Understanding Building Classes Under the National Construction Code (NCC)
A Practical Guide to Classes 1–10
If you work in construction, architecture, property development, or you’re simply looking to understand building compliance in Australia, knowing how National Construction Code building classes work is essential.
The National Construction Code classes categorise buildings according to use, safety requirements and occupancy type: a framework that ensures every structure is built to an appropriate standard.
Although NCC building classifications may seem technical at first, the system quickly becomes logical once broken down. This guide explains each class in plain language with examples, making it easier for builders, designers and property owners to reference when planning projects.
What Are NCC Building Classes?
The NCC building classifications system groups buildings into ten categories based on how they are used, how people occupy them, and the risk profile associated with that use. Residential houses, commercial offices, factories and public buildings all serve different purposes, so the construction requirements they must meet also differ.
In simple terms:
A home doesn’t need the same fire performance as a hospital, and a warehouse doesn’t require the same accessibility standards as a school.
Classes 1 to 10 cover the majority of Australian building classifications, from everyday homes and apartments to hospitals, factories, storage buildings and non-habitable structures.
NCC Building Classifications Explained
Below is a practical breakdown of NCC building classes (Class 1–10) and what each classification means.
Class 1 – Residential Housing
Buildings used primarily as private homes.
Sub-classes:
• Class 1a – A standalone dwelling or one in a row of attached homes such as terrace houses, townhouses or duplexes.
• Class 1b – Small accommodation buildings (generally up to 300m²), including small hostels, guesthouses or bed-and-breakfast style stays.
Class 2 – Apartments
Buildings containing two or more sole-occupancy units positioned side-by-side, above or below one another. This includes apartment buildings as well as units above shared spaces such as carparks and basements.
Class 3 – Larger Residential Accommodation
Used for residential purposes where occupants are unrelated or transient.
Examples include:
- boarding houses
- hostels and backpacker accommodation
- student housing
- workers’ quarters
- hotels and motels
- residential care buildings
Class 4 – A Residence Within a Non-Residential Building
A single dwelling located inside another building.
For example, a caretaker’s unit within a hospital or a manager’s apartment above a shop. Only one dwelling can exist under Class 4 within a single structure.
Class 5 – Office Buildings
Buildings used for clerical, commercial or professional work, including government offices, law firms and administrative workplaces.
Class 6 – Retail & Customer Service Buildings
Premises where goods are sold, or services are directly provided to the public.
Examples:
- retail shops and shopping centres
- restaurants and cafés
- barber shops and hair salons
- laundromats
- showrooms
- funeral parlours
Class 7 – Storage & Warehousing
Buildings used for storing goods or vehicles.
Sub-classes:
• Class 7a – Carparks
• Class 7b – Warehouses, wholesale storage facilities or distribution spaces
Class 8 – Industrial & Production Buildings
Buildings where products are manufactured, assembled, processed or altered.
This includes factories, workshops, abattoirs and laboratories — often requiring higher levels of safety and fire protection.
Class 9 – Public & Community Use Buildings
Designed to accommodate or serve groups of people.
Sub-classes:
• 9a – Healthcare (hospitals, clinics, day surgery centres)
• 9b – Assembly buildings (schools, universities, theatres, places of worship, halls, sports centres)
• 9c – Aged care facilities
Class 10 – Non-Habitable Structures
Structures not designed for residential use.
Sub-classes:
• 10a – Private sheds, garages or carports
• 10b – Fences, masts, antennas, retaining walls, swimming pools
• 10c – Private bushfire shelters associated with a Class 1a dwelling
Why Classification Matters
Correct building class compliance affects:
- fire safety and structural requirements
- certification and approval pathways
- access and egress requirements
- engineering and material specifications
- insurance and risk assessment
Using the wrong classification can lead to approval delays, redesign costs, or safety issues. Identifying the correct NCC building class early reduces risk and ensures smoother development.
Mixed-Use Buildings
Some buildings fall under more than one class.
A common example is a ground-floor retail shop with apartments above.
|
Level/Use |
Building Class |
|
Retail shop |
Class 6 |
|
Residential apartments |
Class 2 |
Mixed-use projects are common in modern Australian building classifications, and each component must meet the requirements relevant to its function.
Quick Reference Summary
|
NCC Class |
Typical Use |
|
1 |
Houses, townhouses, small accommodation |
|
2 |
Apartments & multi-unit residential |
|
3 |
Hotels, hostels, student and boarding housing |
|
4 |
Single dwelling within non-residential building |
|
5 |
Office & administrative workplaces |
|
6 |
Retail shops, restaurants & service businesses |
|
7 |
Storage facilities & carparks |
|
8 |
Industrial/manufacturing premises |
|
9 |
Public buildings – healthcare, assembly, aged care |
|
10 |
Non-habitable structures (sheds, pools, shelters) |
Understanding NCC building classes makes construction compliance simpler and helps ensure buildings are safe, efficient and appropriately designed. Whether you’re planning a residential build, renovating a commercial site or designing a warehouse, referencing this NCC building class guide early supports smoother approvals and better project outcomes.