Author: Jesse Fowler, Director, J&J Plumbing Services
Renovation credit regulation just landed at the kitchen table, and most Australian builders have no idea. Every time a homeowner says yes to a $27,000 bathroom quote, they commit to a financial obligation bigger than most personal loans. Yet that handshake carries none of the consumer protections that a bank loan of the same size would trigger.
That gap is closing fast. Here is why it matters.
Renovation Credit Regulation Starts With a Number: $27,000
The average Australian bathroom renovation now costs $26,747, according to Housing Industry Association data. Sydney and Melbourne push that figure 12 to 25% higher. So a standard gut-and-rebuild sits comfortably in the $22,000 to $35,000 range, while premium projects with structural changes blow past $60,000.
These are serious sums. They match new car prices and university tuition costs. However, renovation credit regulation has not kept pace with these rising costs. The consumer protections attached to a renovation quote look nothing like those governing a personal loan.
When someone borrows $27,000 from a bank, the National Consumer Credit Protection Act kicks in. The lender must hold an Australian Credit Licence. They verify income. They assess whether repayments would cause hardship. They hand over a Credit Guide and pre-contractual disclosure documents.
Meanwhile, when that same person agrees to a $27,000 renovation with staged payments, none of this applies. No credit licence needed. No income check. No affordability assessment. The gap in renovation credit regulation between these two identical financial commitments is staggering.
How Brighte Turned the Tradie Into a Loan Officer
The informal commitment becomes a formal credit event once a tradesperson pulls out the Brighte Vendor App. This fintech platform has built a $3 billion-plus home improvement financing operation serving 260,000 households through 2,600 accredited tradespeople.
In practice, it works like this. A tradie arrives with a renovation quote, mentions a 0% interest payment plan, and hands their phone to the homeowner. The customer enters personal and financial details. Brighte returns a credit decision within minutes. If approved, the homeowner signs digitally, and Brighte pays the tradie the full amount minus a merchant fee reportedly between 18 and 25%.
This creates a real tension at the frontier of renovation credit regulation. The builder is presenting finance options, facilitating applications, and influencing decisions. Those behaviours look a lot like credit intermediation under section 9 of the NCCP Act. Still, compliance obligations sit with Brighte rather than the tradie. As AI continues reshaping how trades businesses quote and close deals, the line between merchant and credit intermediary keeps blurring.
On top of that, ASIC found evidence that merchants charged consumers significantly higher prices when BNPL was offered, particularly on purchases above $2,000. The 0% interest headline hides a merchant fee baked into the quoted price. A $10,000 cash job might be quoted at $12,000 or more when BNPL is involved.
June 2025 Changed the Game for Renovation Credit Regulation
Australia’s Buy Now Pay Later reforms, which commenced on June 10, 2025, represent the biggest shift in consumer credit law since the NCCP Act itself. The Treasury Laws Amendment (Responsible Buy Now Pay Later and Other Measures) Act 2024 created a new category of Low Cost Credit Contracts that pulls BNPL into the National Credit Code.
Now every BNPL provider must hold an Australian Credit Licence, join AFCA, and comply with responsible lending obligations. For contracts above $2,000, providers must assess whether the arrangement would cause substantial hardship. Fee caps limit total charges to $200 in the first year.
Humm’s trajectory shows the pressure building. CHOICE awarded Humm a “Shonky Award” for offering up to $30,000 in BNPL credit for bathroom renovations while only assessing general living expenses for amounts over $15,000. ASIC then issued its first BNPL-specific Design and Distribution Obligations stop order against Humm. By June 2025, Humm had retired its BNPL model entirely, relaunching as a regulated credit product.
But here is where renovation credit regulation still falls short. The new BNPL definition requires a third-party provider paying the merchant. A builder who directly offers their own payment terms falls completely outside the perimeter. Standard milestone payments are definitively not credit under the NCC. Regulation targets Brighte and Humm, not the builder who says “pay me half now and half when it’s done.” For businesses balancing automation with human judgment in regulated finance, this distinction matters enormously.
GreenSky Shows Where This Ends Up
The most instructive enforcement case comes from the US. In July 2021, the CFPB issued a consent order against GreenSky LLC, a fintech platform that partnered with 17,000 home improvement contractors to offer point-of-sale consumer loans. The parallels to Brighte are structural and obvious.
GreenSky’s merchants originated loans at homeowners’ kitchen tables. Loan proceeds bypassed consumers entirely. The CFPB documented over 6,000 complaints from consumers who never authorised loan applications. The penalty: up to $9 million in refunds and a $2.5 million civil fine.
Australia has not had its GreenSky moment yet. Nevertheless, the structural conditions are identical. A fintech platform pays merchants directly. Untrained tradespeople originate credit at point of sale. Merchant fees hide in quoted prices. As renovation credit regulation tightens globally, Australia will eventually catch up to these realities.
Every Major Jurisdiction Is Drawing the Same Line
Global convergence on renovation credit regulation is remarkable. Three jurisdictions are simultaneously bringing BNPL under consumer credit frameworks, and all three have drawn the same boundary: third-party BNPL providers are in, direct supplier credit is out. For now.
In the UK, the FCA’s new BNPL regime takes effect July 15, 2026. Offering BNPL without authorisation becomes a criminal offence. The EU’s Second Consumer Credit Directive, which member states must apply from November 2026, specifically names “plumbers and similar direct suppliers” as parties the regulation is contemplating.
The pattern is clear. Every regulator has reserved the right to expand the perimeter. Australia’s definition is deliberately designed for expansion. The UK has built anti-avoidance mechanisms. The EU’s tight 50-day repayment window means any tradesperson offering terms beyond two months would need full compliance. Understanding how compliance ROI is shifting with agentic AI helps explain why the cost of inaction keeps climbing.
What Builders Need to Know Right Now
Today, a builder using standard milestone payments has no credit-related obligations beyond normal building contract law. But the direction of renovation credit regulation is unmistakable. A builder partnering with Brighte is a merchant subject to Design and Distribution Obligations. They must take “reasonable steps” to distribute finance consistently with the provider’s Target Market Determination.
If the perimeter ever expanded to capture direct supplier credit, the burden would be severe. An Australian Credit Licence application takes up to 150 days to process. Setup costs for a small business would run $5,000 to $20,000 or more before annual compliance overhead.
The renovation market’s scale makes renovation credit regulation more than academic. Australians spent $3.7 billion on residential alterations in the September 2025 quarter alone. KPMG analysis shows renovation spending now accounts for 40% of total residential construction spend. The volume of lightly regulated credit decisions flowing through the trades sector is enormous and growing.
Renovation credit regulation is not coming. It arrived on June 10, 2025. The only question is how far the perimeter expands next.
