Practical site notes before work starts
LBP licensing is not a marketing badge. It is a practical line between work that can be undertaken casually and work that carries a legal and technical standard. For homeowners, the most important point is that some residential building work in New Zealand can only be carried out or supervised by properly licensed people. In our Builder’s Notebook view, understanding this early is one of the simplest ways to reduce compliance risk before the project gets moving.
Builder selection note
The right delivery partner is usually the one who can clarify risk, sequence work properly, and communicate cost movement early.
Clients comparing delivery options
Useful for project owners, site leads, and decision-makers reviewing the next move.
3 min read
Treat this as a pre-start briefing and use the checklist before locking key decisions.
Use this quick review before scope, programme, or procurement hardens.
- Check whether the quote identifies assumptions, exclusions, and allowance items clearly.
- Ask how programme risks, subcontractor coordination, and procurement are managed.
- Confirm who is responsible for client decisions, consultant information, and approvals.
- Review communication cadence so issues are surfaced before they become variation pressure.
1. Know what restricted building work actually means
The term matters because it defines where licensing is legally required. The Building Performance guide to restricted building work[1] explains that this generally covers critical structural and weathertightness elements of residential buildings. If your project touches those areas, the licensing question is not optional.
2. Check whether your project needs an LBP
The official LBP homeowner guidance[2] is the clearest place to start. It outlines when an LBP is required and why supervision, licence class, and Records of Work matter. For owners, the practical lesson is to ask early who is licensed, who will supervise the restricted work, and how that documentation will be supplied to council.
3. Licensing supports compliance, not just workmanship
Clients often associate LBPs with build quality alone, but the compliance pathway is just as important. If restricted work is done without the correct licensed involvement, the council record becomes more complicated and the project may face avoidable issues during inspections, code compliance, or future resale due diligence. The right paperwork is part of the value.
4. Homeowners still have rights, but they need to use them well
Independent guidance from the Citizens Advice Bureau on homeowner rights when hiring builders[3] is a useful companion reference. It reinforces the importance of contracts, implied warranties, and clear records. Licensing is a major protection, but it works best alongside a written agreement, a transparent scope, and a builder who communicates clearly.
5. Ask practical questions before signing
Before you appoint a builder, ask what parts of the project are restricted building work, which licence classes are relevant, who will sign the Record of Work, and how site supervision will be handled. If the answers are vague, that is useful information in itself. It may also help to read our article on questions to ask before signing with a builder[4] so the contract discussion is just as clear as the licensing discussion.
At Henare Construction, we see LBP compliance as basic good practice rather than a late-stage admin requirement. If you are planning residential work in Whangarei or wider Northland, we can help you understand the compliance pathway and make sure the project team is structured correctly from the start.
