Quick Answer
Damp proofing in Melbourne costs $2,000–$15,000 depending on the method and severity. Chemical injection damp proofing (a common fix for rising damp in older Melbourne brick homes) costs $3,000–$8,000 for a typical single-storey home. Surface waterproofing treatments cost $500–$2,500. Severe sub-floor or basement damp requiring drainage solutions costs $5,000–$20,000+. Rising damp affects an estimated 30% of Melbourne homes built before 1970.

Complete Damp Proofing Cost Breakdown
By Treatment Method
| Method | Cost Range | Best For | Durability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical injection DPC | $3,000–$8,000 | Rising damp in solid brick walls | 20–30 years |
| Cavity drainage membrane | $4,000–$12,000 | Basements, below-ground walls | Permanent if maintained |
| External tanking (waterproof render) | $3,000–$10,000 | External walls below DPC level | 15–25 years |
| Internal tanking (cementitious coat) | $2,000–$6,000 | Internal walls, basements | 10–20 years |
| Sub-floor ventilation upgrade | $1,500–$5,000 | Suspended timber floor damp | Ongoing (fan maintenance) |
| Surface sealer/waterproofer | $500–$2,500 | Mild surface moisture, external walls | 5–10 years |
| Drainage/earthwork solution | $5,000–$20,000+ | Site drainage issues, sloped blocks | Permanent if well-installed |
Damp Proofing by Home Area
| Area | Typical Problem | Typical Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Subfloor (timber floor home) | High humidity, rot, termite attraction | $1,500–$6,000 (ventilation, vapour barrier) |
| External walls (rising damp) | Tide marks, paint peeling, salt deposits | $3,000–$8,000 (chemical injection) |
| Internal walls (below grade) | Basement or semi-basement moisture | $2,000–$8,000 (internal tanking) |
| Garage below grade | Water through slab or walls in rain | $3,000–$10,000 (drainage + tanking) |
| Full basement waterproofing | Hydrostatic water pressure | $8,000–$25,000+ (cavity drainage system) |

Types of Damp and Their Causes
Rising Damp
Rising damp occurs when groundwater wicks upward through masonry via capillary action. It appears as a tide mark on walls — typically 0.5m–1.2m above floor level — with white salt efflorescence and peeling paint. It’s most common in Melbourne homes built before 1955 that lack a physical damp-proof course (DPC), or in homes where the original DPC has failed. Heavy clay soils in SE Melbourne suburbs like Dandenong, Springvale, and Noble Park hold moisture at wall base level, accelerating rising damp.
Penetrating Damp
Penetrating damp enters through external walls from rain, gutter overflow, or faulty flashings. It appears as isolated damp patches that worsen after rain rather than year-round. Common in older Melbourne cavity brick homes where cavity wall ties have corroded, or where external render has cracked. Fix source first (gutters, flashings, render cracks) before treating walls.
Sub-floor Damp
Melbourne’s reactive clay soils retain moisture under suspended timber floors, creating high humidity in sub-floor spaces (typically 50–80cm clearance). This humidity rots floor joists and bearers, attracts termites, and creates condensation on the underside of floorboards. Sub-floor ventilation systems (cross-ventilation vents or powered fans) address this — a critical issue in Berwick, Pakenham, Cranbourne, and Officer where many homes are built on reactive clay with suspended floors.
Condensation Damp
Condensation from cooking, showering, and breathing deposits moisture on cold walls and windows. It’s distinct from penetrating and rising damp and is solved by ventilation (exhaust fans, heating, opening windows) rather than waterproofing. Confusing condensation with rising damp is very common — always diagnose before treating.
What Affects Damp Proofing Costs?
1. Diagnosis and Investigation
A professional damp survey costs $200–$600 and identifies the type, source, and extent of dampness using moisture meters, thermal cameras, and visual inspection. This is essential before spending $5,000+ on treatment — misdiagnosis wastes money. A professional diagnosis also provides a warranty baseline for treatment work.
2. Wall Length and Access
Chemical injection DPC is priced per linear metre of wall. A typical Melbourne single-storey home has 30–50 linear metres of external walls — at $60–$150/m, that’s $1,800–$7,500 in injection alone before reinstatement.
3. Replastering and Reinstatement
After damp treatment, affected plaster must be removed (it contains salt deposits) and replaced with renovating plaster or salt-resistant render — add $1,500–$4,000 for a typical Melbourne home. This is often 40–50% of total project cost and commonly omitted from initial quotes.
4. Sub-floor Height and Access
Melbourne homes need 400mm sub-floor clearance for access. Very low sub-floor spaces (200–300mm) require manual entry and cost significantly more to work in — add 30–50% for restricted access sub-floor work.
Signs You Have Rising Damp
| Sign | Description | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Tide mark on wall | Horizontal stain stopping at consistent height, often with yellow/brown border | Get professional moisture meter diagnosis before treating |
| White powder deposits | Efflorescence (salt crystals) on brickwork or plaster base | Rising damp indicator — salts deposited as water evaporates |
| Peeling paint/wallpaper | Paint bubbling or peeling from inside at floor level | Check for high moisture reading. May also be condensation |
| Musty smell at floor level | Persistent mould/damp smell worst in winter, near skirting boards | Inspect sub-floor and base of walls with moisture meter |
| Rotten skirting boards | Timber skirting soft, discoloured, or crumbling at base | Clear indication of moisture at floor level — investigate source |

Top Tips and Gotchas
- Diagnose before treating. Condensation is often misdiagnosed as rising damp. A moisture meter reading, combined with seasonal patterns (condensation is worst in winter; rising damp is year-round), determines the right treatment. Wrong treatment wastes $3,000–$8,000.
- Fix external water sources first. Blocked gutters, downpipes discharging near walls, garden beds higher than DPC level, and cracked render all drive moisture into walls. Fix these first — they’re usually cheaper than chemical treatment and may be the only cause.
- Reinstatement plaster is essential. Removing old salt-contaminated plaster and applying Sika Renderoc, Mapei Mapefinish, or equivalent salt-resistant renovating plaster is non-negotiable after rising damp treatment. Old plaster retains hygroscopic salts that continue drawing moisture even after the DPC is restored.
- Sub-floor ventilation is cost-effective. A sub-floor ventilation system ($1,500–$3,000) solves sub-floor damp for less than most other treatments and runs at 5–10W ongoing power consumption. In SE Melbourne clay soils, this is often the highest-priority damp fix.
- Get written guarantees. Reputable damp proofing contractors provide 20–30 year guarantees on chemical injection DPC. Get this in writing with specific coverage terms. Avoid contractors who don’t offer guarantees.
- Check Heritage Victoria restrictions. Period homes in heritage overlays (common in Frankston, Dandenong, and inner SE Melbourne suburbs) may have restrictions on invasive damp treatment methods. Check with your council planning department before chemical injection work.
- Rising damp affects property value. In Victoria, sellers must disclose known structural defects including rising damp. Untreated rising damp is a deal-breaker for most buyers and triggers significant price negotiations. Treating before sale is usually cost-positive.
- Three quotes minimum. Damp proofing is an area with significant price variation and variable quality. Get 3 quotes with written specifications of method, products, and reinstatement scope.

FAQ
How do I know if I have rising damp or condensation?
Rising damp shows as a consistent tide mark 0.5–1.2m above floor level, with white salt efflorescence and worst on external walls. It’s year-round and worsens in wet seasons. Condensation appears on cold surfaces (windows, walls on cold external faces) and is worst in winter mornings — it appears as water droplets or steaming and doesn’t leave salt deposits. A moisture meter provides definitive measurement.
How long does chemical damp proofing last?
Chemical injection DPC (silicone or silane-based) creates a water-repellent zone in the masonry that typically lasts 20–30 years. Quality products from Sika, Wykamol, and Safeguard carry 20–30 year guarantees when correctly installed. The replastering reinstatement typically needs refreshing every 10–15 years regardless of the DPC condition.
Can I damp proof a house myself?
DIY surface sealers and waterproofing paints (Dulux Aquanamel, Selleys Liquid Nails Waterproofer) address surface moisture on limited areas. Chemical injection DPC requires a specialist injector pump, professional-grade silicone products (not consumer-grade), and technical knowledge of injection spacing and pressure. For significant rising damp, professional treatment is strongly recommended — amateur chemical injection typically fails within 3–5 years.
Does damp proofing add value to a Melbourne home?
Yes. Rising damp must be disclosed in Section 32 vendor’s statements. Treated rising damp (with a professional warranty) allows you to state the issue has been professionally rectified, which is far less damaging to the sale price than disclosed untreated damp. Professional treatment with a 20-year warranty typically returns more than its cost at point of sale.
My sub-floor smells musty — what should I do?
Musty sub-floor smell indicates elevated humidity and possibly early timber decay or mould. Inspect the sub-floor (with a torch through the manhole) for visible mould on joists, pooled water, or inadequate cross-ventilation. Melbourne homes typically need sub-floor vents at 600mm centres on all four sides — blocked vents, built-up gardens, or inadequate clearance are common issues. A sub-floor ventilation specialist can assess and install powered systems for $1,500–$3,500.
Local Resources
- Master Builders Victoria: Find registered builders for major damp remediation and structural repairs.
- Bunnings Warehouse — Damp Sealers: Selleys, Dulux, and Sika surface waterproofing products. Stores in Dandenong, Cranbourne, Pakenham, Frankston.
- Sika Australia: Professional waterproofing and damp treatment product specifications and applicator finder.
- Victorian Building Authority: Verify builder and waterproofing contractor registration before signing contracts.
- WorkSafe Victoria — Mould: Safe handling and remediation guidance for significant mould growth in Victorian homes.
Final Thoughts
Damp proofing in Melbourne ranges from $500 surface treatments to $20,000+ drainage solutions. Accurate diagnosis is the most important first step — get a professional moisture assessment before committing to any treatment. Fix obvious water sources (gutters, drainage, flashings) first. For rising damp in older SE Melbourne homes, chemical injection DPC with proper replastering reinstatement is the standard treatment. Get written guarantees, check contractor registration, and factor in reinstatement plastering in your total budget.