Aerial view of tractor working in agricultural field

Understanding the Labour Hire Supply Chain

Who Is Responsible for What in Australian Horticulture & Agriculture

How the Labour Hire Supply Chain Works

In Australian horticulture and agriculture, the labour hire supply chain typically involves three parties. Understanding each party's role is the first step to understanding compliance obligations.

The Grower (Host Employer)

The grower owns or manages the farm, orchard, or agricultural operation. They need workers to pick fruit, prune vines, pack produce, or operate machinery. They engage a labour hire company to supply those workers. The grower directs the day-to-day work on site.

The Labour Hire Company

The labour hire company recruits, employs, and supplies workers to the grower. They are the legal employer — responsible for pay, entitlements, contracts, and employment conditions. They pay the workers and invoice the grower.

The Worker

The worker is employed by the labour hire company but performs their daily work on the grower's property, under the grower's direction. They may work on piece rates or hourly rates depending on the role and agreement.

Complex Chains Add Risk

Some supply chains have multiple layers — a grower contracts a management company, who contracts a labour hire provider, who may subcontract to another. Each layer adds complexity and reduces visibility, which regulators identify as high-risk for non-compliance.

Aerial view of agricultural farmland plots

What Growers Are Responsible For

Many growers assume that because the labour hire company is the employer, compliance is entirely the labour hire company's problem. This is not correct. Under Australian law, growers carry significant obligations as host employers.

Due Diligence on Labour Hire Providers

Growers must verify that their labour hire provider is licensed (in VIC, QLD, SA, and ACT), legitimate, and operating lawfully. Using an unlicensed provider exposes the grower to penalties.

Ensuring Workers Receive Correct Entitlements

Growers must take reasonable steps to ensure that all workers in their supply chain receive correct minimum entitlements under workplace laws — including correct pay rates, payslips, and conditions.

Written Agreements with Labour Hire Providers

Growers should have written contracts with their labour hire providers that clearly establish mutual awareness of obligations, expected pay rates, and compliance requirements.

Pay Rate Parity

When labour hire workers do the same work at the same location as directly-employed staff, they must receive the same award entitlements. From November 2024, protected pay rate orders can be applied to enforce this.

Workplace Health & Safety

Growers are responsible for site-specific hazards, safe work systems, site inductions, and working conditions. WHS is a shared obligation — it cannot be outsourced entirely to the labour hire company.

Providing Information When Requested

If a labour hire employer makes a written request for information to help them pay workers correctly, the grower must comply. This is a legal obligation, not optional.

Aerial view of vineyard rows in agricultural region

What Labour Hire Companies Must Do

As the legal employer, the labour hire company carries the primary employment obligations. Getting these wrong is where most compliance failures occur.

Hold a Valid Labour Hire Licence

In Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, and the ACT, labour hire providers must hold a valid licence before supplying workers. Penalties for operating without one can exceed $650,000 for a corporation.

Pay Correct Wages and Entitlements

Workers must receive minimum entitlements under the relevant award or enterprise agreement. This includes correct hourly rates, overtime, penalty rates, leave entitlements, and superannuation.

Set Piece Rates Correctly

Under the Horticulture Award, piece rates must be set so that a competent worker at average productivity earns at least 15% above the minimum hourly rate. The calculation methodology must be documented.

Maintain Accurate Records

Since April 2022, employers must record hours worked by all pieceworkers and the piece rates applied. Payslips must be issued. Failure to keep records is one of the most common compliance breaches.

Written Employment Agreements

Every worker must have a clear written employment agreement that establishes terms, conditions, pay rates, and the nature of the employment relationship.

WHS for Their Workers

Labour hire companies are responsible for general WHS management, initial training, induction, and ensuring their workers are safe. They must cooperate with the host employer on site-specific safety matters.

Worker in modern agricultural facility

Accessorial Liability: You Can't Look Away

This is the concept that catches most growers off guard. Under the Fair Work Act, if you knowingly participate in or benefit from workplace law breaches by your contractor, you can be held legally responsible too. Ignorance is not a defence.

What It Means

If your labour hire provider is underpaying workers, and you haven't taken reasonable steps to address it, you may be found to be involved in those underpayments. Both the labour hire operator and the grower can face legal action.

"I Didn't Know" Doesn't Work

Regulators expect growers to proactively manage their supply chain. Not asking questions, not checking licences, and not verifying pay practices leaves you exposed. Wilful blindness is treated the same as knowledge.

Wage Theft Is Now Criminal

From January 2025, intentional wage theft is a criminal offence under the Fair Work Act. This significantly raises the stakes for everyone in the supply chain.

How to Protect Yourself

Maintain written contracts, verify licences, request evidence of compliance, document your due diligence, and keep records proving you took reasonable steps. This documentation is your protection.

Aerial view of harvest field operations

Labour Hire Licensing by State

Australia does not have a single national labour hire licensing scheme. Instead, several states and territories have their own requirements. If you're operating across state borders, you may need multiple licences.

Victoria

Labour hire licence required to supply workers for horticulture-specific work including planting, picking, packing, sorting, labelling, grading, thinning, pruning, and spraying. Managed by the Labour Hire Licensing Authority.

Queensland

Industry-wide licensing scheme. All labour hire providers must hold a licence and be registered on the public register before supplying workers in any industry.

South Australia

Originally limited to prescribed industries (including horticulture). The 2025 Amendment Act broadened the scheme — nearly all providers supplying workers for a fee must now hold a valid licence.

Australian Capital Territory

Industry-wide labour hire licensing scheme covering all sectors.

Western Australia

No dedicated labour hire licensing scheme currently. Many operators require an Employment Agent's Licence under the Employment Agents Act 1976.

Grower Obligation

Host employers must verify their labour hire provider's licence status on the relevant state register before engaging them. Using an unlicensed provider in a regulated state exposes both parties to significant penalties.

GPS guided tractor operating in agricultural field

The Enforcement Reality

The Fair Work Ombudsman conducted a three-year horticulture enforcement strategy targeting 15 high-risk regional hotspots across Australia. The results paint a sobering picture of the industry's compliance levels.

83% Non-Compliance Rate

Of all businesses investigated during the strategy, 83% were found to be non-compliant with the Fair Work Act. This is not a small problem — it is an industry-wide issue.

100% of Labour Hire Providers in Breach

Every single labour hire business investigated was found to be in breach of the law. The most common failures were payslip and record-keeping obligations.

360 Site Visits, 512 Investigations

Regulators visited farms and offices across the country. Over $760,000 in fines were issued and over $384,000 in wages were recovered for 464 underpaid workers.

High-Risk Regions Targeted

Victoria's Yarra Valley and Mornington Peninsula recorded the highest non-compliance at 83%. Sunraysia, Shepparton, and NSW Riverina were also among the worst-performing regions.

Enforcement Is Ongoing

Regulators have announced they will return to troublespot regions with a continued focus on labour hire providers. The Labour Hire Licensing Authority has also taken court action against unlicensed operators.

Agricultural field with orderly crop rows

Most Common Compliance Failures

Based on enforcement data and regulatory findings, these are the most frequent ways businesses fail their supply chain obligations.

No Payslips or Incorrect Payslips

Workers not receiving payslips, or payslips that don't accurately reflect hours worked, rates applied, and deductions made.

Incorrect Piece Rate Calculations

Piece rates that don't meet the 15% above minimum hourly rate requirement, or rates set without documented methodology showing how the rate was calculated.

Missing Time Records for Pieceworkers

Since April 2022, employers must record hours worked by all pieceworkers. Many businesses still don't keep proper timesheets for piece rate workers.

No Written Employment Agreements

Workers unable to identify their actual employer or lacking written contracts that establish terms, conditions, and pay rates.

Operating Without a Licence

Labour hire providers operating in regulated states without holding a valid licence. This also exposes the grower who engaged them.

Unlawful Wage Deductions

Unreasonable deductions for accommodation, transport, laundry, kitchen use, or other charges that reduce workers' effective pay below minimum entitlements.

No Due Diligence by Growers

Growers failing to check their labour hire provider's licence, failing to verify compliance practices, and having no written agreements in place.

Vineyard fields bird's eye view

WHS in the Supply Chain

Work health and safety is a shared obligation that cannot be passed from one party to another. Under WHS laws, everyone in the supply chain must know who is doing what and work together to eliminate or minimise risks.

Grower (Host) WHS Duties

Responsible for site-specific hazards, provision of safe work systems, site-specific inductions, safe working conditions, and ensuring adequate safety consultation with all workers on site.

Labour Hire Company WHS Duties

Responsible for employment-related WHS including general induction, initial training, general safety management, and ensuring their workers are fit and capable for the work assigned.

Consultation, Cooperation & Coordination

Both parties must work together on WHS. This means implementing effective health and safety management systems jointly, ensuring adequate briefing and training, and maintaining continuous communication.

Clear Delineation of Responsibilities

In complex supply chains with multiple contractors and subcontractors, all duty holders must clearly identify and agree on who is responsible for managing each type of risk. This should be documented in writing.

Aerial view of green farmland

Recent Legal Changes You Need to Know

Several significant changes to Australian workplace law have come into effect recently, all of which impact the labour hire supply chain in horticulture and agriculture.

Protected Pay Rates for Labour Hire (Nov 2024)

Labour hire employees can now have regulated pay rate orders applied, meaning they must be paid at least the same rate as the host employer's directly-employed workers doing the same work.

Criminal Wage Theft (Jan 2025)

Intentional wage theft is now a criminal offence under the Fair Work Act. A small business code of conduct provides a pathway to avoid prosecution for those who cooperate, but deliberate underpayment now carries criminal penalties.

Casual Employment Redefined (Aug 2024)

A casual employee is now defined based on the practical reality and true nature of the relationship, not just the contract. If a worker has regular, ongoing hours, they may not legally be a casual — regardless of what the contract says.

Right to Disconnect (Aug 2024-2025)

Eligible employees have the right to not monitor, read, or respond to contact from an employer outside their ordinary hours of work, unless refusal is unreasonable.

SA Labour Hire Licensing Expanded (2025)

South Australia has broadened its labour hire licensing scheme. Nearly all providers supplying workers for a fee must now hold a valid licence — not just those in prescribed industries.

Agricultural drone operating over farmland

Need Help Managing Your Supply Chain Compliance?

Whether you're a grower needing to verify your obligations, or a labour hire company needing help with documentation, record-keeping, and piece rate calculations — we can help. We sit with you, build everything together, and make sure you're covered.

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