At a Glance
Contractor accreditation is evolving beyond licences, qualifications and insurance.
Housing providers and property managers are increasingly seeking greater assurance about the people entering residents' homes.
Police checks, Working With Children Checks and identity verification are becoming more common across the industry.
Organisations retain oversight responsibilities even when work is performed by external contractors.
Strong contractor accreditation helps build trust with residents, clients and asset owners.
These accreditations can help position contractors for future opportunities across housing, property management and other regulated environments.
Expectations around contractor accreditation have expanded significantly in recent years, but why did it take so long?
Allowing a stranger into your home is a vulnerable interaction. Trusting that the person arriving at your front door has been appropriately vetted should be the bare minimum.
Yet historically, contractor accreditation focused almost exclusively on technical competency. If a contractor held the required licences, qualifications and insurance, that was often considered sufficient.
Today, that expectation is changing.
Housing providers, property managers and asset owners are increasingly recognising that technical competency is only one part of the equation. They are asking a broader question: can we demonstrate that reasonable steps have been taken to verify the people entering residents' homes?
This shift reflects changing expectations around governance, duty of care and resident safety. Large housing providers now routinely measure tenant satisfaction, monitor contractor complaints, track call-backs and defects, and expect active oversight of subcontractor networks.
Contractor performance is no longer judged solely on whether a repair is completed. It is increasingly judged on how the work is delivered and the confidence residents have in the people carrying it out.
Why Licences and Insurance Are No Longer Enough
Trade licences, qualifications and insurance remain essential. They provide confidence that a contractor has the technical capability to perform the work safely and professionally.
What they do not necessarily provide is assurance about the broader experience of having someone enter an occupied home.

Housing providers are increasingly accountable for the experience residents have with contractors, not just the outcome of the repair itself. In many cases, contractor interactions are measured through tenant satisfaction, complaints, service quality and responsiveness.
At the same time, organisations retain responsibilities even when work is outsourced.
Safe Work Australia notes that responsibilities within a contractual chain cannot simply be transferred to another party. Organisations remain responsible for exercising appropriate oversight and seeking assurance that systems are in place and functioning effectively.
As a result, organisations are increasingly looking beyond technical competency alone when assessing contractor suitability.
The Shift from Accreditation to Assurance
Historically, contractor accreditation focused on verifying credentials.
Today, organisations are increasingly focused on contractor assurance.
The difference is subtle but important.
Accreditation asks: Does this contractor hold the appropriate licences and qualifications?
Assurance asks: Can we demonstrate that appropriate checks, controls and standards are in place before this contractor enters a resident's home?
This broader approach reflects the reality that organisations must balance compliance obligations, resident safety, governance expectations and reputational risk.
Questions that were once considered outside the scope of contractor accreditation are becoming increasingly common:
How are contractors selected?
What standards of conduct apply when interacting with residents?
What processes are in place to identify and manage risk?
How can an organisation demonstrate that appropriate oversight has occurred?
What Modern Contractor Assurance Looks Like

The answer will vary between organisations, portfolios and resident groups.
However, modern contractor assurance programs often extend beyond trade licences and insurance to include:
National Police Checks
Working With Children Checks where required
Identity verification
Contractor inductions
Codes of conduct
Ongoing performance monitoring
Complaint and incident management processes
These requirements are not based on an assumption that contractors present a risk.
Rather, they are designed to provide confidence that appropriate checks have been completed and that organisations can demonstrate reasonable oversight of the people entering residents' homes.
For contractors, these requirements may sometimes feel like an additional administrative step.
For housing providers, property managers and residents, they are increasingly viewed as part of professional practice.
As contractor networks grow larger and more complex, the industry is gradually moving from a model based on accreditation alone towards one based on assurance.
The goal remains the same as it has always been: ensuring the right person arrives at the right property and completes the work safely.
The difference is that organisations are now expected to demonstrate how they know that person can be trusted before they ever arrive at the front door.




