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Excavation / Site cut · drainage · rock · retaining

You don't know what your land is made of until someone digs into it. By then the price has already moved.

Excavation quotes are the single biggest source of variation in Australian residential construction. The same site, quoted by three excavators, can return numbers $40,000 apart — depending on what they assume about rock, soil class, spoil disposal, and access. This guide shows you what to specify before the dirt moves.

Median cost
$8k–$28k
Standard residential site cut, M-class soil, 100m³
Rock uplift
3–8×
Rock breaking vs standard cut, per cubic metre
Lead time
3 days
Free Dial Before You Dig notice before any digging
Sources
48 verbatim buyer accounts; AS 2870 residential slabs & footings; AS 3798 earthworks; Before You Dig Australia (BYDA) records.
Verification
All cost bands cross-checked against three excavator quotes per state (Oct 2025–Apr 2026). Soil class definitions per AS 2870.
Funding
Independent. We don't take fees from contractors or equipment hire firms. How this works.
Before we start

The classic excavation surprise isn't finding rock — it's finding rock that the geotech report didn't identify, because the geotech report was based on two bore holes 15m apart. By the time you know your soil class is wrong, the engineer is upgrading your footings and the quote is moving the wrong direction. The right paperwork before the first cut is the cheapest insurance in the build.

01

What earthworks really cost

Excavation pricing is volume-based ($/m³), modified by soil class, access, distance to tip, and whether rock is encountered. The same machine can charge double for a difficult site.

2026 price bands · 100m³ site cut
Standard cut & cart away (M-class soil)$80–$140/m³
Reactive clay (H1 / H2 soil)$110–$180/m³
Rock excavation (rippable)$280–$480/m³
Rock breaking (hammer required)$450–$900/m³
Spoil disposal (tip fees, dependent on contamination)$40–$160/tonne
Typical residential site cut$8,000–$28,000
With rock encountered$25,000–$80,000+
Restricted access (rear lot, no truck access) adds 30–60%. Wet weather standby ~$1,500/day.

The rock clause

Most excavation quotes are explicit about rock: "Rock excavation excluded. Rate $XX/m³ if encountered." That clause is the difference between a $14,000 quote that lands at $14,000 and one that lands at $48,000. Ask up front: what defines "rock" in the contract? Is it volume above a threshold, hammer time exceeded, or a geological classification?

02

How to vet an excavator

We had a quote for $14,500. Hit rock 800mm down, three days in. Final bill was $52,000. They had a "rock encountered" clause we'd glanced at. Lesson learned in the worst way.
— Buyer, Northern Beaches NSW
Green flags
  • · Reviews the geotech report before quoting
  • · Asks for a copy of BYDA (Dial Before You Dig) plans
  • · Itemises rock contingency & rate clearly
  • · Public liability $20M+, machine operator tickets current
  • · Site visit before quoting (not just plans)
Red flags
  • · Quotes without seeing the site
  • · No mention of soil classification or geotech
  • · "We'll work it out as we go"
  • · No itemised spoil disposal cost
  • · Won't name the tip / disposal facility
03

Licences, tickets, and Dial Before You Dig

Excavation contractors don't hold a single trade licence the way plumbers or electricians do. They hold a combination of: (a) Earthmoving / civil licensing where required, (b) High Risk Work licences for plant operators, (c) Builder's licence if the work exceeds state thresholds.

What must be in place before the machine starts

  • 1. BYDA (Before You Dig Australia) — free service, 3-day notice. Pulls plans of all known underground services (gas, telco, electrical, water, sewer). Required before any excavation.
  • 2. Geotechnical report — soil bore holes, classification per AS 2870. Sets footing requirements.
  • 3. Survey / site set-out — licensed surveyor pegs the cut levels and boundary offsets.
  • 4. Site management plan — erosion & sediment control (often council requirement).
  • 5. Machine operator licences — current HRW tickets for excavator, dozer, loader.

The service strike problem

Hitting an unmarked gas line, fibre cable, or high-voltage service is a multi-million-dollar liability event. BYDA plans are accurate but not perfect — the operator should still locate before digging within 1m of any marked service. Ask whether they pothole (hand-dig) at service crossings. The good ones always do.

Part Two · Specifying the job
04

When in the build does excavation happen

Excavation is the first physical step after demolition (if any) and surveying. It precedes plumbing rough-in, slab pour, and any other trade. Getting it wrong delays every subsequent trade.

  1. · Week minus 2: Geotech report commissioned
  2. · Week minus 1: Surveyor sets out site, BYDA submitted
  3. · Day 0: Excavator arrives, services located, fencing & erosion control set
  4. · Day 1–3: Strip topsoil, bulk cut to engineering levels
  5. · Day 4–5: Trenching for plumbing & electrical, footings dug
  6. · Day 6: Pad compaction tested, site handover to slab crew
05

Site cut to finished pad

The job has four physical phases. Skipping any of them shows up months later as a cracked slab, sinking driveway, or failed compaction test.

  1. 1
    Topsoil strip. 100–300mm of organic material removed. This is unusable as fill and goes to either disposal or stockpile for later landscaping.
  2. 2
    Bulk earthworks. Cut to engineering levels. Cut material either reused as engineered fill on-site or removed.
  3. 3
    Fine grading & compaction. Final levels achieved, fill compacted in layers (typically 300mm) with density testing.
  4. 4
    Trenching & service runs. Footings, plumbing, electrical conduits dug to engineer's drawings.
06

Bobcat vs excavator vs tip-truck

The machine sets the price. Underspec and the job runs long; overspec and you pay machine-hire premium for capacity you don't need. Most residential cuts need a combination.

Bobcat5T Excavator20T Excavator
Day rate (wet hire)$700–$1,100$1,100–$1,500$2,200–$3,400
Output (m³/day)30–5080–140300–500
Best forLevelling, backfill, trenchingResidential site cutLarge cuts, rock
Access width1.5m2.0m3.0m+
07

Soil classification — the report that decides cost

AS 2870 classifies residential sites A through P. The classification dictates footing design and excavation depth. Two adjacent lots can have different classifications — and that's why the geotech report is non-negotiable.

ClassDescriptionCost impact
AMost stable — rock or sandBase case
SSlightly reactive clay+5–10%
MModerately reactive clay (most common)+10–20%
H1 / H2Highly reactive clay+25–45%
EExtremely reactive+50–80%
PProblem site (fill, soft, landslip)Bespoke engineering

A geotech report costs $1,200–$2,500 and pays for itself the first time it stops a surprise. Insist on it — even on lots where the council doesn't mandate one.

08

Rock, clay, sand — what your suburb sits on

Sydney sandstone belt

Anywhere from the harbour to the Blue Mountains foothills sits on sandstone. Rock is shallow (often within 1m of surface) and hard. Budget for rock breaking.

Melbourne basalt plains

Western and northern suburbs sit on reactive black soil over basalt. H-class footings common. Expect deeper digs to find sound bearing.

SE Queensland

Highly variable. Brisbane CBD on sandstone & tuff; Gold Coast coastal sands; western suburbs reactive clays. Geotech essential.

Perth sand

Coastal plain dominated by sand — A or S class. Excavation usually cheap; site drainage matters more than soil structure.

09

Service strikes, easements, retaining

Three things go wrong on excavation jobs more than anything else: hitting an unmarked service, building over an easement, and underestimating retaining requirements on sloping sites.

  • · Easements — sewer mains, stormwater, gas. Marked on title. You cannot excavate within them without authority approval.
  • · Retaining walls — over 1m height usually requires engineering & permit. Adjacent property owner has rights if you cut their toe of slope.
  • · Tree protection zones — council-protected trees have a TPZ where excavation is restricted. Damage = $30k+ fines.
  • · Boundary surveys — excavate to the survey peg, not the fence line. Fences are often 100–300mm off the true boundary.
10

Spoil removal & site handover

Spoil — the dirt you've removed — is contractually one of two things: their problem or your problem. Read the quote carefully. "Cart away" means they remove it. "Spoil to be retained on site" means it's yours to stockpile and dispose of, sometimes at significant cost.

Handover checklist

  • · Final levels to engineer's drawings — surveyor confirmed
  • · Compaction test results (where engineered fill used)
  • · All service trenches marked and protected
  • · Erosion control fencing in place until slab pour
  • · Spoil disposal dockets retained (for some council audits)
  • · Soil contamination report if site has industrial history

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