build structures, divert water or impede the flow of a waterway. Buyers of hinterland properties adjoining creeks, rivers or lakes should seek legal advice on their riparian rights and any applicable restrictions before purchasing, particularly if water access or use is an important part of their plans for the property.
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7 Star Energy Rating (Seven Star)
The minimum NatHERS star rating — also referred to as the Seven Star standard — required for new residential dwellings under the National Construction Code 2022, which came into effect in Queensland in May 2024. Properties built before this date are not required to meet the 7 Star standard, though many designed well homes in Noosa's climate can achieve or exceed it through good passive design. Buyers of new builds or house-and-land packages should confirm the 7 Star NatHERS rating as part of due diligence and ask for the energy assessment report. For renovation projects, achieving 7 Stars is not mandatory on existing homes but increasingly relevant for energy costs, liveability and resale appeal as buyer awareness of energy performance grows.
RPEQ (Registered Professional Engineer of Queensland)
The formal designation for a professional engineer registered under the Professional Engineers Act 2002 (Qld). Only RPEQs can certify engineering work in Queensland — structural designs, geotechnical reports, and engineering certificates must be signed by a registered professional engineer to be accepted by building certifiers and local councils. When reviewing an engineer's report or engineering certificate on a property you are purchasing, confirm the document is signed and stamped by an RPEQ. Documents prepared by unregistered persons — regardless of their qualifications or experience — have no legal standing in Queensland and cannot be used for building approvals or certifications. The RPEQ register is publicly searchable through Engineers Australia and the Queensland government.
Sarking
A reflective foil laminate or breathable membrane installed immediately beneath roof cladding (tiles or metal) to reduce radiant heat transfer into the roof space and provide a secondary barrier against water ingress. In Queensland's climate, sarking under a metal roof (particularly a dark coloured one) significantly reduces the amount of radiant heat that enters the roof space, lowering ceiling space temperatures and reducing the cooling load on the home. Sarking also acts as a condensation barrier in some roof assemblies. It is mandatory under the NCC for certain roof types and climate zones, but many older Queensland homes were built without it. When a building inspector accesses the roof space, sarking presence and condition should be noted. Retrofitting sarking is possible during a roof replacement and is a cost effective thermal upgrade on older homes. See also: Insulation R-Value, Subfloor Ventilation, Climate Zone 2.
Search Bundle
The package of searches and inquiries carried out by a solicitor or conveyancer during the due diligence and conveyancing process. A typical search bundle for a Queensland property purchase includes: a title search, registered plan, land tax clearance certificate, rates search, water and sewerage search, heritage search, contaminated land search and body corporate records search (for units). Additional searches may be ordered depending on the property, including flood searches, planning searches, building and plumbing records searches and QBCC searches. The cost and composition of a search bundle varies depending on the property type and location.
Section J (NCC Energy Efficiency Provisions)
The section of the National Construction Code covering energy efficiency requirements for buildings. For residential buildings, Section J (now Part H6 in NCC 2022) sets minimum standards for insulation, glazing, sealing, lighting and services such as hot water and air conditioning. Compliance can be demonstrated through a NatHERS thermal performance assessment or a deemed-to-satisfy pathway following prescriptive requirements. Relevant for buyers assessing new builds or significant renovations — a compliant Section J report should be available as part of the building approval documentation.
Self Assessable Work
A term previously used under the Sustainable Planning Act 2009 (now superseded) to describe development that could be carried out without approval, provided it met certain requirements. Under the current Planning Act 2016 (Qld), this category has been replaced by accepted development and accepted development subject to requirements. The term may still appear in older planning documents or reports. Buyers reviewing historical approvals or older planning advice should be aware that the terminology has changed.
Selling Agent / Vendor's Agent
The real estate agent appointed by the seller under a Form 6 to market and sell the property on their behalf. The selling agent's legal obligation is to act in the vendor's best interest, not the buyer's. Their commission is typically calculated as a percentage of the sale price, which means a higher sale price benefits both the agent and the vendor. This is not a criticism of selling agents, it is simply the structure of the relationship. Understanding whose interests the selling agent represents helps buyers make sense of why independent representation through a buyer's advocate matters.
Serviceability
A lender's assessment of a borrower's ability to meet loan repayments based on their income, existing debts and living expenses. Lenders apply a serviceability buffer, typically 3% above the current interest rate, to test whether the borrower could still meet repayments if interest rates rise. Serviceability is one of the primary factors that determines how much a buyer can borrow, alongside deposit size and credit history. A buyer may have significant assets but still fail a serviceability assessment if their income is insufficient to service the proposed debt. Buyers should discuss serviceability with their mortgage broker early in the property search.
Setbacks
The minimum distances that must be maintained between a building or structure and the property boundaries. Importantly, setbacks are measured to the outermost projection (OMP) of the structure — not the wall face. Eaves, balconies, pergolas, roof overhangs and other projecting elements all count toward the setback calculation, even if the wall itself complies. Setbacks are specified in the relevant zone code or overlay code of the planning scheme and vary depending on the zone, lot size and type of structure. In the Noosa region, front, side and rear setbacks all apply, and additional setbacks may be required near waterways, roads, bushland or other sensitive features. Understanding the applicable setbacks — and what counts as the OMP — is essential for buyers planning any building work, as structures that do not meet setback requirements will require a development approval or, if already built, may be considered unapproved.
Full guide: Setbacks →
Settlement
The final step in the purchase process, when ownership officially transfers, the balance of the purchase price is paid and keys are handed over. Typically 30–90 days after signing in Queensland.
Settlement Period
The agreed time between signing the contract and settlement. In Queensland this is commonly 30–60 days, although longer or shorter periods can be negotiated depending on the circumstances of both parties.
Shading Design
The use of eaves, pergolas, screens, awnings, louvres and landscaping to control solar heat gain through windows and on external walls. Effective shading blocks the high summer sun while allowing the lower winter sun to penetrate and warm interior spaces. In Noosa's subtropical climate, shading is one of the most important passive design tools — correctly designed eaves on north facing windows can dramatically reduce cooling loads without sacrificing natural light. Buyers should assess the depth of eaves, the presence of external shading on west facing windows (where afternoon sun is most intense), and whether existing vegetation provides effective shading of the building.
Shared Pontoon
A pontoon shared between two or more neighbouring waterfront properties, or managed as part of a body corporate in a canal estate. Common in Noosa Waters and some Noosaville canal precincts. Shared pontoons typically involve a cost-sharing arrangement for maintenance and the MSQ waterway licence. Buyers should confirm how the sharing arrangement is documented, what the ongoing cost obligations are, and whether the arrangement is legally binding on future owners, informal arrangements between neighbours can become contentious when ownership changes.
Short Stay Accommodation Area
A designation under the Noosa Plan that identifies where short stay letting (including Airbnb and holiday rentals) is permitted as of right. Properties outside a designated Short Stay Accommodation Area may not be legally let on a short stay basis without a separate development approval, and approval is not guaranteed. This is one of the most commonly misunderstood planning rules in Noosa. Buyers purchasing with short stay income in mind must confirm the property sits within a Short Stay Accommodation Area before committing. The fact that a property has previously been listed on Airbnb does not confirm it is lawfully permitted to operate as short stay accommodation.
Short Stay Letting (Short Term Rental / Holiday Letting)
The use of a residential property for paid accommodation for periods typically under 30 days, facilitated through platforms such as Airbnb, Stayz and similar services. In Noosa Shire, short stay letting is governed by a local law adopted in October 2021 and effective from February 2022. All properties operating as short stay letting require a one-off Council approval under the local law, plus annual renewal — regardless of whether planning scheme approval also exists. Approval depends on zoning, the property's specific development approval, body corporate by-laws (for units), and compliance with Council's code of conduct requirements including a local contact person for complaints. Buyers purchasing with short stay income in mind must verify both that planning approval exists for the specific property and that a current local law approval is held. A property currently listed on Airbnb is not necessarily lawfully approved. Body corporate by-laws can also prohibit short stay letting entirely regardless of Council approval. Where the owner resides on the property during every stay, the relevant Council term is Home Hosted Accommodation. See also: Short Stay Accommodation Area, Home Hosted Accommodation, Body Corporate, Development Approval.
Full guide: Short Stay Accommodation in Noosa →
Show Cause Notice
A formal notice issued by a local government under the Planning Act 2016 advising a property owner that a potential breach of the planning scheme or development approval has been identified, and inviting the owner to show cause why enforcement action should not be taken. A Show Cause Notice is typically the step before an Enforcement Notice and gives the recipient an opportunity to respond, provide information or take corrective action before council makes a formal enforcement decision. Buyers should check whether any Show Cause Notices have been issued against a property as part of their council search during due diligence.
Site Classification (AS2870)
The formal assessment of a building site's soil reactivity under Australian Standard AS2870, used to determine minimum footing and slab requirements for residential construction. Classifications range from Class A (stable, non-reactive ground — typically sand, rock or non-reactive clay) through Classes S (slightly reactive), M (moderately reactive), H1 and H2 (highly reactive), E (extremely reactive) to Class P (problem sites, which include filled ground, loose sands, soft clays, aggressive soils, and sites subject to flooding or landslip — requiring individual geotechnical design). The site classification is not a fixed property of the land — it can change if the moisture regime changes or if fill is placed. For any property where construction or significant renovation is planned, the site classification should be confirmed by a geotechnical investigation, not assumed from neighbouring properties or general area knowledge.
Site Cover
The proportion of a lot that can be covered by roofed structures, expressed as a percentage of the total site area. Site cover limits are set out in the relevant zone code and are intended to preserve open space, manage stormwater runoff and maintain the character of residential areas. In the Noosa region, site cover limits vary by zone and lot size. Buyers planning significant additions or new dwellings should check the applicable site cover limit early in the planning process, as it can constrain the footprint of what can be built.
Smoke Alarm Compliance (QLD)
Queensland has mandatory smoke alarm requirements under the Fire and Emergency Services Act 1990 and associated regulations. Since 2022, all dwellings being sold or leased must have interconnected photoelectric smoke alarms installed in every bedroom, in hallways connecting bedrooms to the rest of the dwelling, and on each storey. Alarms must be less than 10 years old and in working order. Sellers are required to lodge a Form 24 statutory declaration confirming smoke alarm compliance at settlement. Buyers should confirm compliance before settlement as non-compliant alarms become the buyer's responsibility to rectify after settlement, and non-compliance can affect insurance coverage in the event of a fire.
Soil Test (Geotechnical Investigation)
An assessment of the ground conditions on a site to determine the soil type, reactivity classification, bearing capacity and suitability for construction. A residential soil test under AS2870 typically involves drilling or excavating test holes, collecting soil samples, and laboratory analysis to classify the site and recommend appropriate footing types. Soil testing is required before designing footings for any new dwelling or significant structure. It is also advisable — and sometimes essential — when buying a property with development potential, on steeply sloping sites, on filled land, or in areas known for reactive soils or poor ground conditions. In Noosa's hinterland, soil conditions can vary significantly over short distances, and a soil test on the actual lot is always more reliable than assuming conditions from a neighbouring property.
Solar Heat Gain Coefficient (SHGC)
A measure of how much solar radiation passes through a window or glazing system, expressed as a number between 0 and 1. A lower SHGC means less solar heat is transmitted through the glass — useful for reducing cooling loads on west and north facing windows in a warm climate like Noosa. A higher SHGC allows more solar heat in, which is beneficial in cooler climates where passive solar heating is a priority. Low-E glass coatings typically reduce SHGC significantly while still allowing visible light through. When comparing window specifications for a new build or renovation in Noosa's subtropical climate, a lower SHGC on west facing windows is generally preferable. SHGC is distinct from the insulating value of glass (measured by U-value) — a window can have low SHGC and still have poor thermal insulation. See also: Low E Glass, Double Glazing, Window-to-Wall Ratio (WWR), Solar Orientation.
Solar Orientation
The positioning of a building on its site relative to the sun's path, to maximise beneficial solar access in winter and minimise heat gain in summer. In Australia, north facing living areas, bedrooms and glazing receive the most controllable sunlight — low in winter when warmth is welcome, high in summer when it can be shaded by eaves. East facing aspects receive gentle morning sun; west facing aspects receive intense afternoon sun and are the most challenging to manage thermally. South facing aspects receive no direct sun year round. In Noosa's subtropical climate, avoiding unshaded west facing glass is particularly important for thermal comfort. Buyers should note a property's orientation early in their assessment.
Solar PV System (Solar Panels)
A rooftop photovoltaic system that converts sunlight into electricity. Solar PV is highly effective in Noosa's sunny subtropical climate and can significantly reduce or eliminate grid electricity costs when sized appropriately. Buyers of homes with existing solar should confirm the system size (kilowatts), age, inverter condition, feed-in tariff arrangement and whether a battery is installed or the system is battery ready. Older systems may have legacy feed-in tariff contracts that transfer with the property. New builds without solar should confirm the roof structure and orientation are suitable for future installation. Solar PV systems require occasional maintenance and inverter replacement over their lifespan.
Solicitor
A qualified lawyer who can provide legal advice and conduct conveyancing on behalf of a property buyer. In Queensland, both solicitors and licensed conveyancers can manage the transfer of property, but a solicitor can also advise on broader legal issues arising from a purchase, including contract disputes, easement implications, development agreements and trust or company structures. For complex purchases involving rural land, heritage overlays, unusual title conditions or significant encumbrances, a solicitor is generally preferable to a conveyancer. Engagement before signing the contract, not after, is strongly recommended.
Source of Funds
The origin of the specific money being used in a property transaction — for example, savings, the sale of another property, an inheritance, a loan or a gift. Under Australia's new AML/CTF laws from 1 July 2026, real estate professionals may be required to ask buyers where their purchase funds are coming from as part of Customer Due Diligence. This question is not a judgment about the buyer's legitimacy — it is a legal requirement designed to ensure that property transactions cannot be used to move illicit funds through the market. Buyers who are unable or unwilling to explain the source of their funds may find that a real estate professional cannot legally proceed with the engagement. See also: AML/CTF, Customer Due Diligence, Enhanced Due Diligence, Source of Wealth, Beneficial Owner.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Source of Wealth
A broader concept than Source of Funds — it refers to how a person has accumulated their overall wealth, not just where the money for a specific transaction is coming from. Source of wealth questions are typically only asked in Enhanced Due Diligence situations, such as transactions involving large sums, foreign buyers, politically exposed persons (PEPs) or complex ownership structures. A buyer may be asked to explain how they built their wealth — through business, employment, investment or inheritance — along with supporting documentation. While this can feel intrusive, it is a legal requirement under Australia's AML/CTF laws in higher-risk circumstances. See also: AML/CTF, Source of Funds, Enhanced Due Diligence, Politically Exposed Person, Customer Due Diligence.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Stamp Duty
Transfer duty in Queensland is calculated on the purchase price or market value. First home buyers may be eligible for concessions. Use the Queensland Revenue Office calculator for an accurate estimate before committing to a purchase price.
Full guide: Transfer Duty (Stamp Duty) →
Storm Surge Zone
An area identified as being at risk of inundation from storm surge — the temporary rise in sea level caused by the strong winds and low atmospheric pressure associated with tropical cyclones or severe storms. Storm surge can push large volumes of seawater well inland, posing a significant risk to low-lying coastal properties. In Queensland, storm surge zones are mapped by state and local authorities and are referenced in planning schemes as a coastal hazard overlay. Properties within a storm surge zone may face restrictions on development, building heights and floor levels, and may have implications for insurance availability and premiums. Noosa's coastal and lakeside properties, particularly in low-lying areas adjacent to the ocean and Noosa River, should be checked for storm surge zone designation. See also: Coastal Hazard Area, Erosion Prone Area, Flood Resilient Design.
Stormwater Management
The planning and infrastructure systems that collect, direct and treat rainwater runoff from roofs, driveways, roads and hard surfaces. In urban areas, stormwater is typically directed to the kerb and channel system, street drains and ultimately to waterways. Poor stormwater management on a property — inadequate drainage, blocked or damaged pipes, improperly graded surfaces — can cause water to pool or penetrate buildings after heavy rain. In Noosa's high-rainfall subtropical climate, stormwater performance is an important due diligence item, particularly for properties in low-lying areas, on sloping blocks or adjacent to waterways. Buyers should ask building inspectors to assess drainage on site and check whether any recent earthworks or additions have affected natural drainage patterns. Development approvals for new builds and additions typically include stormwater management conditions. See also: Flooding Terms, WSUD, Rainwater Harvesting.
Strata Title
Individual ownership of a lot, such as an apartment or unit, within a larger building or complex. Owners share the common property and contribute to body corporate fees for its upkeep.
Structural Engineer
A registered professional engineer (RPEQ) who designs and certifies the structural elements of buildings and other structures — including footings, slabs, frames, retaining walls and connections. Structural engineers are engaged at multiple stages of a property transaction. During due diligence, they can assess structural concerns identified in a building inspection, such as cracking, movement or footing distress, and provide a written report on the cause and recommended remediation. During design, they size and specify the structural elements of a new build or renovation. During construction, they inspect and certify critical stages of work. When buying an older property — particularly one that has been extended, altered, or sits on a challenging site — an independent structural engineer's assessment during due diligence can identify issues that a general building inspector may flag but cannot formally evaluate.
Subfloor Ventilation
The system of vents and airflow beneath a suspended timber floor that prevents moisture buildup and mould growth in the subfloor cavity. Critical in Noosa's humid subtropical climate where moisture accumulates readily under elevated homes. Inadequate subfloor ventilation is one of the most common issues found in building inspections across the Sunshine Coast region and can lead to timber rot, termite activity and mould — sometimes without visible signs from inside the home. Buyers of older Queensland homes, which are commonly elevated on timber stumps, should specifically ask building inspectors to assess subfloor ventilation, moisture levels and evidence of previous water ingress.
Subject to Building and Pest
A contract condition allowing the buyer to arrange professional inspections of the property. If significant structural issues, safety concerns or termite damage are identified, the buyer may negotiate repairs, request a price reduction or terminate the contract.
Subject to Finance
Another way of describing a finance clause. A contract "subject to finance" means the buyer can withdraw from the purchase if their lender does not provide formal loan approval by the specified date.
Subsidence
The downward movement of the ground surface, typically caused by soil compression, moisture change, consolidation of fill, extraction of groundwater, or the decay of organic material in the soil. Subsidence can cause cracking to walls and slabs, doors and windows that stick or rack out of square, and in severe cases, structural failure of footings and floors. In Noosa, subsidence risk is highest on properties built on filled ground, on reactive clay soils subject to significant moisture variation, in low-lying areas with high water tables, and on hinterland sites with steep slopes or unconsolidated fill. Early signs of subsidence include diagonal cracking from window and door corners, uneven floors, and gaps opening between structural elements. A structural engineer or geotechnical engineer should be consulted if subsidence is suspected — the cause must be identified before remediation can be designed and costed.
Sunset Clause
A provision in a contract, most common in off the plan purchases, that allows either party to cancel if settlement has not occurred by a specified date. Buyers should understand the sunset date and what happens to their deposit if the clause is triggered.
Suspicious Matter Report (SMR)
A formal report that a real estate professional is legally required to file with AUSTRAC when they suspect a transaction or client behaviour may be connected to money laundering, terrorism financing or other serious financial crime. Triggers for an SMR include: evasiveness about identity or source of funds; use of cash in unusually large amounts; complex or opaque ownership structures with no apparent legitimate purpose; and pressure to complete a transaction unusually quickly. Importantly, filing an SMR does not mean the professional believes the buyer is definitely doing anything wrong — it is a legal obligation to report suspicion. The tipping-off offence makes it illegal for a real estate professional to tell you that an SMR has been filed about you. See also: AML/CTF, AUSTRAC, Tipping-Off Offence, Customer Due Diligence.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Swing Mooring
A mooring system consisting of a buoy or float anchored to the bed of a waterway by a chain and sinker, to which a vessel is tied. Swing moorings are distinct from pile moorings and pontoon berths, the vessel swings freely around the buoy with wind and current, requiring adequate clearance from surrounding vessels and structures. In Queensland, swing moorings on tidal waterways require approval from Maritime Safety Queensland, and the number of approved moorings in any given area is regulated. Buyers purchasing a property with an existing swing mooring should confirm the mooring has a current MSQ approval and that the approval can be transferred to the new owner.
T
Thermal Bridging
Heat transfer through conductive building elements that bypass or interrupt insulation — such as metal fasteners, concrete slabs, window frames or structural steel members that penetrate the insulated envelope. Thermal bridges create localised cold spots on interior surfaces, increasing condensation risk and reducing overall thermal performance below what the insulation specification alone would suggest. A commonly overlooked issue in otherwise well-insulated buildings. In Passivhaus construction, eliminating thermal bridges is a primary design objective. Relevant when assessing the actual energy performance of a new build relative to its rated specification.
Thermal Comfort (Adaptive Comfort Model)
Thermal comfort is the condition of mind that expresses satisfaction with the surrounding thermal environment. The Adaptive Comfort Model is a standard referenced in the NCC and by sustainable building designers that recognises people in naturally ventilated buildings accept and feel comfortable across a wider temperature range than the older Predicted Mean Vote (PMV) model assumes — particularly in warm climates. The key insight is that occupants of naturally ventilated buildings adjust their expectations and behaviour (opening windows, wearing lighter clothing, using fans) in response to outdoor conditions, and feel comfortable at temperatures that would be considered unacceptably warm in a fully air-conditioned building context. In Noosa's subtropical climate, the Adaptive Comfort Model supports the case for passive design: a home with good cross ventilation, shading, ceiling fans and appropriate orientation can maintain genuinely comfortable conditions through much of the year without mechanical cooling, whereas NatHERS modelling based on fixed comfort temperatures may overstate the need for air conditioning. For buyers, understanding adaptive comfort helps explain why a well-designed older Queenslander can be more comfortable day to day than a modern poorly oriented home with air conditioning as its only thermal management strategy. See also: Passive Design, Cross Ventilation, NatHERS Rating, Relative Humidity.
Thermal Envelope
The boundary between a building's conditioned interior and the external environment — comprising the walls, roof, floor, windows and doors that collectively control heat flow in and out of the building. A designed well thermal envelope minimises unwanted heat gain in summer and heat loss in winter through high levels of insulation, airtightness, quality glazing and elimination of thermal bridges. The performance of the thermal envelope determines how hard mechanical heating and cooling systems need to work to maintain comfortable temperatures. Improving the thermal envelope is typically more cost effective than upgrading mechanical systems.
Thermal Mass
The ability of dense materials — concrete, brick, tile and stone — to absorb, store and slowly release heat. When used correctly in passive solar design, thermal mass moderates temperature swings by absorbing heat during the day and releasing it at night. Effective thermal mass requires direct solar access in winter and shading in summer to work as intended. In Noosa's subtropical climate, thermal mass is less critical than in cooler southern climates — natural cooling through cross ventilation and shading is generally more effective. Lightweight construction with good insulation and ventilation often outperforms heavy thermal mass in warm humid climates. Buyers should not assume that concrete or brick construction equates to better thermal performance without also considering ventilation and shading.
Tidal Access
Water access from a property that is affected by tidal variation, meaning the depth and navigability of the water changes with the tide. Properties with tidal access may only be able to launch or moor vessels of a certain size at high tide, with the frontage becoming too shallow at low tide. Distinct from deep water access, where sufficient depth exists at all tidal states. In Noosa, tidal variation is particularly relevant along upper Noosa River reaches, some Noosaville canals and Lake Weyba margins. Always check tidal range and minimum depth at the property's frontage if boat access is a priority.
Tidal Boundary
A property boundary defined by the high water mark of a tidal waterway, rather than by a fixed surveyed line. Tidal boundaries are common for properties fronting the ocean, Noosa River, tidal canals and estuaries. Because the high water mark can shift over time due to erosion or accretion, a tidal boundary means the legal extent of a property can change without any formal survey amendment. Buyers of tidal waterfront properties should understand that they do not own the foreshore below the high water mark, this land is Crown land, and that structures placed on or over the foreshore require state approval.
Tidal Works Approval
An approval required from Maritime Safety Queensland (MSQ) for any works on or over tidal land, including the construction, repair or removal of pontoons, jetties, boat ramps, rock walls and other waterfront structures. Tidal Works Approval is separate from any building approval and is administered at the state level. Buyers purchasing waterfront properties on the Noosa River, Lake Weyba, Noosa Waters or tidal canals should confirm that any existing structures have current Tidal Works Approval and understand the process for transferring or reapplying for approvals at settlement. Approvals are not automatically transferred to new owners.
Tipping-Off Offence
A criminal offence under Australia's AML/CTF laws that makes it illegal for a real estate professional to tell a client — or anyone else — that a Suspicious Matter Report has been filed about them, or that AUSTRAC is investigating a transaction. The rationale is straightforward: if a suspect is warned, they may destroy evidence or move funds before investigators can act. The tipping-off offence has applied in Australia since 31 March 2025. This means that if you ask your agent whether they have filed a report about you, they are legally prohibited from confirming or denying it. This can feel uncomfortable, but it is a deliberate feature of the legislation, not an evasion by your agent. See also: AML/CTF, Suspicious Matter Report, AUSTRAC.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
Title Insurance
An insurance policy that protects property owners from certain title-related risks such as boundary issues, survey errors or undisclosed encumbrances that may not appear in standard searches.
Title Search
A formal search of the property's title to confirm ownership and identify any encumbrances, caveats, easements or mortgages registered against it. Your conveyancer will conduct this as part of the purchase process.
Full guide: Title Search →
Torrens Title
The standard form of freehold land ownership in Queensland, where ownership is registered on a government-maintained title register. The most common title type for houses and vacant land in Noosa.
Town Planner
A qualified planning professional who interprets and advises on planning schemes, zoning regulations, overlays and development assessment processes. In a property purchase context, a town planner can be engaged to assess what is permissible on a site under the applicable planning scheme, identify any overlay constraints, advise on the prospects of a development application and assist buyers who are purchasing with a specific use or development intent in mind. In the Noosa region, where the planning scheme is detailed and overlay mapping can significantly restrict what is achievable on a property, engaging a town planner during due diligence is particularly valuable for buyers considering renovation, subdivision, short stay use or any form of development beyond the existing dwelling.
Tranche 2
The term used to describe the second phase of Australia's anti-money laundering reforms, which extends AML/CTF obligations to real estate professionals and other industries for the first time from 1 July 2026. Tranche 1 (introduced in 2006) covered banks, financial institutions, casinos and bullion dealers. Tranche 2 adds real estate agents, buyer's advocates (Buyer's Advocates), conveyancers, property developers, lawyers, accountants and dealers in precious stones and metals. The term is used consistently across government, all state real estate institutes (REIQ, REIV, REINSW, REIWA etc.) and AUSTRAC. If you hear someone refer to "Tranche 2 obligations" or "Tranche 2 reforms", they are referring to this expansion. See also: AML/CTF, AUSTRAC, Designated Service, Reporting Entity, Customer Due Diligence.
Full guide: New Property Laws 2026 →
U
U Value (Thermal Transmittance)
A measure of how much heat passes through a building element — wall, roof, floor or window — per square metre for every degree of temperature difference between inside and outside. Expressed in W/m²K (watts per square metre per kelvin). A lower U-Value means better insulating performance and less heat transfer. U-Value is the inverse of R-Value: a high R-Value insulation product has a low U-Value. For windows, U-Value measures the insulating performance of the entire window assembly (frame and glass combined), while SHGC measures solar heat gain. When comparing window specifications for a new build or renovation, both U-Value and SHGC matter: U-Value affects how much heat is lost or gained through conduction, SHGC affects how much is gained through solar radiation. Single pane glass has a poor U-Value (high heat transfer); double glazing significantly improves it. Relevant for buyers assessing new build specifications or comparing window upgrade options. See also: SHGC, Double Glazing, Insulation R-Value, Thermal Envelope.
Unapproved Building Work
Building work carried out without the required approval, or work that does not comply with approved plans or the Building Act 1975. The correct term is unapproved building work, though illegal building work is still commonly used in general conversation — both refer to the same thing. It includes structures built without a building approval, works that deviated from approved plans and structures where a final inspection certificate was never obtained. Unapproved building work is sometimes referred to as as-built or as-constructed work, particularly in the context of retrospective approval, where the structure must be surveyed and certified to reflect its actual final state. Common examples include decks, carports, sheds, garage conversions and extensions. From August 2025, Queensland sellers are required to disclose unapproved structures, often triggering a retrospective as-constructed certification process. Unapproved building work becomes the buyer's responsibility at settlement. It can affect insurance, future approvals and resale, and may need to be rectified or retrospectively approved at significant cost.
Unapproved Structures
Buildings, extensions, sheds, decks, pools, carports or other structures that have been constructed without the required development approval or building approval, or without a final inspection certificate being issued. Unapproved structures become the buyer's problem at settlement, the responsibility for rectifying, approving or removing them transfers with the property. In the Noosa region, unapproved structures are common on older properties and on rural and hinterland lots. Always check council building records and compare approved plans against what is physically present on the site before going unconditional.
Unapproved Use
The use of a property or building for a purpose that has not been approved under the planning scheme or a development permit. Unapproved use is distinct from unapproved structures, a building may be physically approved but used in a way that is not permitted. Common examples include using a residential property as a short stay accommodation without the required approval, operating a commercial activity in a residential zone without an approval, or using a shed or outbuilding as accommodation when it is approved only as a non-habitable structure. An unapproved use can result in an Enforcement Notice from council and may not be capable of retrospective approval.
Unconditional Contract
A contract becomes unconditional once all conditions (such as finance and building & pest) have been satisfied or waived. At this point, the buyer is legally obligated to proceed with the purchase and the deposit becomes at risk if the contract is terminated.
Full guide: Unconditional Contract →
Unconditional Date
The date when all contract conditions must be satisfied. Once the contract passes this date and becomes unconditional, the buyer is legally committed to completing the purchase.
Under Contract
A property listed as under contract has an accepted offer and a signed contract, but conditions such as finance or building and pest have not yet been satisfied. Under contract does not mean sold, the deal can still fall through if conditions are not met. Once all conditions are satisfied the contract becomes unconditional, and the property is effectively sold.
Underpinning
A structural remediation process used to strengthen or stabilise the footings of an existing building that has moved, settled, or been found to be inadequate for the loads it carries. Underpinning typically involves excavating below the existing footings and extending them deeper into stable ground, or installing piers or pilings to transfer the load past problematic soil layers. It is one of the more expensive structural repairs a property may require, and the need for underpinning is a significant finding in a pre-purchase building inspection or engineer's report. Common triggers include subsidence, reactive soil movement, footing distress discovered during renovation, or the discovery that the original footings were inadequately designed or constructed. Always obtain a scope of works and cost estimate from a structural engineer before proceeding — and confirm whether the repaired footings will be certified by an RPEQ.
Unregistered Easement
An easement that exists and affects the use of land but has not been formally registered on the title. Unregistered easements can arise through long-term use, verbal agreement or historical arrangements that were never formalised. Because they do not appear on a standard title search, they can be difficult to identify during due diligence. Common examples include informal driveway access arrangements, utility infrastructure that crosses a property without a registered easement, and drainage paths that have been used for many years without documentation. Buyers should be alert to any physical evidence of use by third parties, such as tracks, pipes, poles or fencing, that may indicate an unregistered easement.
Use Code
A set of planning scheme requirements that apply to a specific type of land use, such as dwelling house, short stay accommodation or home-based business. If a proposed use complies with its applicable use code, it may be approved without a full development application. Buyers considering short stay letting, home businesses or non-standard uses should check whether their intended use has an applicable use code under the Noosa Plan.
Use Definitions
The defined terms in a planning scheme that describe specific categories of land use, such as dwelling house, short term accommodation, home-based business, or food and drink outlet. Each use definition has a precise meaning under the planning scheme, and the use definition that applies to an activity determines which zone requirements and assessment pathways apply. A property being used in a way that does not match the correct use definition may be operating unlawfully, even if the activity appears minor or residential in nature.
V
Valuation
An independent assessment of a property's market value conducted by a licensed valuer, usually arranged by the lender before approving a loan. A valuation coming in below the purchase price can affect your borrowing capacity.
Vapour Control Layer / Vapour Permeability
A vapour control layer (VCL) is a material installed within a building assembly to limit the movement of water vapour through the structure. Unlike a fully impermeable vapour barrier, many modern vapour control layers are vapour variable — they allow a controlled amount of moisture to pass through depending on seasonal conditions, reducing the risk of moisture being trapped within the assembly. Vapour permeability is a measure of how readily a material allows water vapour to diffuse through it, expressed in units such as ng/Pa·s·m². In warm humid climates like Noosa, the placement and permeability of vapour control layers matters significantly — moisture drive can reverse seasonally as humid outdoor air pushes into the cooler air-conditioned interior, a different direction to cold-climate buildings where moisture typically moves from the warm interior outward. Incorrectly specified or positioned vapour control layers in a subtropical climate can trap moisture rather than manage it. Relevant for buyers commissioning high performance new builds or major renovations involving wall or roof insulation upgrades. See also: Hygrothermal Performance, Interstitial Condensation, Airtightness, Sarking.
Vegetation Clearing Permit
A formal approval required under Queensland's Vegetation Management Act to clear regulated native vegetation. Required for most clearing of Category B and Category R vegetation on rural and rural residential properties. Applying for and obtaining a vegetation clearing permit can be a lengthy process and is not guaranteed, approval depends on the type and ecological significance of the vegetation. Never assume vegetation on a property you intend to clear can be removed without checking permit requirements first.
Vegetation Management
State government controls that restrict the clearing of native vegetation on Queensland properties. Relevant particularly for acreage and rural properties in the Noosa hinterland. Always check vegetation management maps before purchasing land you intend to clear or develop.
Vegetation Protection Overlay
A Noosa Plan overlay that identifies and protects significant trees and vegetation on individual properties. Properties subject to a Vegetation Protection Overlay may face restrictions on removing, lopping or damaging protected trees, including for pool installations, extensions, driveways and view clearing. Council approval is required before any work affecting protected vegetation, and penalties for unauthorised removal can be substantial. Buyers planning to remove trees or clear vegetation for any purpose should check whether a Vegetation Protection Overlay applies before purchasing.
Vendor
Another term for the seller of a property. The vendor's agent works on behalf of the vendor, not the buyer. A buyer's advocate works exclusively for you.
Vendor Bid
A bid made at auction by or on behalf of the vendor, used to move the bidding toward the reserve price. Vendor bids are permitted in Queensland but must be clearly identified by the auctioneer at the time they are made. A vendor bid does not represent a genuine third party buyer, it is a mechanism to stimulate bidding. Once genuine bidding exceeds any vendor bid and the reserve price is met, the property is on the market. Buyers at auction should listen carefully for the auctioneer's announcements to understand whether bids are vendor bids or genuine buyer bids.
W
Water Allocation Area
A defined area of state tidal land set aside for the exclusive use of a property owner in connection with approved tidal works, such as a pontoon, jetty or boat ramp. A Water Allocation Area is typically established as part of the approval process for tidal structures and gives the property owner an exclusive right to use that area of state land for the approved structure. The water allocation area is usually documented in the Tidal Works Approval or a separate lease from the state. Buyers should confirm the terms of any water allocation area, including the annual fee, renewal conditions and what happens if the structure is removed or the property is sold.
Water Efficiency Labelling and Standards (WELS Rating)
Australia's mandatory water efficiency labelling scheme, applied to products such as taps, showerheads, toilets, urinals and washing machines. Products are rated from 0 to 6 stars — the more stars, the more water efficient the product. The WELS scheme is administered under the Water Efficiency Labelling and Standards Act 2005 and covers both products sold in Australia and imported products. For buyers assessing the water efficiency of a home, WELS ratings on installed fixtures provide a baseline indication. Higher rated fixtures reduce water bills and are increasingly expected in sustainable home design. Relevant for buyers seeking to understand the ongoing operating costs and environmental footprint of a property. See also: Rainwater Harvesting, Greywater Recycling.
Water Sensitive Urban Design (WSUD)
An approach to urban planning and building design that integrates water cycle management into the built environment — reducing runoff, improving water quality and conserving water supply. WSUD principles include minimising hard surfaces that prevent rainwater absorption, incorporating rain gardens and bioretention systems that filter stormwater before it reaches waterways, using rainwater harvesting and greywater recycling to reduce mains water demand, and designing landscapes that work with natural drainage patterns rather than against them. In planning and development contexts, WSUD conditions may be included in development approvals for new builds, subdivisions and larger renovations. Noosa Council's commitment to protecting the Noosa River and broader waterway health makes WSUD an increasingly relevant consideration in the shire. Relevant for buyers of new builds, properties with large paved areas, or those planning significant development. See also: Rainwater Harvesting, Greywater Recycling, Stormwater Management.
Waterfrontage
The length and quality of a property's direct frontage to a body of water, such as the ocean, a river, canal or lake. Waterfrontage is one of the primary value drivers in the Noosa luxury waterfront market. Properties with longer, uninterrupted waterfrontage, direct water access and good aspect command significant premiums over those with limited or restricted frontage. When assessing waterfrontage, buyers should consider not just the linear metres of frontage but also the nature of the boundary (bank, wall or no-bank), the orientation, the depth of the water at the frontage and whether there are any structures, easements or other encumbrances affecting use of the waterfront portion of the lot.
Waterway Corridor / Riparian Area
A planning overlay or development constraint that applies to land adjacent to creeks, rivers, lakes and other waterways. In the Noosa region, waterway corridors are identified in the Noosa Planning Scheme and on the Queensland Globe. They typically impose setback requirements, minimum distances between any new structure and the high bank of a waterway, and may restrict vegetation clearing, earthworks and certain development activities. Properties in Noosaville, Cooroibah, Lake Macdonald, Tewantin and parts of the hinterland commonly have waterway corridor overlays applying to portions of the lot. Buyers should check waterway corridor mapping as part of planning due diligence, particularly if they intend to build close to a creek or drainage line.
Waterway Licence
An approval issued by Maritime Safety Queensland (MSQ) authorising the installation and use of a structure on a tidal waterway, most commonly a pontoon or private jetty. Waterway licences are issued to a named individual, not to the property itself. When a waterfront property is sold, the existing licence does not automatically transfer to the new owner, the buyer must apply to MSQ for a new licence in their name. This process takes time and is not guaranteed. Buyers should confirm the licence status of any waterfront structure during due diligence, and not assume that the structure's physical presence alone constitutes lawful authority to use it.
Wetlands Mapping
State and local government mapping that identifies wetland areas, including freshwater wetlands, estuarine wetlands and coastal wetlands. Wetlands in Queensland are protected under both state legislation and the Noosa Plan. Properties near or containing mapped wetlands may face strict limits on development, earthworks and vegetation clearing. The Noosa River system, Lake Weyba and numerous hinterland creek systems are associated with significant mapped wetland areas. Always check wetland mapping when purchasing near waterways or low-lying land.
Whole of Home Energy Budget
A requirement introduced under the National Construction Code 2022 (NCC 2022) that sets a maximum annual energy consumption target for a home's regulated fixed appliances — including heating, cooling, hot water, lighting and pool and spa equipment — in addition to the NatHERS thermal performance rating. Where the NatHERS star rating assesses the thermal envelope of the building (how much energy is needed to heat or cool it), the Whole of Home budget addresses the actual energy used by the systems installed. Together they form a more complete picture of a new home's likely energy performance. For buyers of new builds completed under NCC 2022 (effective Queensland from May 2024), a Whole of Home compliance certificate should be available alongside the NatHERS certificate. The requirement encourages builders to specify more efficient appliances — hot water systems, lighting and HVAC — not just better insulation and glazing. See also: NatHERS Rating, 7 Star Energy Rating, Section J, Operational Energy.
Window to Wall Ratio (WWR)
The proportion of a building's external wall area that is glazed, expressed as a percentage. A high window to wall ratio increases natural light and views but also increases solar heat gain and thermal losses. The NCC sets maximum window to wall ratios for different climate zones as part of energy efficiency requirements. In Noosa's subtropical climate, large west facing glazing without adequate shading is a common source of overheating. Buyers assessing homes with extensive glazing should consider the orientation of the windows, the shading provided and whether Low-E glass or double glazing is specified.
Z
Zone of Influence
The area of soil around a footing, slab, tree root system, excavation or other load-bearing element within which changes in stress or moisture will affect that element's performance. In building and geotechnical engineering, the zone of influence determines how close structures, trees, services or excavations can be to a footing without affecting its stability. For retaining walls, the zone of influence defines the area where surcharges — additional loads like driveways, structures or fill — must be factored into the wall's design. For trees, root systems can extend well beyond the visible canopy, and roots within the zone of influence of a footing can cause movement as they extract moisture from reactive soils. This is a term that rarely gets explained clearly but has practical consequences on properties with large trees near structures, on sites with retaining walls close to boundaries or driveways, and on any site where excavation is planned near existing buildings.
Zoning
Council zoning determines how land can be used and what can be built on it. In Noosa, common residential zones include Low Density Residential, Medium Density and Rural Residential, each with different development possibilities and density allowances.
Full guide: Zoning →

Not sure where to start?

The Noosa market has more moving parts than most — planning overlays, local rules, hazard areas and off-market activity that never shows up publicly. Knowing the terminology is one thing; knowing how it applies to a specific property is another.

Get in touch if you want clear, independent guidance, or browse all buyer resources at your own pace.