Vendor Disclosure vs Vendor Inspection — What’s the Difference?

Vendor disclosure statement versus pre-sale building inspection — what each covers and where the gaps are
Vendor disclosure vs pre-sale inspection — different documents, different protections.

About the author: Michael Tuder is a Victorian Building Authority Registered Builder and the founder of Star Building Inspections. With 30+ years building and inspecting homes across Melbourne’s western suburbs, Michael personally carries out every inspection. AS4349.1-2007 and AS4349.3 compliant.

Sellers in Victoria face two related but separate documents in any property sale: the Section 32 vendor’s statement (a legal disclosure) and a voluntary vendor’s building inspection report (a building-condition document). They get confused regularly. After 30+ years inspecting Melbourne homes, I see the same questions come up — what each covers, who prepares it, and whether one replaces the other. This post draws the line between them, in plain English, from a builder’s perspective.

Quick answer: Vendor disclosure (the Section 32 in Victoria) is a legally required document that discloses defined matters about the property — title, encumbrances, planning, services, notices. A vendor inspection (pre-sale building inspection) is a voluntary report on the physical condition of the building. They are different documents, with different scope, different preparers, and different purposes. You usually want both.

What the law requires — Section 32

Under Victoria’s Sale of Land Act, a vendor must give the prospective buyer a vendor’s statement — universally called the Section 32 — before the buyer signs the contract of sale. That document is a legal disclosure. It is prepared by your conveyancer or solicitor, not by a builder.

The Section 32 typically includes:

  • Title details and any encumbrances (mortgages, easements, covenants)
  • Planning and zoning information
  • Outgoings — rates, body corporate fees, taxes
  • Services connected (water, sewer, gas, electricity, telecoms)
  • Building permits issued in the last 7 years
  • Owner-builder warranty insurance (where applicable)
  • Notices, orders, or proposals affecting the property
  • Bushfire-prone area declarations
  • Information about any planning, building, or environmental notices

If the Section 32 is wrong or incomplete, the buyer can rescind the contract before settlement. That is a serious legal consequence. Your conveyancer carries the responsibility.

This post is not legal advice. For specific questions about your Section 32, talk to your conveyancer or solicitor.

What the law does not require — building condition

Here is the important part: the Section 32 does not require you to disclose the physical condition of the building. There is no legal obligation in Victoria for a vendor to inspect the building, document defects, or share defect information with the buyer.

The default rule is caveat emptor — buyer beware. The buyer is expected to do their own due diligence, which is why most buyers commission their own pre-purchase inspection.

That changes the dynamic of the sale. The buyer’s inspector will find what they find. You have no opportunity to position the findings, fix the issues first, or set context. The buyer reacts to the report cold.

A voluntary vendor inspection (pre-sale inspection) lets you change that.

What a voluntary vendor inspection adds

A vendor inspection is a building condition report you commission before listing. It is the same scope as a pre-purchase inspection — Australian Standard AS4349.1 (building) and AS4349.3 (pest where included).

It covers:

  • Roof exterior, roof void, sub-floor where accessible
  • Interior — walls, ceilings, floors, doors, windows
  • Wet areas — tiling, grout, silicone, fixtures
  • Kitchen — bench, cabinets, appliances visible
  • Exterior — cladding, render, brick, eaves, fascia
  • Site — drainage, paving, retaining walls, fencing
  • Visible electrical and plumbing
  • Pest activity and conducive conditions

You receive a same-day photo-rich PDF report. You decide what to do with it.

For more on the value of doing this, see our post on whether you should get a pre-sale building inspection.

How they fit together

The two documents work in parallel, not in competition.

Section 32 Vendor building inspection
Required by law Yes No
Prepared by Conveyancer / solicitor Registered builder / qualified inspector
Covers Legal disclosures (title, planning, notices, services) Physical condition of the building
Standard Sale of Land Act 1962 (Vic) AS4349.1, AS4349.3
Cost $300–$700 typical $400–$650 typical
Timing Must be given to buyer before contract signed Optional, before listing or during marketing
Consequence if missing or wrong Buyer can rescind contract None — but buyer’s inspection may find problems

The Section 32 answers the legal question: “is the title clean, is there anything legally wrong with this property?” The vendor inspection answers the physical question: “what condition is the building in, and what defects exist?”

A buyer with both documents has a much clearer picture of what they are buying. A vendor with both has documented their position on both fronts before the buyer’s inspector arrives.

When the two overlap

Two areas where the documents touch:

Building permits

The Section 32 lists building permits in the last 7 years. The vendor inspection often surfaces work that should have had a permit but did not — extensions, decks, structural alterations, re-stumping. If the inspection finds unpermitted work, the Section 32 may need to address it. Talk to your conveyancer.

Building work outside the 7-year window

The Section 32 only covers permits in the last 7 years. The vendor inspection looks at the building as it stands today, regardless of when the work was done. Older unpermitted work shows in the inspection but not the Section 32.

Disclosure of the inspection report

About to list your home?

Find your defects before the buyer does. Defends asking price, speeds settlement.

Whether you give your inspection report to the buyer is your choice. The options:

Share it upfront — through your agent, alongside the Section 32 in the marketing pack. Builds trust, shows transparency, signals that you have done your homework.

Hold it back — and offer it only when a buyer asks for an inspection. Some buyers will accept your inspection rather than commissioning their own; others want their own.

Use it for your own decisions only — fix the defects you want fixed, disclose nothing voluntarily, and let the buyer’s inspection run its course.

A good agent helps you decide based on the property, the market, and the asking price. There is no single right answer.

What the vendor inspection does not do

Coverage Venn diagram — vendor disclosure vs pre-sale inspection
What each document covers — and the overlap where buyers test you most.

Important boundaries:

  • It is not a Section 32. It does not satisfy any legal disclosure obligation.
  • It is not a planning or compliance audit. It does not certify that all work was permitted.
  • It does not replace a structural engineer’s report for active movement.
  • It is not legal advice on your disclosure obligations.

If the inspection raises a question that crosses into legal territory — disclosure, contract terms, retrospective approvals — that is conveyancer territory.

What buyers think when they see both documents

Here is the buyer’s perspective. They receive your Section 32 and a vendor’s building inspection from a registered builder. Their reaction:

  • “The vendor has nothing to hide on title.”
  • “The vendor has documented the building condition independently.”
  • “The defects listed are the defects I will find — no surprises.”
  • “I can either accept this report or commission my own to confirm.”

Compare that to receiving only the Section 32 with no inspection. The buyer’s default is suspicion: what is the vendor not telling me? They commission their own inspection, find what they find, and react.

Most experienced agents in Melbourne’s west will tell you that vendor inspections — especially on older homes — make sales smoother and protect prices.

Frequently asked questions

Do I have to disclose defects I know about?
Talk to your conveyancer. Victorian disclosure law focuses on the matters listed in the Section 32. Beyond that, there is a general principle that you cannot actively mislead a buyer (don’t paint over a known leak, for example), but you generally do not have to volunteer building condition information that is not in the Section 32. Your conveyancer is the right person to advise on the line.

Can my vendor inspection be used by multiple buyers?
Technically yes, but practically each buyer’s lender or conveyancer may want a fresh inspection. Many vendors share the report with serious buyers as additional information rather than a substitute for the buyer’s own inspection.

Is a vendor inspection report worth more if it is recent?
Yes. A report under three months old reflects current condition. Older reports get less weight from buyers. If your home does not sell in the first marketing campaign, expect to need a refresh.

Does the vendor inspection cover the things in the Section 32?
No. The two cover different territory. The vendor inspection looks at the building. The Section 32 looks at the legal context. You usually want both.

Can the inspector help me draft the disclosure?
No. Inspectors are not legally qualified to advise on disclosure. We inspect and report on building condition. Disclosure questions go to your conveyancer.

Do you do vendor inspections in the Wyndham and Melton corridors?
Yes — Hoppers Crossing, Werribee, Point Cook, Tarneit, Wyndham Vale, Manor Lakes, Plumpton, and Melton South and West. Same-day photo reports.

Book a vendor pre-sale inspection

The Section 32 is your conveyancer’s job. The building condition report is ours. Star Building Inspections runs registered-builder pre-sale inspections across Melbourne’s west, with same-day PDF reports you can take to your agent or hold for your own decisions. Read more about our pre-sale building inspection service, or call Michael on 0412 014 216.

Related reading:
Should you get a pre-sale building inspection before listing?
Top defects pre-sale inspections find that derail home sales


INFOGRAPHIC

Vendor disclosure vs pre-sale inspection

CoverageVendor StatementPre-Sale Report
Title + zoning
Encumbrances
Structural condition
Active defects
Termite check
Repair cost estimates
Required by lawyes (s.32)no — but worth it

What customers say about Star

First time round Michael discovered a 'major defect' — water leaking from shower into next room. I had been told by the agent there were no problems. He saved me tens of thousands in repairs. When he gave me the all clear on the second property, I felt confident putting in an offer.
— Barb K.  ·  ★★★★★
Michael is a registered builder and this makes him qualified to put across a report that is in line with the REAL TRUE outcome needed of a building and pest inspection. His business is purely on word …
— Karthikeyan H. · ★★★★★
Michael had uncovered various major defects and I feel like I have dodged a bullet by doing this inspection. In the end I withdrew from purchasing the property.
— Nadhila · ★★★★★
That evening I had a good 30 minute conversation with him over the phone about what was found in the report, and he took the time to explain everything in terms I understood.
— Frances G. · ★★★★★
INFOGRAPHIC

How we grade defects

Critical
Safety / structural
Don't sign contracts
Major
Costly to remediate
$5-25k repair
Moderate
Maintenance item
Fix within 12 months
Minor
Cosmetic
DIY or schedule
Problem

You list, buyers inspect, their report finds 3 issues you didn't know about, and the deal falls over or gets re-negotiated 20k below your asking price.

Solution

Star does a pre-sale inspection BEFORE you list. You see the report first, fix what's cheap, disclose what isn't, and remove the buyer's "gotcha" leverage entirely.

INFOGRAPHIC

Why customers choose Star

157
Google reviews
Same day
Report by 6pm
🏗
20+ yrs
VBA-registered
📞
100%
Phone walkthrough

Across Melbourne's west

INFOGRAPHIC

Chain inspectors vs Star

FactorChain inspectorStar (independent)
Inspector continuityRotating staffMichael every time
VBA-registered builder
Report walkthroughyes — phone call
Same-day reportyes (by 6pm)
Cost$300-450$450-650

Why book Star Building Inspections?

Star Building Inspections is owned and operated by Michael Tuder — a VBA-registered builder with 20+ years inspecting homes across Melbourne's western corridor. Michael personally attends every inspection, writes every report, and calls every customer to walk them through the findings line by line. No contractors. No rotating staff. No outsourced sign-offs.

157
Google reviews
5.0
Stars
20+
Years experience
Same day
Report by 6pm

Book a pre-sale inspection

Find your home's issues before the buyer does. Defends asking price, removes the buyer's 'gotcha' leverage, speeds the settlement.

Michael Tuder, VBA-registered building inspector, Melbourne western suburbs
Written by
Michael Tuder

Michael Tuder is the owner of Star Building Inspections and a VBA-registered builder with 20+ years of experience inspecting homes across Melbourne's western corridor. He grew up here, lives here, and personally attends every inspection — no contractors, no rotating staff. Star has earned 157 five-star Google reviews, and Michael calls every customer to walk through the report line by line.

More from Michael →
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest

Your Questions Answered & Price Confirmed Today

Need a booking? Have a question? Just enter your details. We’ll call back today. Friendly service and advice. No pressure 😁👍

Star review
🔒SSL Secured. Privacy Assured. Star Building Inspection Reports meet Australian Standards and are Professionally Accepted.