Trades & Licensing
RPL Evidence: What Assessors Actually Want to See
The single biggest reason a Recognition of Prior Learning claim stalls is not a lack of skill — it is evidence that an assessor cannot use. You know you can do the work. The assessor has to be able to see it, mapped to a standard. Get that right and RPL becomes straightforward.
The three tests assessors apply
Good evidence is judged against a few simple principles. Assessors look for proof that is:
- Valid — it actually relates to the unit of competency being assessed.
- Sufficient — there is enough of it, across enough situations, to show consistent skill.
- Current — it reflects what you can do now, not only a decade ago.
- Authentic — it is genuinely your work, verifiable by a third party.
Evidence that carries weight
- Third-party reports. A signed report from a licensed supervisor or builder confirming what you did, to what standard, is gold.
- Dated photos and video of you performing the task, not just the finished product.
- Job documentation — invoices, quotes, plans, sign-offs and compliance certificates in your name.
- Tickets and licences already held, which corroborate your scope of work.
- A mapped work history that ties each role to specific units.
Turn a shoebox into a case
Most tradespeople have plenty of evidence; it is just scattered across phones, utes and old emails. The work is in curating it: matching each piece to the right unit, filling gaps with references, and presenting it so the assessor’s job is easy. That is precisely the structuring we do under Trades & RPL.
If your experience is solid but the paperwork is a mess — or a previous claim was knocked back — send us the file and we will tell you honestly where it stands.
Open a confidential file
Got a notice, or worried about one?
Tell us what landed on your desk. We map it against the criteria the authority is actually measuring against and tell you where you stand — confidentially, and before you spend a cent on legal fees.
Regulated Pty Ltd provides strategic, non-legal advocacy and narrative services. This article is general information, not legal, tax or financial advice, and does not create a client relationship. Rules differ between states, territories and authorities and change over time. For advice about your situation, consult an admitted legal practitioner or the relevant regulator. We work alongside your existing professional team.
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