19 May 2026
Q&A: Can an appointed administrator break a tied vote at an AGM?
Question: What is the administrator’s role at an AGM? An administrator has been appointed to our body corporate under orders. If owners vote on a motion at an AGM and…
Western Australia is entering a new era of professionalisation in strata management. With the introduction of the Lands Regulations (Community and Strata Titles) Amendment Regulations 2025 (WA) (the Amended Regulations), the State Government has implemented comprehensive reforms to the qualification and experience requirements for those providing strata and community titles management services.
For strata managers, community scheme managers, councils of owners and the broader property industry, these changes mark the most significant regulatory shift since the 2019 reform package. They reshape who may perform strata management functions, the training they must hold, and how businesses must structure and supervise their personnel.
The reforms elevate education requirements by making the Certificate IV in Strata Community Management (CPP40521), or a recognised equivalent, the minimum standard for most key roles.
In effect:
This shift creates a baseline level of competence for those making decisions involving scheme funds, maintenance, compliance and governance, areas that have historically been sources of dispute and legal exposure.
The Amendment Regulations introduce statutory clarity to the hierarchy within strata management businesses:
These definitions now align with distinct education and experience requirements. This reduces ambiguity around who is doing what, and provides councils of owners with a clearer basis for accountability.
The new requirements commenced on 30 October 2025, with staged pathways designed to allow existing practitioners time to upskill.
Key transition points include:
From a legal risk perspective, businesses should assume regulators will treat these dates as firm. Failure to comply could invalidate contractual warranties, expose the business to breach-of-contract claims or non-compliance findings.
Strata management businesses will need to undertake a systematic compliance review. In practice, this means:
Early compliance will position businesses to demonstrate professionalism in a competitive and increasingly regulated environment.
While councils and owners are not regulated by the Amendment Regulations, the reforms will directly affect the quality and oversight of the services they receive.
Practical steps for councils include:
Owners can reasonably expect more consistent service delivery as the new standards take effect, but only if they actively engage with the compliance process.
These reforms tighten the regulatory framework around strata management and reinforce the sector’s shift towards professionalism, competency and consumer protection. Bugden Allen will continue to monitor implementation, regulatory guidance and any further reforms that may emerge.
Navigating these reforms will require careful planning, contract updates and a clear compliance strategy. Bugden Allen advises strata management businesses, councils of owners and developers across WA on governance, regulatory obligations, staff qualification requirements and risk management. Our team can review your current arrangements, prepare compliance roadmaps, update agreements and provide tailored training for your staff and council members. If you need practical, commercial guidance to prepare for the 2025–27 changes, we’re here to help.
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This article was first published on 15 November 2025. It was written by Julia Moroz, Special Counsel and Nicholas Cooley, Paralegal in our Perth office.
© Bugden Allen Group Legal Pty Ltd. This is general information only and not legal advice. You should not rely on this information without seeking legal advice tailored to your specific circumstances.