A guide to the legislation, standards, and process for property owners in New South Wales
New South Wales has some of Australia’s most comprehensive pool barrier regulations — and for good reason. Drowning remains the leading cause of accidental death in children under five. Understanding the legislative framework behind your pool inspection helps you engage meaningfully with the process and protect what matters most.
Australia’s pool safety laws are driven by a single, hard statistic: young children drown in backyard swimming pools at a rate that is entirely preventable. New South Wales has responded over three decades with an evolving legislative framework that today involves a specific Act of Parliament, a supporting Regulation, and a suite of Australian Standards — each layer adding precision and strength to the one before it.
At PoolPro Inspectors, we find that clients who understand why these rules exist — and where they come from — approach the inspection process with far more confidence. This article lays out the full picture: the history, the current regime, and exactly what happens during a certified inspection.
The Swimming Pools Act 1992 (NSW) (“the Act”) is the primary legislation governing the safety of residential swimming pools in New South Wales. Assented to on 10 July 1992, the Act replaced the shorter-lived Swimming Pools Act 1990 and established the foundational requirement that every swimming pool on a residential property must be surrounded by a child-resistant barrier that separates the pool from the dwelling and from any adjoining public or private land.
The Act has since been amended eight times. The most significant amendments occurred in 2009 and 2012:
Key operative provisions in the current Act include:
The Regulation provides the detailed technical standards that give effect to the Act. There have been three substantive versions in NSW:
The original companion instrument to the 1992 Act. It called up the then-current Australian Standard AS 1926–1986 as the benchmark for child-resistant barrier design, and set out the administrative machinery for inspections and fees. It applied to pools constructed prior to 1 September 2008.
A substantial remake of the 1992 Regulation. It called up the newly published AS 1926.1–2007 as the applicable standard for pools constructed from 1 September 2008 to 30 April 2013, and introduced more prescriptive requirements for non-climbable zones (NCZs), mesh aperture sizes, and retaining walls forming part of a barrier.
A further amendment in 2016 allowed vendors to include a certificate of non-compliance in a sale contract and transfer rectification responsibility to the purchaser, who then had 90 days to achieve compliance.
The current Regulation. Administrative responsibility for swimming pools transferred from the NSW Office of Local Government to NSW Fair Trading on 1 January 2018, and the 2018 Regulation followed as part of that consolidation. Key changes included:
The 2018 Regulation also reinforced the significance of 31 August 2008 as the critical construction date: pools that cannot demonstrate continuous compliance since before that date are assessed under the more stringent AS 1926.1–2012 requirements.
The Australian Standards are technical documents published by Standards Australia. They translate the Act’s broad requirements into precise, measurable specifications. Three versions apply in NSW, depending on when your pool was constructed:
| Pool built | Act / Reg in force | Applicable Standard | Key focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Before 1 Aug 1990 | Swimming Pools Act 1990 / 1992 | AS 1926–1986 | Barriers not mandatory for pre-1990 pools; three-sided arrangement permissible |
| 1 Aug 1990 – 31 Aug 2008 | Swimming Pools Act 1992; Reg 1992/1998 | AS 1926–1986 | Barrier mandatory; separation from dwelling required; some three-sided exemptions remained |
| 1 Sep 2008 – 30 Apr 2013 | Swimming Pools Act 1992; Reg 2008 | AS 1926.1–2007 | Stricter NCZ rules, mesh sizes, retaining walls as part of barrier |
| 1 May 2013 – present | Swimming Pools Act 1992; Reg 2018 | AS 1926.1–2012 | Four-sided barrier required; incorporates corrections from 2007 version; current standard |
Note: AS 1926.1:2024 was published by Standards Australia on 23 August 2024. However, as of the date of this article, it has not been incorporated into either the Swimming Pools Regulation 2018 or the National Construction Code (NCC/BCA). The operative standard for NSW pool inspections remains AS 1926.1–2012 with its NSW variations.
Note: Considering a typical lack of evidence to prove the exact date of construction, PoolPro Inspectors assess and certify all pools only following AS1926.1-2012.
For most pools built after 1 May 2013 (and many older pools where original compliance cannot be demonstrated), the inspector works from AS 1926.1–2012. The Standard specifies, among other things:
Created by the 2012 amendments to the Act, the NSW Swimming Pool Register is the central database for all registered pools in the state. All pool owners with a residential pool or spa are required to register their pool on the Register. Registration certificates, certificates of compliance, and — since 2018 — certificates of non-compliance are all recorded on the Register.
The Register is administered by NSW Fair Trading and is publicly searchable. A certificate of compliance issued from the Register is valid for three years from the date of inspection, or until the barrier is modified, whichever comes first.
In NSW, pool barrier inspections for the purpose of issuing a certificate of compliance may be carried out by two types of authorised persons: registered E1 certifiers (private building certifiers holding a swimming pool inspector endorsement) and local councils. PoolPro Inspectors is a registered E1 certifier operating across NSW.
An inspection may be triggered by any of the following:
A pool barrier inspection typically takes 30 to 60 minutes. The inspector will assess all elements of the pool barrier system, including:
Following inspection, the certifier must act within strict statutory timeframes:
A certificate of non-compliance is not a penalty — it is a formal mechanism that allows a property transaction to proceed while placing the rectification obligation squarely on the purchaser (who must achieve compliance within 90 days of settlement). It is recorded on the Register and must be attached to the contract for sale.
Understanding the framework is one thing; preparing for it is another. Here are the key practical points:
PoolPro Inspectors is a registered Pool Certifier. Our inspectors are licensed to issue pool fence compliance certificates across New South Wales and bring deep knowledge of the Swimming Pools Act 1992, the Swimming Pools Regulation 2018, and the applicable Australian Standards to every inspection.
Whether you are buying, selling, leasing, or simply ensuring your family’s pool is safe and legally compliant, we can help.
Contact PoolPro Inspectors to schedule your inspection
Disclaimer: This article is prepared for general information only. Legislative requirements change over time. Always seek professional advice specific to your property from a registered certifier or your local council. References are made to the Swimming Pools Act 1992 (NSW), Swimming Pools Regulation 2018 (NSW), and Australian Standards AS 1926–1986, AS 1926.1–2007, and AS 1926.1–2012. AS 1926.1:2024 has been published but is not yet in force in NSW.
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