Unpacking the Heavy Vehicle National Law reform: expanded driver duty, mass, dimension and loading changes and more
Amendments to the Heavy Vehicle National Law (HVNL) passed Parliament in November 2025 and are expected to commence in mid-2026.
The reform package, which includes the Heavy Vehicle National Law Amendment Act 2025 and amendments to several national regulations, brings significant changes aimed at improving the administration and efficiency of the heavy vehicle industry and the safety of heavy vehicle drivers and road users alike.
In our previous article, we explored the new accreditation framework and requirements for operators, drivers and others who work for heavy vehicle operations. In this article we look at the expanded driver duty, key changes to the Heavy Vehicle (Mass, Dimension and Loading) National Regulation (the MDL Regulation), the shift from the HVNL to National Regulations for some requirements and other important regulatory changes.
The expanded driver duty
Under the current legislation, drivers have a duty to not drive a fatigue-regulated heavy vehicle, which is over 12 tonnes (t), if they are impaired by fatigue.
Upcoming legislation changes will extend this duty to apply to all heavy vehicles over 4.5t and combine it with an additional duty to be ‘fit to drive’. Driving ‘fit’ considers apparent physical and mental fitness and the effect and concentration of drugs and alcohol on driving a vehicle or starting or stopping its engine, among other things.
Breach of this duty will incur an increased maximum penalty of $20,000, up from $6,000.
In addition, other requirements including s 26E (Prohibited requests and contracts), s 358 (Restriction on grant of work diary exemption (notice)) and s 540 (Requiring driver to stop working if impaired by fatigue) will be amended to reference the new requirement to be fit to drive.

Changes to the MDL Regulation
In an effort to boost productivity in the heavy vehicle industry, the following changes to the MDL Regulation (among others) have been proposed:
The increase of General Mass Limits (GML) to match limits under Concessional Mass Limits (CML) |
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The increase of vehicle length limits |
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The incorporation of Euro VI compliant prime movers into road train combinations |
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The amendment of tow mass ratio and associated tag trailer conditions |
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The transfer of requirements from the current HVNL |
Certain requirements relating to the definition of twin steer axle group, the display of warning signs and class 2 heavy vehicle authorisation (permits) and mass or dimension exemption permits will be moved from the current HVNL into the MDL Regulation. |

The shift from HVNL to national regulation
Other prescriptive detail that is currently enforced under the HVNL will be transferred to the Heavy Vehicle (General) National Regulation, Heavy Vehicle (Fatigue Management) National Regulation and Heavy Vehicle (Vehicle Standards) National Regulation.
This shift aims to simplify the law and allow for the regulatory framework to better adapt to future technologies or industry needs. The transferred requirements relate to the following matters, among others –
Heavy Vehicle (General) National Regulation |
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Heavy Vehicle (Fatigue Management) National Regulation |
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Heavy Vehicle (Vehicle Standards) National Regulation |
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New codes of practice framework, strengthened enforcement powers and penalty changes
Other changes from this reform will update certain requirements relating to Codes of Practice (CoPs), powers and penalties. For example:
- a new CoP framework will replace the existing industry CoP framework to support and guide Chain of Responsibility parties and drivers to meet their heavy vehicle duties and obligations. The NHVR will be responsible for issuing, amending and revoking CoPs.
- new powers will be introduced for Responsible Ministers to issue directions to the NHVR relating to preventing and minimising serious public risk, acting in relation to alternative compliance accreditation, and investigating or providing advice or information.
- the issue of an improvement notice concurrent with a prosecution for the same conduct will be allowed, provided the offence is deemed serious enough and there is sufficient evidence.
- where suitable, authorised officers will be able to issue formal warnings instead of fines, and there will be a wider range of breaches for which formal warnings may be issued.
- courts will be able to deliver alternative verdicts for primary duty offences.
- there will be 50 penalty amount increases and 21 penalty amount decreases, as well as consolidation of several offences. (For a full list of these, email info@enviroessentials.com.au).

Keeping your compliance on track with Environment Essentials
These amendments are anticipated to become law in the middle of 2026 and will be summarised and incorporated into our health and safety online directory, SafetyLaw, after they have commenced.
These detailed and easy-to-read summaries can be integrated into your processes, policies and procedures, used for internal compliance evaluations or as an aid to cultivate understanding and compliance among employees.
Our complimentary news service, HSE Bulletin, will also notify you of additional developments leading up to the commencement date.
If you are an Environment Essentials subscriber and would like to add SafetyLaw to your cache of products, please contact your Account Manager or our client services team.
If you are not an Environment Essentials subscriber but would like to stay on top of the heavy vehicle reform and identify, understand and integrate your heavy vehicle requirements, then sign up for a free trial today or get in touch with our sales team.
References
- NTC Publication: Heavy Vehicle (Mass, Dimension and Loading) National Regulation Amendment Consultation Overview
- NTC Publication: Heavy Vehicle (Mass, Dimension and Loading) National Regulation Amendment 2025 Explanatory Document
- NTC Webinar: Heavy Vehicle National Law Draft Mass, Dimension and Loading Regulation Amendment Webinar
- NTC Webpage: Towards an Updated Heavy Vehicle National Law
- Queensland Government Legislation: Draft Heavy Vehicle (Mass, Dimension and Loading) National Amendment Regulation 2025
- Queensland Government Legislation: Draft Heavy Vehicle National Amendment Regulations 2024
- Queensland Government Legislation: Heavy Vehicle National Law Act 2012
- Queensland Government Legislation: Heavy Vehicle National Law Amendment Act 2025
- Queensland Government Publication: Heavy Vehicle National Law Amendment Bill 2025 Explanatory Notes