Smoke alarm exemption for dwellings proposed for demolition: Settlement agents bulletin 78 (January 2018)

This publication is for: 
Property industry

January 2018

Western Australia’s Building Regulations 2012 require owners of residential dwellings to have compliant smoke alarms installed prior to the sale, transfer of ownership, rent or hire of the dwelling. 

Changes to the Regulations that come into effect on 22 January 2018 provide an exemption for owners who are transferring ownership to a person intending to demolish the dwelling.

This means the current owner of a dwelling that is subject to transfer of ownership may choose not to install smoke alarms if the new owner has provided them with a declaration of intended demolition before the transfer of ownership.

A declaration of intended demolition is a statutory declaration made by the new owner, declaring they intend to demolish the dwelling within six months of the transfer day.

A statutory declaration is a written statement that the maker (the new owner) signs and declares to be true before an authorised witness.

Further information about statutory declarations is available on the Department of Justice website.

If the property is not demolished, the new owner must install the required number of smoke alarms within six months of the transfer. Prior owners would have a defence against a charge of not installing smoke alarms prior to the transfer of the dwelling’s ownership if they can prove the new owner gave them a declaration of intended demolition for the dwelling before the transfer day.

Important: This does not remove the requirement for the new owner to install smoke alarms should he or she subsequently decide to rent or hire the dwelling after the transfer.

The Building Regulations 2012 are available on the State Law Publisher’s website.

A general Smoke alarm laws publication is available on the Building Commission website and has been updated to reflect these changes.

Consumer Protection
Bulletin
Last updated 23 Jan 2018

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