FY27 Starts Here: What the First Half of 2026 Tells Us About the Next 6 Months in Australia’s Construction Industry
An industry outlook for Project Managers, Consultants, Engineers, and Tier 1 Builders
As we enter a new financial year, the Australian construction industry finds itself at an interesting crossroads.
The first half of 2026 has shown signs of renewed activity across infrastructure, energy, data centres, healthcare, and housing. Yet many of the challenges that have shaped the industry over the past few years remain firmly in place: labour shortages, productivity concerns, project cost pressures, and increasingly complex delivery environments.
For Project Managers, Consultants, Engineers and Tier 1 Builders, the question is no longer whether work exists—it does. The challenge is how projects will be delivered successfully in a market where demand continues to outpace capacity.
So what have we learned from the first six months of 2026, and what is likely to shape the next six?
What We Have Seen So Far in 2026
- The Pipeline Remains Strong
Despite ongoing economic uncertainty, Australia’s construction pipeline remains one of the strongest in decades.
According to Infrastructure Australia, the nation’s Major Public Infrastructure Pipeline has grown to approximately $242 billion over the next five years, representing a 14% increase on the previous outlook. Transport, utilities, energy transmission and housing projects continue to drive investment nationwide.
For Tier 1 contractors and major consultants, this means opportunities remain plentiful across:
- Transport infrastructure
- Energy transition projects
- Utilities
- Healthcare
- Defence
- Data centres
- Housing and urban development
The issue is increasingly becoming delivery capacity rather than project availability.
- Workforce Shortages Have Become the Industry’s Biggest Risk
Perhaps the most significant theme emerging in 2026 is the growing shortage of skilled workers.
Infrastructure Australia estimates the current infrastructure workforce shortage at approximately 141,000 workers, with shortages potentially peaking at around 300,000 workers by 2027. Engineers, architects, scientists, trades and project management professionals are all expected to face substantial shortages.
For project teams, this is creating:
- Increased competition for talent
- Higher labour costs
- Longer design and delivery programmes
- Greater reliance on specialist subcontractors
- Increased pressure on project planning and sequencing
Many organisations are already experiencing challenges securing experienced BIM Managers, Digital Engineers, Project Engineers, Design Managers and specialist MEP resources.
- Productivity Is Now the Industry’s Major Discussion Point
A recurring theme across industry conferences, forums and government reports is productivity.
While Australia’s construction productivity saw a short-term improvement recently, Infrastructure Australia notes that long-term productivity growth remains largely flat and below historical levels.
The industry is increasingly recognising that simply adding more people will not solve delivery challenges.
Instead, the focus is shifting towards:
- Digital Engineering
- BIM implementation
- Common Data Environments (CDEs)
- Automation
- Prefabrication and modular construction
- Better information management
- Earlier collaboration across project teams
For owners and contractors alike, productivity improvements are becoming essential rather than optional.
- Housing Delivery Is Still Falling Short of Targets
Housing remains one of Australia’s biggest challenges.
Although approvals and commencements have improved in some areas, Australia continues to face a significant gap between current delivery rates and the National Housing Accord target of 1.2 million homes by 2029. ABS data shows dwelling approvals continue to fluctuate, while industry analysis suggests completions remain below the level required to achieve national targets.
This has several implications:
- Increased demand for medium and high-density developments
- Greater pressure on planning and approval processes
- Increased focus on Modern Methods of Construction (MMC)
- More government intervention aimed at accelerating delivery
For consultants and builders, the housing challenge is likely to continue driving innovation and procurement reform throughout FY27.
- Data Centres Continue Their Growth Trajectory
One sector that continues to outperform expectations is data centres.
Driven by cloud computing, artificial intelligence, hyperscale infrastructure and digital transformation, demand remains exceptionally strong across Australia. Industry forecasts continue to point towards significant growth in both capacity requirements and investment.
For engineering consultants and contractors, this means:
- Increased demand for specialist MEP design
- Higher requirements for digital coordination
- Greater emphasis on prefabrication
- Complex programme management requirements
- Increased demand for highly detailed BIM and Digital Engineering deliverables
This sector is likely to remain one of the strongest opportunities through FY27 and beyond.
What the New Financial Year Means
The start of FY27 brings several realities for project teams.
Clients Are Demanding More Certainty
After years of cost escalation, owners are increasingly focused on:
- Cost certainty
- Programme certainty
- Reduced risk
- Earlier issue identification
- Better project visibility
This is creating greater demand for digital delivery methodologies that allow teams to identify issues before construction begins.
Procurement Models Are Evolving
More clients are looking at:
- Early Contractor Involvement (ECI)
- Alliance-style approaches
- Design for Manufacture and Assembly (DfMA)
- Collaborative delivery models
The objective is simple: reduce downstream risk and improve project outcomes.
Digital Capability Is Becoming a Differentiator
The industry is moving beyond asking whether BIM should be used.
The question is now:
How effectively are organisations using BIM and Digital Engineering to improve project outcomes?
The organisations gaining a competitive advantage are those using digital tools to:
- Improve coordination
- Reduce rework
- Support prefabrication
- Improve stakeholder communication
- Deliver more accurate project information
What We Expect to See in the Next 6 Months
- Increased Investment in Digital Engineering
With workforce shortages unlikely to ease quickly, organisations will continue investing in technologies that improve efficiency and reduce reliance on manual processes.
Expect increased adoption of:
- BIM execution planning
- Model-based coordination
- Reality capture
- Digital twins
- Automated workflows
- Asset information management
- Greater Focus on Prefabrication and DfMA
Infrastructure Australia notes that prefabrication remains a relatively small proportion of the Australian market despite strong industry interest. As labour pressures continue, we expect adoption to increase significantly.
Projects that integrate digital design and prefabrication earlier are likely to see the greatest benefits.
- More Pressure on Consultants and Design Teams
Engineering and design resources are expected to remain constrained throughout FY27.
This will place greater emphasis on:
- Efficient design processes
- Better information management
- Clear project standards
- Early design coordination
- Digital delivery maturity
- Continued Demand for Certainty
Project owners have become increasingly focused on risk mitigation.
Expect stronger requirements around:
- Clash detection
- Design validation
- Model quality
- LOD requirements
- Construction sequencing
- Digital handover deliverables
What This Means for Project Teams
For Project Managers
- Invest more time in upfront planning and digital coordination.
- Lock in specialist resources earlier.
- Use BIM and 4D planning to reduce programme risk.
For Consultants
- Standardise information requirements early.
- Focus on model quality rather than model quantity.
- Prepare for increasing client demands around digital deliverables.
For Tier 1 Builders
- Leverage Digital Engineering to improve certainty before site mobilisation.
- Increase integration between design, procurement, and construction teams.
- Explore prefabrication opportunities earlier in the project lifecycle.
Our 3 Predictions for FY27:
- Digital Engineering will move from a project requirement to a business requirement.
Companies will increasingly be judged on how effectively they use data, BIM, and digital workflows to improve project outcomes.
- Labour shortages will accelerate the adoption of prefabrication and automation.
The industry will need productivity gains to offset workforce constraints.
- Information quality will become as important as construction quality.
Clients will demand better asset information, digital handovers, and data-driven decision-making.