Redcliffe Building Inspector — Coastal New-Build & Handover Inspections
VG Inspect provides independent, QBCC-licensed building inspections for new homes across Redcliffe and the wider Redcliffe Peninsula — so the coastal home you're paying for is the home you actually receive at handover. On a bayside lot, salt air, exposure and low finished levels change what matters most, and every inspection here is weighted accordingly.
Book an InspectionFrom $660 (new homes under 220m²) — larger homes quoted on request · Same-week availability · Same-Day Digital Reports
Last updated: May 2026
Redcliffe is part of our Moreton Bay coverage — see Building Inspections Moreton Bay for the full City of Moreton Bay LGA overview.
Building on the coast? See our Redcliffe Peninsula building inspections hub for the salt-air specialist overview across Newport, Redcliffe, Scarborough, Margate and Clontarf.
About Redcliffe and the peninsula
Redcliffe is the keystone suburb of the Redcliffe Peninsula, a low-lying spit of land reaching into Moreton Bay roughly 30 km north of Brisbane and now part of the City of Moreton Bay local government area. It is one of South East Queensland's oldest seaside communities, and that maturity shapes the kind of new-build work happening today. Rather than vast greenfield estates, Redcliffe's new homes are mostly infill and knock-down-rebuild projects on established waterfront and near-water streets, where an older cottage makes way for a modern home that has to stand up to a genuinely coastal setting.
For a buyer, the defining feature of building in Redcliffe is the marine environment itself. A home a few hundred metres from the bay lives in salt-laden air every day of its life, and that changes the long-term performance of fixings, flashings, coatings and any exposed metalwork. The peninsula is also flat and low, so finished-floor levels and site drainage carry more consequence than they do on a free-draining inland slope. None of this implies coastal homes are poorly built — it simply means the points that fail first are different, and an independent inspection that understands the coast catches them while they are still easy to rectify.
Local conditions that matter at a Redcliffe inspection
Every location has site conditions that influence what an inspector watches most closely. On the Redcliffe Peninsula the recurring coastal themes are:
- Salt-air corrosion exposure. Redcliffe sits in a marine environment where airborne salt attacks fixings, fasteners, brick ties, flashings and any unprotected metalwork far faster than inland. Material selection and corrosion protection for the coastal exposure category are checked closely — the wrong grade of fixing or an incomplete coating shows up as rust within a year or two on the bay.
- Wind region and coastal terrain. The peninsula falls in Wind Region B under AS 1170.2, and its open bayside exposure usually means a more demanding terrain category than a sheltered inland estate. The site-specific wind classification under AS 4055 drives frame tie-down and bracing, so it's a key check at frame stage on an exposed coastal block.
- Low-lying lots and site drainage. Much of Redcliffe is flat, low-lying land close to sea level, so finished-floor levels, overland flow paths and final grading matter more than on a draining slope. QBCC Section 2.3 and NCC Volume 2 Part 3.1.2.3 require finished levels to direct water away from the building — easy to get wrong on a flat coastal lot.
- Durability of external metalwork. Downpipes, gutters, garage doors, balustrades, brackets and flashings all need full coating and corrosion protection to survive the salt air. Incomplete paint or exposed bare metal is a recurring coastal item we record.
- Peninsula termite pressure. The bayside fringe is no exception to South East Queensland's high termite pressure. An AS 3660.1 termite management system must be installed correctly at slab stage and the durable notice fixed in the meter box at handover — both are verified. Council jurisdiction sits with the City of Moreton Bay, and the certifier handles building-approval compliance while the independent assessment complements that regulatory work.

Commonly found at Redcliffe new builds
Across recent VG Inspect handover and stage inspections on the peninsula, these are the items that come up most often on a coastal Redcliffe lot. Each is tied to a standard, photographed, and located in your report.
- Flashings not fully sealed at junctions Critical. On a coastal home, any unsealed flashing is an open door for wind-driven salt rain. We regularly find window head flashings, parapet and step flashings or roof-wall junctions left short or relying on silicone alone. NCC Volume 2 Part 3.5 covers the flashing requirements, and in a Redcliffe salt-air environment a failed flashing means both water ingress and accelerated corrosion behind it.
- Render cracking and drummy or hollow render Critical. Rendered facades are common on Redcliffe rebuilds, and on the exposed coast a crack or a debonded (drummy) section lets moisture and salt sit behind the render where it can't dry out. We tap-test render and map every crack, noting whether it points to shrinkage, movement or a substrate bond failure that will worsen quickly in the marine setting.
- Site drainage on low-lying lots Critical. Much of Redcliffe is flat, near-sea-level land, so final grading that lets water sit against the slab edge rather than draining clear is a recurring find. QBCC Section 2.3 and NCC Volume 2 Part 3.1.2.3 require water to be directed away from the building, and on a coastal block standing water is both a structural and a corrosion concern.
- Corrosion on fixings and fasteners Critical. The wrong grade of bracket, screw or brick tie corrodes fast in salt air. We check that fixings on external metalwork, balustrades and structural connections are the correct corrosion-resistant grade for the coastal exposure category, because a failed fixing on the bay is a safety and durability issue, not a cosmetic one.
- Incomplete paint or coating on downpipes and metalwork Minor. Bare or partly coated downpipes, brackets and garage-door hardware rust quickly on the coast. It's usually a minor finish item at handover, but on a Redcliffe lot it's the start of a durability problem, so we record every unprotected section for rectification before you accept the keys.
- Blocked or missing window weep holes Monitor. Weep holes let water and salt escape the window frame and the cavity. On the coast, blocked, painted-over or missing weep holes trap moisture against the frame and the brickwork behind it. We check each one and record any that need clearing so wind-driven coastal rain and sand can drain as intended.
Stage inspections at Redcliffe catch most of these before they're covered up — see how a PCI inspection works.
Inspection types available in Redcliffe
What we check at your Redcliffe inspection
VG Inspect inspections are documented against the National Construction Code Volume 2, the relevant Australian Standards, and the QBCC Standards and Tolerances Guide. Every defect noted in your report references the specific clause it breaches. On a coastal Redcliffe home the headline checks at a PCI or handover inspection include:
- Slab and footings — level, edge beam dimensions, reinforcement cover, termite management system per AS 3660.1, soil-class compliance per AS 2870 and set-down at wet areas on a flat coastal lot.
- Structural frame and tie-down — timber sizing, bracing nail patterns, tie-down bolts and truss connections per AS 1684, with particular attention to the wind classification under AS 4055 on an exposed peninsula block.
- Roof and flashings — covering, gutters, valleys, ridge capping, fall to downpipes and every flashing and penetration sealed against wind-driven coastal rain per NCC Volume 2 Part 3.5.
- External cladding, render and brickwork — render finish and bond, brick veneer cavity, articulation joints, window head flashings, weep holes, external sealants and corrosion-resistant brick ties for the coastal exposure.
- Corrosion protection of external metalwork — coatings and material grade on downpipes, gutters, balustrades, garage doors, brackets and fixings appropriate to the salt-air environment.
- Wet-area waterproofing — shower, bathroom, laundry and balcony membrane height, junctions, drainage and substrate per AS 3740 and NCC Volume 2 Part 3.8.1.1 — the highest-consequence defect category at any inspection.
- Internal finishes — plasterboard, cornice, paint finish, tiling, grout and silicone against QBCC Section 14 tolerances (visible from 1.5 m under natural light).
- Joinery, fixtures and fittings — kitchen and bathroom cabinetry, benchtop installation, tap and toilet operation, appliances against the contract specification.
- Site works and drainage — driveways, paths, retaining, fencing, drainage falls and finished ground levels relative to slab and to NCC Volume 2 Part 3.1.2.3 on a low-lying lot.
- Compliance documentation — Form 16s, Form 21, waterproofing certificate, termite durable notice and energy efficiency certificate present and in your name.

The Redcliffe handover process — what to expect
The legal moment that matters on a new Queensland home is signing the practical-completion acknowledgement. Once you sign, your statutory 12-month defect liability period under the Queensland Building and Construction Commission Act starts. Items that should have been picked up before that signature — including coastal corrosion and flashing defects — become harder to enforce afterwards.
The typical Redcliffe handover sequence runs like this:
- Builder notifies you of practical completion — usually 5 to 14 days before handover.
- You book your VG Inspect PCI inspection — ideally for the morning of, or the day before, your scheduled handover walkthrough with the builder.
- Adam attends the property for 2 to 3 hours, with extra time on coastal corrosion, flashings and drainage, and issues the photographic report the same day.
- You hand the report to your site supervisor — every item with its photograph, location and AS/QBCC clause reference. The builder rectifies items in the timeframe agreed in your build contract.
- You attend the handover walkthrough with the builder and confirm rectification items are addressed before signing.
- Items still outstanding at handover are recorded in writing — your VG Inspect report is your contemporaneous record for the 12-month defect liability period.
Builders we inspect in Redcliffe
Redcliffe's new homes are built by a mix of national volume builders and mid-size operators working on infill and knock-down-rebuild lots across the peninsula. VG Inspect is independent — we work alongside these builders, not against them — and Adam is available to inspect a new home from any builder active in Redcliffe, including Metricon, Coral Homes, Plantation Homes, GJ Gardner, Brighton Homes and Hallmark Homes. [ADAM TO CONFIRM: confirm which of these builders you have personally inspected on Redcliffe lots before this goes live.] Every builder above builds quality homes; the role is simply an independent, QBCC-licensed second set of eyes verifying the home being delivered is the home the buyer is paying for, against Australian Standards and the QBCC Standards and Tolerances Guide.
Why Redcliffe buyers choose VG Inspect
QBCC licensed inspector
Adam holds QBCC licence 1318443 — the legal requirement to inspect and report on residential construction in Queensland. Fully insured, with every Redcliffe inspection carried out personally.
Coastal new builds only
We specialise exclusively in newly constructed homes and weight every peninsula report toward the salt-air corrosion, flashing and drainage items that matter most on the coast.
Same-Day Digital Reports
Your same-day digital report with photographs and AS/QBCC clause references is ready to hand directly to your builder for rectification (most inspections, exclusions apply).
Local to the peninsula
We cover Redcliffe, Scarborough, Margate, Clontarf, Woody Point, Newport and the surrounding City of Moreton Bay estates.
After your Redcliffe inspection — your 12-month window
Your VG Inspect report doesn't end at handover. It's the contemporaneous record you rely on for the 12-month statutory defect liability period under the Queensland Building and Construction Commission Act. On the coast, where salt-air corrosion and water ingress can emerge in the first year, the report is your starting point for a written request to the builder and, if needed, a QBCC dispute.
For peace of mind at the back end of the warranty period, many peninsula buyers also book an 11-month warranty inspection — a focused inspection at the 11-month mark to identify defects that have emerged in the first year, including early rust on fixings and metalwork, before the 12-month liability window closes.
Frequently asked questions — Redcliffe building inspections
Do you carry out handover (PCI) inspections in Redcliffe?
Yes. Practical completion (PCI) and handover inspections on new homes are the core service, and Redcliffe — the keystone suburb of the Redcliffe Peninsula in the City of Moreton Bay — is a market Adam knows intimately. Adam attends your new Redcliffe home before you accept the keys, documents every defect against the National Construction Code Volume 2, the relevant Australian Standards and the QBCC Standards and Tolerances Guide, and issues a same-day digital report you can hand straight to your builder. On a coastal lot the report pays particular attention to corrosion-prone fixings, flashings and external metalwork that a salt-air environment punishes faster than an inland one.
Why does a coastal Redcliffe inspection need a different focus?
Redcliffe sits on a low-lying bayside peninsula, so the marine environment changes what matters most. Salt-laden air accelerates corrosion of fixings, fasteners, brick ties, flashings and any unpainted or poorly coated metalwork, which is why durability and corrosion protection sit near the top of the checklist here. The peninsula falls in Wind Region B under AS 1170.2 with a more exposed coastal terrain category than sheltered inland estates, so frame tie-down and bracing under AS 4055 carry extra weight. Low finished-floor levels and overland drainage also need close attention on flatter bayside blocks. None of this means a coastal home is built worse — it simply means the failure points are different, and a local inspector weights the report accordingly.
When should I book my Redcliffe PCI inspection?
Book as soon as your builder issues the practical completion notice — usually 5 to 14 days before your scheduled handover. Redcliffe's active infill and knock-down-rebuild market means handover programmes can firm up quickly, so booking a few days ahead protects your preferred slot and leaves room for a re-inspection after rectification if you want one.
Which builders are building in Redcliffe and do you inspect alongside them?
Redcliffe's new-home activity is a mix of national volume builders and mid-size operators working on infill and knock-down-rebuild lots across the peninsula. VG Inspect is completely independent — not employed, paid or appointed by any builder — so Adam is available to inspect a home from any builder active in Redcliffe. The role is to add a focused, QBCC-licensed set of eyes for the buyer that complements the builder's own quality assurance and the private certifier's compliance checks, never to work against the builder.
Do you check the coastal corrosion protection on external metalwork?
Yes — it is one of the defining checks on a Redcliffe coastal job. Adam looks at the coating and corrosion protection on downpipes, gutters, flashings, garage doors, balustrades, fixings and exposed brackets, because in a salt-air environment incomplete paint or the wrong material grade leads to accelerated rust. Weep holes, window flashings and external sealants get particular attention too, since wind-driven coastal rain and salt find any gap. Everything is photographed and referenced to the relevant standard or the QBCC Standards and Tolerances Guide.
Are you QBCC licensed and insured, and is it really just one inspector?
Yes on both counts. VG Inspect operates under current QBCC licence 1318443 — the legal requirement to inspect and report on residential building work in Queensland — and carries professional indemnity and public liability insurance. Every Redcliffe inspection is carried out personally by Adam Gates; nothing is subcontracted, so the person who licences and signs the report is the person who stood in your home. You can verify licence 1318443 through the QBCC online licence search at qbcc.qld.gov.au before you book.
How much does a building inspection cost in Redcliffe?
A practical completion (handover) inspection is $660 for new homes under 220m²; larger homes are individually quoted so the fee reflects the actual floor area. Construction stage inspections are $550 per stage, an 11-month warranty inspection is $550, and a post-handover new-home inspection is $660. There is no travel surcharge for Redcliffe or anywhere else on the peninsula.
Estates and suburbs we cover near Redcliffe
VG Inspect covers all new-home work across the Redcliffe Peninsula and the surrounding bayside corridor, including Scarborough, Margate, Clontarf and Newport and surrounds. If your new home is being built anywhere on the peninsula, we cover it.
For region-wide context, see our Redcliffe Peninsula hub for the coastal specialist overview, or our Moreton Bay region hub for new-build activity across the council area.
Book your Redcliffe building inspection today
Same-week availability. QBCC licensed. Detailed same-day digital reports with a coastal focus.
Book an InspectionCall 07 3180 8041 · QBCC Licensed · Same-Day Digital Reports · Independent Coastal New-Build Specialist
Inspections in nearby suburbs
We cover Redcliffe and the surrounding peninsula across the City of Moreton Bay.