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Ask Baily about your Melbourne renovation. One vetted VBA-registered Melbourne builder, not a dozen strangers.

hipages forwards your project to a dozen tradies. Baily routes it to one VBA-registered Melbourne builder who handles Heritage Overlay paperwork and Section 173 Agreements for a living.

Melbourne — joining waitlist

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Melbourne, VIC, Australia market, 2026

Melbourne remodeling market overview

A$14-22B

Market size

A$32,000-A$85,000

Median kitchen

A$20,000-A$50,000

Median bathroom

6-20 weeks

Permit timeline

How AskBaily compares to Angi and Thumbtack

The math, as arithmetic

12

strangers Angi sells one lead to.

1

licensed Los Angeles builder Baily hands your project to. Named, verifiable, CSLB #1105249.

5–10

follow-up calls a lead typically fields, in the first 48 hours.

Every other marketplace sells your kitchen remodel to a dozen strangers and calls that “choice.” Baily picks up where they cash out.

Melbourne partner

We are accepting Melbourne builder applications.

We vet one general contractor per city — licensed, insured, with a track record in Melbourne, VIC, Australia. If you are a Melbourne GC who wants exclusive routing from Baily, apply at /for-pros.

What Baily scopes in Melbourne

High-ticket remodels, scoped for Melbourne, VIC, Australia.

Renovation

Scoped for Melbourne, VIC, Australia costs and permits

Kitchen Renovation

Scoped for Melbourne, VIC, Australia costs and permits

Bathroom Renovation

Scoped for Melbourne, VIC, Australia costs and permits

Whole Home Renovation

Scoped for Melbourne, VIC, Australia costs and permits

Apartment Renovation

Scoped for Melbourne, VIC, Australia costs and permits

Rear Extension

Scoped for Melbourne, VIC, Australia costs and permits

First Floor Addition

Scoped for Melbourne, VIC, Australia costs and permits

Heritage Overlay Renovation

Scoped for Melbourne, VIC, Australia costs and permits

Victorian Terrace Restoration

Scoped for Melbourne, VIC, Australia costs and permits

Reblocking Restumping

Scoped for Melbourne, VIC, Australia costs and permits

Service × Melbourne spoke pages are coming in a later release.

How the math actually runs

Their way. Our way.

Angi, Thumbtack, Houzz, HomeAdvisor. One pattern: your project gets sold to many strangers. AskBaily runs the other direction.

Who sees your project / Them

3–8 contractors, simultaneously

AskBaily

1 licensed LA builder

Who scopes the job / Them

You, via a category form

AskBaily

Baily + NP Line Design GC

Photo intake / Them

Upload to a form, wait for a callback

AskBaily

Gemini multimodal, analyzed in-chat

Permits and Title 24 / Them

Not considered until the call

AskBaily

LADBS + Title 24 2025 in the scoping

Wildfire rebuild and insurance / Them

Same generic intake as a kitchen refresh

AskBaily

Specialist flow — SB 1103, Xactimate, IICRC

Your info / Them

Your data is the product

AskBaily

Stays with one builder, not resold

Follow-up calls / Them

5–10 over the next 48 hours

AskBaily

1, from Netanel's team

SMS / iMessage continuity / Them

Restart from scratch

AskBaily

Same Baily, same conversation

Every column on the left is documented — FTC v. HomeAdvisor (2023, $7.2M), Angi’s own lead-share terms, Thumbtack’s pay-per-contact schedule. We cite them so you don’t have to.

Melbourne, VIC, Australia rules Baily knows

Local regulation, already in the scope.

Every Melbourne renovation runs through two parallel consent regimes. A Planning Permit is issued by the local council under the Victoria Planning Provisions and addresses land use, amenity, heritage, and overlay controls. A Building Permit is issued by a registered Building Surveyor and addresses technical compliance with the National Construction Code. Miss either one and the work is unlawful even if the other has been granted. A building permit cannot issue until a planning permit is endorsed where one is required.

The Building Act 1993 and Building Regulations 2018 require a VBA-registered practitioner for any residential building work over A$10,000. For work over A$16,000 the builder must carry Domestic Building Insurance (DBI) underwritten by the Victorian Managed Insurance Authority (VMIA), giving the homeowner 6-year structural and 2-year non-structural cover if the builder dies, disappears, or becomes insolvent. The Domestic Building Contracts Act 1995 requires a written fixed-price contract for work over A$10,000 with a statutory cooling-off period and a progress-payment schedule tied to stages.

Victoria Planning Provisions Clause 43.01 — Heritage Overlay — covers most of the inner-Melbourne suburbs built before World War I. Fitzroy, Carlton, North Melbourne, Richmond, Collingwood, Abbotsford, South Yarra, Prahran, St Kilda, Hawthorn, Kew, Camberwell, Malvern, Armadale, and Williamstown all sit under extensive HO schedules. Demolition, external alteration, subdivision, and sometimes interior work to a graded building trigger a planning permit, a heritage statement, and a municipal heritage adviser review. State-significant places on the Heritage Victoria register require a separate permit from Heritage Victoria in addition to the council permit.

Victoria Planning Provisions Clause 44.06 — Bushfire Management Overlay — triggers a Bushfire Attack Level (BAL) assessment under AS 3959 on every peri-urban lot in the Dandenongs, the Yarra Ranges, Nillumbik, Macedon Ranges, the Mornington Peninsula, and scattered coastal fringes. BAL ratings run from BAL-Low to BAL-FZ (Flame Zone). BAL-29 and above add materially to construction cost — non-combustible cladding, ember guards, window and door glazing upgrades, defendable-space vegetation management, and bushfire attack-level-rated decking.

The Owners Corporations Act 2006 governs body-corporate consent on Victorian strata and apartment stock. Any work that affects common property — a bathroom waterproofing membrane, balcony balustrade, facade cladding, or ducted-heating riser — requires Owners Corporation resolution, often by special resolution at a general meeting. Expect A$500-A$3,500 in manager and surveyor fees plus 4-12 weeks of OC meetings before works can start. Some schemes require a registered amendment to the rules before major works.

A 6-star energy rating (moving to 7-star under the 2023 National Construction Code update) is mandatory for new class-1 dwellings and major alterations, assessed under NatHERS via FirstRate5, AccuRate, or BERS Pro by an accredited thermal-performance assessor. A 6-star rating drives window orientation, glazing U-value and SHGC, insulation levels in walls, ceilings, and floors, and often external shading. Non-compliance is a building-permit refusal, not a negotiating position.

Section 173 Agreements (Planning and Environment Act 1987) are council-imposed ongoing conditions registered on title — car parking, vegetation retention, stormwater detention, heritage controls. They bind all future owners. Section 32 vendor statements under the Sale of Land Act 1962 require the vendor to disclose every S173 Agreement, planning overlay, and building order before signing a contract. A builder scoping a Melbourne renovation should read the Section 32 before quoting; surprises on title at contract-stage are common.

Secondary dwellings in Victoria do not enjoy the NSW granny-flat fast-track. A Melbourne secondary dwelling typically requires a planning permit under Clause 52.42 or a specific DDO provision, plus a building permit, plus service-upgrade coordination with the distribution network. The Department of Transport and Planning is reviewing a streamlined pathway; for now, budget 12-24 weeks for consents versus 10 days for a Sydney complying-development granny flat.

Victorian Heritage Council places on the state Heritage Register (for example Melbourne Club, The Windsor, and individual Italianate mansions in Toorak, Hawthorn, and Kew) require a Heritage Victoria permit in addition to the council planning permit. Unauthorised work on a registered place is an offence under the Heritage Act 2017 carrying fines into six figures for corporations. Heritage advisers, architects on the Heritage Victoria panel, and specialist conservation trades become non-negotiable on registered places.

Asbestos is a statutory issue for any renovation on a pre-1990 Melbourne home. The Occupational Health and Safety Regulations 2017 and the Compliance Code for Removing Asbestos (WorkSafe Victoria) require a pre-works survey and a licensed removalist over 10 square metres of non-friable or any friable quantity. Reblocking and restumping — a distinctively Victorian specialty because of the combination of timber-stump foundations and reactive clay soils in the western and northern suburbs — is its own VBA-registered speciality with its own permit pathway. Termite treatment under AS 3660.1 is expected on every reblock given the prevalence across the north and west.

Melbourne neighborhoods

Melbourne neighborhoods — coming soon.

Melbourne CBDDocklandsSouthbankEast MelbourneCarltonNorth MelbourneWest MelbourneParkvilleFlemingtonFitzroyCollingwoodAbbotsfordClifton HillNorthcoteThornburyPrestonBrunswickCoburgPascoe ValeRichmondHawthornKewCamberwellCanterburyBalwynMalvernArmadaleToorakSouth YarraPrahranWindsorSt Kilda EastSt KildaElwoodBrightonSandringhamHamptonMentoneMordiallocCaulfieldCarnegieOrmondBentleighMcKinnonOakleighChadstoneGlen WaverleyMount WaverleyWilliamstownYarravilleNewportFootscraySeddonKensingtonAscot ValeEssendonMoonee PondsHeidelbergIvanhoeEaglemontFairfieldAlbert ParkMiddle ParkPort MelbourneSouth Melbourne

Melbourne neighborhood sub-pages are planned for a later release. Chat with Baily now for a Melbourne, VIC, Australia scope regardless of neighborhood.

Origin

Who is Baily?

Baily is named after Francis Baily — an English stockbroker who retired at 51, became an astronomer, and in 1836 described something on the edge of a solar eclipse that nobody had properly articulated before: a string of bright beads of sunlight breaking through the valleys along the moon’s rim.

He wasn’t the first to see them. Edmond Halley saw them in 1715 and barely noticed. Baily’s contribution was clarity — describing exactly what was happening, in plain language, so vividly that the whole field of astronomy paid attention. The phenomenon is still called Baily’s beads.

That’s what we wanted our AI to do. Every inbound call and text has signal in it — a homeowner’s real question, a timeline, a budget, a hesitation that means “yes but.” Baily listens to every one, 24/7, and finds the beads of light.

Baily was a businessman before he was a scientist. That’s our vibe too.

Questions LA homeowners actually ask

Nearby markets

Cities Baily also scopes.

Compare
AskBaily vs hipages in Melbourne

One vetted local builder — or twelve strangers bidding on your brief. See how the two models stack up for Melbourne renovations.

Ask Baily about your Melbourne renovation and you will not be passed around. Melbourne is our second Australian market because Victorian homeowners face a specific and often underestimated challenge: a housing stock dominated by nineteenth-century terraces and interwar Californian bungalows, a heritage-overlay regime that catches far more properties than homeowners realise, and a tradie economy that hipages and Oneflare route through quote-farms by default. Baily does it differently. We introduce one Melbourne builder holding a Victorian Building Authority Domestic Builder registration, who has worked inside the specific heritage overlay your council operates under, who understands the Bushfire Management Overlay if your home sits on the peri-urban fringe, and who respects the conventions of Victorian terrace restoration. One pro per homeowner from the first conversation through defects liability. No quote-spray, no ghosting, no dodgy shortcuts on heritage detail. The builder we introduce is the builder who finishes the job and signs the Occupancy Permit.

The Melbourne remodel market in 2026

Melbourne is Australia's second-largest residential renovation market by total spend, and the ABS Building Approvals data for Victoria consistently shows strong alterations-and-additions activity through 2023 and 2024 [verify — ABS 8731.0]. At the project level, a mid-range Melbourne kitchen renovation typically runs A$30,000 to A$75,000 supplied and fitted, with designer kitchens in Toorak, South Yarra and Brighton regularly passing A$140,000 once stone benchtops, imported joinery and structural wall removal are included (Houzz Australia Kitchen Trends Study 2023, Master Builders Victoria 2024 cost indicators [verify]). Bathroom renovations sit between A$18,000 and A$40,000 for standard scopes. Full-home renovations on four-bedroom Edwardian or Californian bungalow homes commonly sit in the A$350,000 to A$800,000 range. Heritage-grade restorations with joinery, plasterwork and tessellated-tile conservation push materially higher.

The Melbourne housing stock is shaped by its ages. The inner north (Fitzroy, Carlton, Collingwood, North Melbourne) and inner south (South Melbourne, Albert Park) are dense with Victorian-era terraces, many single-fronted workers' cottages on long narrow allotments. The middle ring (Hawthorn, Kew, Camberwell, Malvern, Armadale) is layered with Edwardian and Californian bungalow homes on larger lots. The bayside (Brighton, Sandringham, Hampton) and Mornington Peninsula extensions carry interwar, post-war and contemporary stock. St Kilda and surrounds mix art-deco apartments with Victorian grand terraces. Renovating homeowners are typically mid-career upgraders extending into rear-open-plan pavilions, long-term owners restoring heritage detail while modernising services, and downsizers refitting apartments in Southbank, Docklands and Richmond. 2026 trends lean towards rear kitchen-meals-living pavilions with steel-framed glazing, heritage-sensitive front-room restoration paired with contemporary rear extensions, bushfire-resilient rebuilds in peri-urban overlays, and secondary-dwelling builds under Victorian small-secondary-dwelling reforms.

What homeowners need to know about Melbourne regulations

Heritage Overlay across inner suburbs. The Victoria Planning Provisions Heritage Overlay (HO) applies to individual properties and precincts identified in each council's planning scheme. Yarra, Melbourne, Port Phillip, Stonnington and Boroondara councils carry some of the heaviest Heritage Overlay coverage in the state. Any external alteration, demolition or subdivision on an HO-affected property requires a planning permit. Internal alterations are generally exempt unless the HO specifically includes internal fabric. Expect a heritage adviser to be engaged by council. Determination typically runs sixty to ninety days, longer where objections are lodged. Yarra and Melbourne council Heritage Overlay areas are particularly active.

Bushfire Management Overlay (BMO) in peri-urban areas. Properties mapped within the BMO under Clause 44.06 of the Victoria Planning Provisions require a Bushfire Management Statement as part of the planning permit application, with construction to the Bushfire Attack Level rated under AS 3959-2018. The BMO catches peri-urban edges around the Yarra Ranges, Nillumbik, Cardinia, Macedon Ranges and parts of Mornington Peninsula. Country Fire Authority referrals are standard and can add thirty to sixty days to determination.

Victorian Terrace restoration conventions. The Heritage Victoria advisory guidelines and individual council heritage policies lay out expectations for terrace restoration: retention of front verandas and cast-iron lacework, conservation of tessellated tile paths and front-fence detailing, preservation of chimneys and roof forms visible from the street, and sympathetic match on paint colour palettes. Front-room internal restoration of ceiling roses, cornices, arches and skirtings is not regulated in most HO precincts but is expected at the high end of the market and materially affects resale. Your builder must know local tradespeople for plaster run-in-situ, cast-iron replacement and hand-set tessellation.

Building Permit and Planning Permit separation. Victoria separates planning and building approvals under the Planning and Environment Act 1987 and the Building Act 1993. A Planning Permit is issued by council for use and development; a Building Permit is issued by a private building surveyor under the Building Act for construction compliance with the National Construction Code (NCC). Homeowners and first-time renovators often conflate the two — the reality is that for most renovations involving extension, alteration to a heritage-overlaid home, or any change in building use, both approvals are required in sequence.

Domestic Building Insurance (DBI). Any domestic building work over A$16,000 requires the builder to hold Domestic Building Insurance under the Building Act 1993, with certificates issued before commencement. The Victorian Managed Insurance Authority (VMIA) administers DBI. Missing or late DBI is a common compliance failure that voids consumer protection.

Renovation trends across Melbourne's neighbourhoods

Fitzroy and Carlton. Victorian workers' cottages and double-fronted terraces, heavy Heritage Overlay coverage. Rear-open-plan kitchen-dining pavilions with steel-framed doors, front-room restoration, tessellated-tile path conservation and cast-iron veranda repair.

South Yarra and Toorak. Substantial Edwardian and interwar homes, prestige market. Whole-home refurbishments with structural reconfiguration, designer kitchens, pool and pool-house additions, and basement cellars where geotech permits.

St Kilda and Port Melbourne. Mix of Victorian grand terraces, art-deco apartments and post-war bayside homes. Apartment kitchen-and-bath reconfigurations within owners-corporation approval workflows, grand terrace restoration, and bayside bungalow extensions.

Brighton and Hampton. Interwar and post-war detached homes on generous lots. Full-home refurbishments, rear pavilion additions, pool-and-alfresco integrations and primary-suite second-storey additions.

Hawthorn and Kew. Edwardian and Californian bungalow homes, many on large lots. Rear extensions preserving front-room heritage detail, second-storey additions with careful massing, and garden-room outbuildings.

Richmond and Williamstown. Victorian workers' terraces (Richmond) and Federation-through-post-war detached homes (Williamstown). Tight-plan kitchen reconfigurations with party-wall detailing, heritage restoration and rear-pavilion additions.

How AskBaily operates in Melbourne

In Melbourne we pair each homeowner with one Baily-vetted Melbourne builder holding a Victorian Building Authority Domestic Builder — Unlimited (DB-U) or Limited (DB-L) registration, verified through the VBA public register, with current Domestic Building Insurance cover administered by VMIA. Partner scope covers kitchen renovations, bathroom renovations, rear extensions and pavilion additions, second-storey additions, full-home refurbishments, heritage-overlay-sensitive restorations, and BMO-compliant rebuilds on peri-urban lots. We are most differentiated against hipages on Heritage Overlay projects where routing-to-twelve fails — most quote-aggregators cannot verify whether a builder has actually delivered a compliant Heritage Overlay planning permit. Baily checks before we introduce. One pro per homeowner, one phone number, one builder owning the relationship with your council's heritage adviser, your private building surveyor and you.

Frequently asked questions — Melbourne

How long does a permit take for a typical Melbourne kitchen renovation? If the work is internal-only and the property is not under a Heritage Overlay that includes internal fabric, a Building Permit alone is typically issued within ten to twenty business days by a private building surveyor. A rear kitchen-extension renovation on a Heritage Overlay property will require a Planning Permit first — expect sixty to ninety days determination plus Building Permit sequencing afterwards.

What licences do you verify on your partner builder? We verify VBA Domestic Builder registration on the public register, current Domestic Building Insurance (VMIA), at least A$20 million Public Liability insurance, and membership of Master Builders Victoria or Housing Industry Association. Plumbing and electrical subtrades must be separately licensed. We also check the builder's Certificates of Occupancy or Certificates of Final Inspection from recent jobs.

How are payments structured in Melbourne? Under the Domestic Building Contracts Act 1995, deposits are capped at 5 percent for contracts over A$20,000 and 10 percent below that threshold. Progress payments follow the stages in the MBV or HIA contract: base, frame, lock-up, fixing and completion. All amounts are in Australian dollars. Baily does not take homeowner funds — your money goes directly to your builder against contract stages.

How do you handle my personal data? Baily complies with the Australian Privacy Principles (APPs) under the Privacy Act 1988 (Commonwealth). Your enquiry data is held on a legitimate-business-relationship basis. You can request access and correction through the APP process. We do not sell data or broadcast to a panel of builders. Victorian data is held in Australian data centres where commercially practical.

What language does Baily handle? English is the primary service language. Baily handles Mandarin, Cantonese, Greek, Italian, Vietnamese and Arabic through its natural-language layer — languages with large Melbourne-resident communities. Written contracts, VBA paperwork and council planning applications are issued in English.

How is a dispute resolved if something goes wrong? The Victorian Building Authority handles registered-builder conduct complaints. Consumer Affairs Victoria runs free dispute resolution for domestic building contracts. If escalation is needed, the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT) Building and Property List has jurisdiction. The ACCC covers broader consumer-law questions. Many MBV and HIA contracts include stepped dispute clauses requiring direct negotiation before formal proceedings.

Press and podcast coverage

We are targeting launch coverage in Houses magazine, Inside Out, Belle, Vogue Living, Australian House & Garden and Dulux Colour Trends editorial. Business-press angles sit with The Age property desk, Australian Financial Review property, and Domain Melbourne. Podcast targets include Grand Designs Australia: The Podcast, The Design Files Talks, The Property Couch for renovating-investor audiences, and The Fifth Estate for sustainability-in-construction angles. The Melbourne narrative is specific: hipages and Oneflare route jobs to tradie panels, leaving homeowners to sort out who actually knows how to deliver a Heritage Overlay planning permit without the council's heritage adviser pushing back. AskBaily is one vetted Melbourne builder, matched to your property, your overlay and your scope before the first site visit.

Authoritative guides

All guides →

Deeply-researched regulatory + cost pillars for this city — written for homeowners who want to hire one vetted GC, not twelve strangers.