7-Star Energy Certificates vs 6-Star: What’s the Difference, Why It Matters, and Where It Applies in Australia
If you’re planning a new home or major renovation, you’ve probably heard a lot about “7-star energy certificates.” In short: Australia has lifted the minimum thermal performance for new homes from 6 stars to 7 stars under the National Construction Code (NCC 2022), and most states and territories have now implemented those requirements (with a few exceptions and transitional arrangements). This article breaks it all down in plain English so you can make confident decisions—and avoid costly redesigns—before you lodge your plans.
First, what is a 7-star rating and an energy report?
Australia uses the Nationwide House Energy Rating Scheme (NatHERS) to model how much energy your home will need for heating and cooling each year, based on your plans and specification (orientation, glazing, insulation, shading, materials, etc.). The result is a thermal star rating from 0 to 10: the higher the stars, the less energy required to stay comfortable. Since NCC 2022, NatHERS certificates can also include a Whole-of-Home score that estimates total annual energy use from fixed appliances (heating/cooling, hot water, lighting, pool/spa), and credits on-site solar/batteries. (NatHERS)
An energy report (often called a “NatHERS report” or “star rating report”) documents those results and the specification needed to achieve them. Your building surveyor/certifier uses it to check compliance with the NCC or, in NSW, BASIX. (NatHERS)
7-Star vs 6-Star: what actually changes?
1) Thermal performance target
- Old minimum: 6 stars
- New minimum: 7 stars (most jurisdictions)
That one extra star is a big lift in thermal performance. In most locations, a 7-star home needs about 20–25% less energy for heating and cooling than a 6-star home, which reduces running costs and improves comfort in heatwaves and cold snaps. (Sustainability Victoria)
2) The specification to get there
To move from 6 to 7 stars, plans commonly require smarter passive design and, in many cases, upgrades such as:
- Better orientation and window placement
- Higher-performing glazing (e.g., low-E, thermally broken frames, double-glazing in many climates)
- Improved insulation levels and detailing (including thermal breaks)
- Effective shading (eaves, awnings, external blinds)
These are part of the “first principles” the NCC and NatHERS guidance emphasise for cost-effective 7-star outcomes. (National Construction Code, yourhome.gov.au)
3) Whole-of-Home energy budgeting (NCC 2022)
Under NCC 2022, new houses and apartments also need to meet a Whole-of-Home energy budget, assessed in NatHERS software. It sums the expected annual energy use of fixed systems (heating/cooling, hot water, lighting, pool/spa) and then subtracts on-site generation/storage (solar PV + batteries). Think of it as a second test alongside the star rating: the building fabric must be efficient and the major services must be sensibly specified. (NatHERS, National Construction Code)
What are the advantages of a 7-star energy report for consumers?
Lower bills, year after year
Because a 7-star shell needs less heating and cooling energy, you spend less to stay comfortable—an advantage that compounds over the life of the home (and only grows as energy prices rise). Government and industry sources consistently peg the heating/cooling savings around 20–25% compared with 6 stars, depending on climate and design. (Sustainability Victoria)
Greater comfort and resilience
7-star homes hold temperature far better during heatwaves and cold spells, meaning fewer hot/cold rooms, smaller temperature swings, and quieter HVAC because systems can be downsized and run less often. This makes daily life more comfortable and reduces peak-demand stress on the grid. (National Construction Code)
Better design discipline (and better resale)
Reaching 7 stars drives good design decisions early—orientation, glazing percentages, shading—that improve liveability and natural light. Buyers increasingly understand (and demand) energy-efficient homes; a compliant 7-star design with a strong Whole-of-Home score is a marketable feature.
Future-proofing against code changes
The NCC is on a trajectory toward even higher performance over time. Designing for 7 stars now (and considering an all-electric, solar-ready approach) helps future-proof your investment and avoid retrofits later. (NatHERS)
Health and well-being
Efficient envelopes reduce drafts, condensation risk, and temperature extremes—factors linked to fewer respiratory issues and mould problems. That translates to healthier indoor environments for families. (National Construction Code)
Where (and when) is the 7-star minimum required?
NCC 2022 took legal effect on 1 May 2023, with each state/territory setting its own adoption and transition timetable. Here’s the snapshot (residential energy efficiency only), current at the time of writing:
- Victoria: 7-star & Whole-of-Home from 1 May 2024. (National Construction Code)
- New South Wales: NSW uses Enhanced BASIX (not the NCC provisions) from 1 Oct 2023. Enhanced BASIX mirrors the uplift via its own thermal and energy targets. (National Construction Code)
- Queensland: Energy efficiency provisions commenced 1 May 2024 (with local allowances such as the outdoor-living area credit). (Energy and Climate Queensland)
- Australian Capital Territory: Implemented from 15 Jan 2024. (National Construction Code)
- South Australia: Implemented from 1 Oct 2024. (National Construction Code)
- Western Australia: Implemented from 1 May 2025. (National Construction Code)
- Tasmania: As at the ABCB’s latest table, NCC 2022 housing energy efficiency provisions not adopted (other parts of NCC 2022 are). Always check the latest Tasmanian guidance before lodging. (National Construction Code)
- Northern Territory: Energy efficiency changes limited; 5-star requirements apply (housing), with NCC 2022 apartment provisions not adopted. Confirm current NT requirements for your project. (National Construction Code)
Tip: If you’re designing now, plan for 7 stars and Whole-of-Home regardless of location. Even where transitional arrangements still exist, most lenders, buyers and certifiers are expecting the uplift.
What does a 7-star energy report include?
A typical report (based on your plans, sections and specification) will include:
- Thermal star rating (0–10) and zone-by-zone modelling assumptions
- Fabric specification needed to achieve the rating (insulation R-values, glazing U-values/SHGC, frame types, thermal breaks, roof colour, slab/floor construction, etc.)
- Thermal load breakdown (heating vs cooling) and climate file used
- Whole-of-Home outcome (where required), including appliance schedules and any on-site PV/battery contribution
- Compliance statement: confirmation that the design meets the NCC 2022 energy efficiency performance provisions (or BASIX for NSW), subject to construction matching the report.
How to reach 7 stars cost-effectively
From thousands of projects, the winning formula is design-first, specification-second:
- Orientation & layout
- Prioritise north-facing living areas where possible; limit west-facing glazing; stack windows to capture breezes. These moves are “free” on paper and save costly upgrades later. (National Construction Code)
- Right-sized, better-placed windows
- Improve daylighting while managing solar gains. Use higher-performance glazing strategically rather than upgrading everything. (yourhome.gov.au)
- Insulation & thermal breaks
- Lift roof/ceiling R-values; insulate slabs/edges where climate-appropriate; include thermal breaks in metal framing or window systems to cut heat flow. (yourhome.gov.au)
- Shading & roof colour
- Fixed eaves, adjustable external shading, light-coloured roofing in hot climates—all deliver outsized gains at low cost. (yourhome.gov.au)
- Airtightness & detailing
- Seal penetrations, fit quality door seals, and pay attention to construction joints. Better airtightness improves comfort and can allow smaller HVAC. (National Construction Code)
- Whole-of-Home choices
- Prefer high-efficiency, all-electric systems (heat-pump hot water; high-efficiency reverse-cycle for heating/cooling; LED lighting).
- If roof space allows, solar PV meaningfully improves Whole-of-Home outcomes and reduces bills. (NatHERS)
- Engage your assessor early
- Small plan tweaks (window size/placement, eave depth) can be the difference between 6.7 and 7.1 stars. Early modelling avoids late surprises.
7 stars and NSW: how BASIX fits in
NSW runs its own compliance pathway—BASIX—rather than adopting the NCC residential energy provisions directly. As of 1 October 2023, Enhanced BASIX lifted thermal performance and energy targets to broadly align with the national 7-star uplift and Whole-of-Home intent, but compliance is demonstrated through BASIX certificates, not a straight NCC check. Your assessor will model your design using the BASIX engines and generate the certificate for your DA/CC. (National Construction Code)
What about renovations, extensions and multi-unit projects?
- Alterations & additions typically must ensure the new work meets current provisions, with interfaces to existing fabric treated carefully (e.g., adding insulation or window upgrades where practicable).
- Townhouses/duplexes (Class 1) and apartments (Class 2) are included in the 7-star/Whole-of-Home uplift, with apartment thermal requirements tailored to multi-residential layouts and shared elements. Always confirm the current rules in your state and with your building surveyor/certifier. (National Construction Code)
FAQs
Is a 7-star home always more expensive to build?
Not necessarily. Many projects reach 7 stars through design optimisation rather than costly materials. Where upgrades are needed (some glazing, extra insulation), the running-cost savings and comfort gains generally pay back over time—and help resale. (National Construction Code)
What’s the Whole-of-Home score “out of 100”?
It’s a separate rating indicating how your fixed appliances and any solar/battery perform together on an annual energy budget; 100 represents net-zero operational energy use over a year (scores above 100 are possible if you generate more than you use). (NatHERS)
Do I still need a report in NSW?
Yes—just via BASIX rather than a standard NCC residential energy check. We’ll advise on the most efficient BASIX pathway for your design. (National Construction Code)
What if my project spans a transition date?
Transition rules vary. To avoid risk, design for 7 stars now and keep your documentation aligned with the current state-based requirements. (National Construction Code)
How Floyd Energy can help
Whether you’re at concept stage or ready to lodge, our assessors specialise in practical, buildable 7-star solutions that protect your budget and program:
- Pre-DA/pre-permit modelling to find the easiest path to 7 stars
- Whole-of-Home optimisation (all-electric strategies, solar sizing, appliance selections)
- Specification guidance (glazing schedules, insulation, thermal breaks, shading)
- State-specific compliance—NCC 2022 in VIC/QLD/SA/ACT/WA and Enhanced BASIX in NSW
- Renovations & additions—we’ll help you hit targets without over-capitalising
Bottom line
Moving from 6 to 7 stars is more than a number change. It’s a step-change in comfort, resilience and running cost—and in most of Australia, it’s now the minimum for new homes. With early advice and smart design, achieving 7 stars is straightforward and affordable—and the benefits last for decades.
If you’d like us to review your plans and show you the quickest path to a compliant, comfortable 7-star home, get in touch with Floyd Energy and we’ll start with a no-nonsense upfront assessment.
References & useful links
- NatHERS: Thermal Star Rating (how the stars work) and Whole-of-Home overview. (NatHERS)
- ABCB (NCC): State and territory adoption dates and 7-star guidance. (National Construction Code)
- Sustainability Victoria: Why 7-star typically uses 20–25% less heating/cooling energy than 6-star. (Sustainability Victoria)
- Queensland Government: Implementation dates and local provisions. (Energy and Climate Queensland)
Note: Codes and adoption dates are accurate at the time of publication, but jurisdictions can update their timelines and guidance. We’ll confirm the latest position for your specific project when we prepare your report.