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NCC 2025 Volume One — What's Changed (v2)

· 14 min read
PSEC
Architecture Team

National Construction Code 2025 Preview Draft vs NCC 2022 Deep Research Report — March 2026


Overview

The NCC 2025 Volume One (Building Code of Australia — Class 2 to 9 buildings) introduces significant new provisions and updates across fire safety, water management, energy efficiency, accessibility, sanitary facilities, and electric vehicle infrastructure. The preview draft was released in February 2026, with earliest adoption expected from May 2026 (jurisdiction-dependent).

This report covers three areas:

  1. What's NEW — provisions that did not exist in NCC 2022
  2. What's UPDATED — existing provisions that have been revised
  3. Why — the drivers and rationale behind the changes

1. What's NEW in NCC 2025

1.1 EV Charging Infrastructure (Section J / Part J9)

EV charging provisions were first introduced in NCC 2022 Amendment 2 (effective October 2023) for Class 2 buildings. NCC 2025 extends and refines these requirements across commercial building classes.

Important clarification: Class 2 (apartments) EV-ready requirements are not new in NCC 2025 — they were established under NCC 2022 Amendment 2. Building Ministers have paused further residential changes until mid-2029. NCC 2025's EV changes primarily affect commercial classes.

Requirements by building class:

Building ClassDescriptionNCC 2022NCC 2025
Class 2Apartments100% EV-ready (NCC 2022 Amd 2)Unchanged — paused until 2029
Class 3Hotels, motelsLimitedCharging infrastructure for guest parking
Class 5OfficesLimitedConduit pathways + electrical capacity
Class 6Retail/shops~5%10% of carpark spaces with dedicated EDBs
Class 7aCarparks (stand-alone)Not requiredExempt
Class 7aCarparks (within other buildings)Not requiredFollows associated building class
Class 8Factories/labsLimitedProvisions proportional to vehicle demand
Class 9Public buildingsLimitedCharging provisions for staff/visitor parking

Class 2 EV-ready technical specs (NCC 2022 Amd 2, continuing unchanged):

  • 100% of car spaces must be EV-ready (infrastructure, not chargers)
  • Dedicated EV distribution board separate from building systems
  • Circuits supporting minimum 7 kW (32A) single-phase Type 2 chargers
  • Minimum 12 kWh delivery between 11pm–7am daily
  • Active conductors: minimum 6mm² cross-sectional area
  • Max 50m cable run from distribution board to EVSE outlet
  • 36mm DIN rail space per circuit for future metering
  • One additional distribution board per 24 car spaces beyond 168 per storey
  • Mandatory charging control system (load management)
  • Compliance via DtS (Part J9D4) or Performance Solution (Clause A2G2)

Class 6 EV charging technical specs (NEW in NCC 2025):

  • 10% of carpark spaces must have EV charging equipment
  • Dedicated electrical distribution boards (EDBs) per storey, labelled for EV use
  • Load management/charging control system required
  • Separate sub-circuit metering for each EV charging device
  • EDBs located no more than 10m from busduct (where busduct solution used)

1.2 Mandatory On-Site Solar (Section J — New DtS for Class 3–9)

NCC 2025 introduces a new DtS requirement for mandatory on-site photovoltaic (PV) systems on commercial buildings.

  • Class 6 buildings: Solar panels required on 100% of available roof space
  • Exclusions: trafficable zones, plant spaces, shaded areas
  • Class 7a buildings: Exempt from solar panel requirements
  • Supports the "near zero operational greenhouse gas emissions" performance requirement

1.3 Water Management Framework (Part F1 — Restructured/New)

NCC 2025 consolidates and expands water management into a unified framework under Part F1. This replaces the fragmented approach in NCC 2022 where waterproofing, weatherproofing, and water shedding were treated somewhat separately. Parts F1 and F3 have been merged into a single Part F1.

New framework structure:

Notable new/strengthened requirements:

  • Minimum 1:80 gradient for water shedding on balconies, podiums, and accessible areas
  • 70mm step-downs at door thresholds to external tiled areas
  • Expanded scope to cover previously unregulated junctions and interfaces
  • Performance-based pathways with clearer verification methods
  • Class 7 and 8 buildings now included — previous waterproofing exemptions removed

1.4 All-Gender Sanitary Facilities (Part F4 — New Provision)

NCC 2025 formally introduces provisions for all-gender (unisex) sanitary facilities in certain building types, reflecting contemporary approaches to inclusive design.

  • Applicable to new Class 5, 6, and 9 buildings above certain thresholds
  • Provisions allow all-gender facilities to count toward overall sanitary fixture requirements
  • Privacy and safety design requirements included (full-height partitions, individual lockable compartments)

2. What's UPDATED in NCC 2025

2.1 Fire Safety — Carpark Sprinklers & FRL (Section C)

This is the most significant fire safety change in NCC 2025, driven by an Arup literature review of ~400 sources commissioned by ABCB.

AspectNCC 2022NCC 2025
Sprinklers (>40 spaces, enclosed)RequiredRequired (unchanged)
Sprinklers (>40 spaces, open-deck)ExemptNow mandatory
Sprinklers (stand-alone open-deck)ExemptStill exempt
Car stackersNo sprinkler requirementMandatory sprinklers
FRL — open-deck Type A/B60/60/60120/120/120
FRL concessions (sprinkler-protected)Available for Type A below other classesRemoved
EV fire riskNot addressedAcknowledged (toxic fumes, thermal runaway, re-ignition risk)

Key details on EV fire considerations:

  • EV battery fires produce significantly more smoke and toxic gases (including hydrogen fluoride) than conventional vehicles
  • Require hours or days of firewater cooling for control
  • Risk of re-ignition hours/days after initial extinguishment
  • ABCB determined EVs should not be classified as "special hazards" — they are now common
  • Queensland Fire's request to classify EVs under special hazard provisions (E1D17/E2D21) was not adopted

Rationale: The 1980s research underpinning the old open-deck exemptions did not account for modern vehicles (larger, more plastic content, EV batteries). The Arup review confirmed the updated risk profile.

2.2 Waterproofing & Water Shedding (Part F1)

AspectNCC 2022NCC 2025
Balcony gradientsGeneral guidance, no minimum1:80 minimum gradient mandated
Door step-downsVaried/unclear70mm step-down at doors to external tiled areas
ScopePrimarily internal wet areasExtended to balconies, podiums, terraces, external junctions
Class 7 & 8 buildingsExempt from waterproofingNow included under F1P2
Wall cladding (Zones 6-8)Direct-fix permittedDrained/ventilated cavity (min 18mm) required
Verification methodsLimitedExpanded performance-based pathways

2.3 Condensation Management (Part F8)

AspectNCC 2022NCC 2025
Vapour permeanceGeneral requirementsClass 4 vapour permeance classification for barriers
Climate zonesZones 6-8 for roof ventilationExtended to Climate Zones 4-8
VentilationBasic requirementsEnhanced mechanical/passive ventilation; mandatory vapour-permeable membranes
Roof spacesGeneral guidanceSpecific condensation control + moisture escape pathways
Small roofsStandard requirementsReduced ventilation requirements

2.4 Women's Toilet Ratios (Part F4)

AspectNCC 2022NCC 2025
General ratio (F:M)1:1.25Maintained at 1:1.25 for most building types
Theatres & cinemas1:1.25Increased to 1:1.8 (F:M)
Assembly buildings1:1.25Increased ratios for high-attendance venues

Rationale: Evidence-based adjustment to reduce queue times at high-turnover venues.

2.5 Energy Efficiency (Section J)

AspectNCC 2022NCC 2025
Performance targetEnergy efficiencyNear zero operational greenhouse gas emissions
Solar panels (Class 6)Not mandatoryMandatory — 100% available roof space
Solar panels (Class 7a)N/AExempt
Facade solar admittanceBaseline~44% tighter wall-glazing solar admittance
GlazingPrescriptive SHGC/U-valueUpdated values for current glazing tech
HVACEfficiency baselinesRaised minimum efficiency
ReportingJV3 verificationEnhanced NatHERS and JV3 alignment

Rationale: Aligned with Australia's net zero 2050 target. Buildings account for ~25% of national energy consumption.

2.6 Structural Provisions (Section B)

AspectNCC 2022NCC 2025
Performance-based assessmentGeneral frameworkEnhanced documentation and verification
Referenced standardsAS/NZS 1170 (2021)Updated to latest published editions
RobustnessImplicitMore explicit progressive collapse and structural robustness provisions
Means of assessmentGeneralAmendments to A2G2, B1P1, H1P1 for consistent Performance Solutions

2.7 Accessibility (Part D — AS 1428.1 Update)

AspectNCC 2022NCC 2025
Referenced standardAS 1428.1-2009Updated to AS 1428.1:2021
Luminance contrastGeneral requirementsStrengthened minimum ratios
Tactile indicatorsBasic provisionsUpdated installation and spacing
Accessible toiletsAS 1428.1-2009 layoutRevised layout per 2021 standard
Class 6 adult change facilitiesBasicRequired in shopping centres above thresholds
Class 7a accessible parkingBasicMinimum 1 space per AS/NZS 2890.6; signage for carparks >5 spaces

2.8 Carpark Ventilation (Class 7a)

AspectNCC 2022NCC 2025
Base ventilation rateHigher baseline (single engine)Halved — reduces size, cost, energy, materials
CO exposure limitsTable-basedUpdated Table FV4.2 limits
Open-deck definitionCross-ventilation 2 sidesUnchanged — 1/6 area ratio, 1/2 wall area openings
EV contaminantsNot addressedNote: AS 1668.2 does not cover EV battery charging contaminants — designers must investigate

3. Class-Specific Change Summary

Class 7a — Carparks

Class 6 — Retail / Shops / Cafes


4. Reasons Behind the Changes

4.1 Summary of Drivers

4.2 Detailed Rationale

Building Defect Prevention

Water ingress and waterproofing failure remain the number one category of building defects in Australia. The consolidated water management framework directly targets this by mandating measurable gradients (1:80), specifying step-down dimensions (70mm), and expanding scope to balconies and terraces. The removal of Class 7/8 waterproofing exemptions acknowledges that carparks also suffer from water management issues.

Condensation and mould issues have increased as buildings become more airtight for energy efficiency. Extended Climate Zone 4-8 coverage and Class 4 vapour permeance requirements address these unintended consequences. Wall cladding changes (drained cavities in Zones 6-8) prevent moisture trapping behind facades.

Safety Modernisation

The Arup literature review (~400 sources) confirmed that 1980s carpark fire research is obsolete. Modern vehicles are larger, contain more plastics, and include EV batteries that burn differently. The FRL increase from 60/60/60 to 120/120/120 for open-deck carparks and mandatory sprinklers for >40 spaces directly respond to this evidence.

Environmental & Climate Policy

Australia's net zero 2050 commitment requires the building sector (~25% of national energy) to improve significantly. Mandatory solar panels for Class 6, tighter facade thermal performance (~44% reduction in solar admittance), and enhanced HVAC efficiency standards all contribute. The "near zero operational greenhouse gas emissions" performance requirement replaces the previous energy efficiency framing.

Social Equity & Inclusivity

Updated women's toilet ratios for theatres/cinemas (1:1.8) are evidence-based. All-gender sanitary facilities reflect inclusive design principles. Updated accessibility standards (AS 1428.1:2021) incorporate a decade of research since the 2009 edition.


5. Implementation Timeline

Key dates:

  • February 2026: Preview draft published
  • May 2026: Earliest jurisdiction adoption (ACT confirmed with 6-month transition)
  • October 2025: Building Ministers agreed to pause residential changes until mid-2029
  • Tasmania: Committed to freezing (not adopting) NCC 2025 EV changes
  • NSW, VIC, QLD, SA, WA: Adoption dates not yet confirmed

Sources

Official

Industry

Technical


Report generated March 2026. Based on the NCC 2025 Preview Draft — final adopted version may differ.