Turning Dense Defect Reports Into Deal-Saving Clarity
When a 70-page building and pest report lands in buyers’ inboxes halfway through a short finance period, the deal can wobble in minutes. As agents in Inner Brisbane, you are often the first phone call, and your ability to explain major vs minor defects in a building inspection can be the difference between a calm renegotiation and a terminated contract.
I’m Paul Klumper, your local Resicert inspector at Building & Pest Bne. I’ve spent years walking through Inner Brisbane character homes, older brick builds and apartments with buyers, sellers and agents. My job is to turn dense, standards-based information into something you can use in live negotiations while the campaign clock is ticking.
What follows is written professional to professional, so you can understand how I work, what the standards actually require, and how to use my reports to keep deals moving without ever compromising on safety or compliance.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
Major Defects
Minor Defects
Australian Standards
Best For
What Major and Minor Defects Really Mean in Practice
When we talk about major vs minor defects in a building inspection, we’re working within the definitions of:
• AS 4349.1, Residential building inspections (pre-purchase)
• AS 4349.3, Timber pest inspections
Those standards use terms like “major defect”, “minor defect” and “major building element” very deliberately, and compliant reports must reflect that structure. This is not my personal opinion; it is a regulatory framework I must work within.
Put simply: