Keith Allan Hall — Licensed Glazier (Queensland)

Active QBaCC #15226052 Queensland
Last synced with Queensland Building and Construction Commission register: 14 February 2026
Verify directly on QBaCC

Licence Details

Licence Number 15226052
Licence Class Glass, Glazing and Aluminium
Status Active
Financial Category No Financials Required
Source QBCC

This data is sourced from public government registers and may not reflect real-time changes. Always confirm licence details with Queensland Building and Construction Commission directly. Full disclaimer.

What a Glazier Licence Means in Queensland

Glaziers cut, install, and replace glass in windows, doors, shopfronts, balustrades, shower screens, mirrors, and skylights. In Australia, glaziers work with a wide range of glass types including toughened (tempered) safety glass, laminated glass, insulated glass units (double glazing), low-E coated glass for energy efficiency, and specialist acoustic or bushfire-rated glass. The trade requires precision measuring and cutting, knowledge of Australian Standards for safety glass locations, and understanding of structural glazing techniques for frameless installations. Homeowners most commonly engage a glazier for broken window replacement, shower screen installation, glass balustrade fitting, window upgrades for energy efficiency or noise reduction, splashback glass, and mirror installation. Glaziers also assess and rectify failed sealed units where moisture has entered between double-glazed panes.

Hiring a licensed glazier means you are protected by the state's regulatory framework. Licensed tradespersons must comply with industry standards, maintain appropriate insurance, and can be held accountable through the licensing body's complaint and disciplinary processes.

The No Financials Required financial category assigned to this licence determines the maximum value of work the licensee can have under contract at any one time. This category is set by Queensland Building and Construction Commission based on the licensee's assessed financial capacity.

Hiring a Licensed Glazier in QLD

Before hiring any glazier in Queensland, use this five-point checklist to protect yourself and ensure you're working with a properly licensed and insured professional.

  1. Confirm the glass type meets Australian Standards for the location — Australian Standard AS 1288 mandates safety glass (toughened or laminated) in specific locations including doors, sidelights, wet areas, low-level panels, and balustrades. Ask the glazier to confirm the glass type they will install meets the Standard for your specific application — non-compliant glass is a safety hazard and may void your insurance.
  2. Ask about their experience with frameless glass installations — Frameless glass balustrades, pool fencing, and shower screens require precision engineering — incorrect spigot placement, inadequate glass thickness, or poor alignment can cause structural failure. If your project involves frameless glass, confirm the glazier has specific frameless installation experience and uses compliant hardware.
  3. Check they hold a QBCC or equivalent glazier licence — In Queensland, glazing work over $3,300 (inc. GST) requires a QBCC licence. NSW requires a licence for glazing work over $5,000. Verify the licence on the relevant state register. Glass balustrades and pool fencing are safety-critical — an unlicensed installer exposes you to significant liability.
  4. Ask about energy ratings if upgrading for efficiency — If you are upgrading windows for energy efficiency, ask about the glass U-value and Solar Heat Gain Coefficient (SHGC). Low-E coatings and double glazing significantly reduce heating and cooling costs. The glazier should recommend the right combination for your climate zone — what works in Melbourne differs from what suits Brisbane.
  5. Confirm compliance with pool fencing regulations if installing glass pool fencing — Glass pool fencing must comply with AS 1926.1 and relevant state regulations for height, gap clearances, and gate operation. The glass must be toughened safety glass of adequate thickness (typically 12 mm for frameless). Ask the glazier to confirm compliance and whether they will arrange council inspection if required.

Red Flags to Watch For

  • Proposes non-safety glass in a location that requires it — Installing standard annealed glass where AS 1288 mandates safety glass (doors, wet areas, low-level panels, balustrades) is illegal and dangerous. Annealed glass breaks into large, sharp shards that cause severe lacerations. Any glazier who suggests it is either unaware of the Standard or cutting costs at your expense.
  • No documentation of glass compliance markings — Safety glass installed in Australia must carry a permanent identification mark showing the manufacturer, type (toughened or laminated), and compliance with AS/NZS 2208. If the glazier cannot show you the compliance stamp on the glass before installation, you have no way to verify it is genuine safety glass.
  • Glass pool fencing installed without council inspection or non-compliant gaps — Glass pool fencing must meet strict gap and height requirements under AS 1926.1 to prevent child drowning. Gaps between panels, under panels, or around gates that exceed the maximum (typically 100 mm) are non-compliant. A glazier who installs pool fencing without measuring gaps precisely or arranging a compliance inspection is putting children at risk.

Typical Glazier Costs in Queensland

Hourly Rate $70 – $110
Callout Fee $70 – $120
Single window glass replacement $150 – $400
Shower screen installation $500 – $1500
Sliding door glass replacement $300 – $800

View full glazier pricing guide for Queensland →

Your Rights — Complaints & Disputes in Queensland

Queensland Building and Construction Commission (QBCC)

How to Lodge a Complaint

  1. 1 Write to the tradesperson detailing the issue and requesting rectification within a reasonable timeframe (usually 14 days)
  2. 2 If unresolved, lodge a complaint online via the QBCC website or call 139 333
  3. 3 QBCC will assess the complaint and may arrange an inspection

Read our full guide to hiring a licensed glazier →

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