Quick Answer

Installing a bathroom or kitchen exhaust fan in Melbourne costs $150–$450 for a basic replacement by a licensed electrician. Installing a new fan where no fan existed (new wiring, ducting to outside) costs $300–$800. Under the NCC and Australian Standards (AS 1668.2), bathrooms and toilets in new builds and major renovations require mechanical ventilation — many older Melbourne homes don’t comply and suffer from mould as a result.

Installing an exhaust fan into a bathroom ceiling
Installing an exhaust fan into a bathroom ceiling — the fan must duct outside the building, not into the roof cavity, to comply with AS 1668.2 and prevent moisture accumulating in the roof space.

Exhaust Fan Installation Cost Breakdown

By Installation Type

Job Type Cost Range Notes
Replace like-for-like (same wiring) $150–$300 1–2 hour job. Electrician supply and install
New install (existing circuit nearby) $250–$500 New wiring from nearby light/power circuit
New install (new dedicated circuit) $350–$700 Run cable from switchboard. Higher labour
Fan + ducting through ceiling/roof $400–$800 Cut new duct hole, flexible duct to outside
Fan + heat + light combo $300–$600 IXL Tastic-type 3-in-1 unit, popular in Melbourne
Kitchen rangehood install $200–$500 Replace existing; ducted vs recirculating
Ducted rangehood (new duct run) $400–$900 Cutting duct through cabinetry and external wall

Fan Unit Costs

Fan Type Supply Cost Recommended For
Basic ceiling exhaust fan $30–$80 Toilet, small bathroom
Quiet/premium exhaust fan $80–$180 Bathroom (noise matters)
Fan + light combo $60–$150 Small bathrooms without skylight
Heat + fan + light (IXL Tastic) $180–$350 Melbourne bathrooms — warm while showering
Inline fan (remote motor) $120–$280 Long duct runs, quiet operation
Ducted range hood (kitchen) $150–$800 Removes grease and steam externally
Pro tip: IXL Tastic and similar heat/fan/light combos cost $50–$100 more than basic fans but heat the bathroom in Melbourne’s cold winters without a separate heater — many SE Melbourne homeowners consider this essential for winter comfort.
Connecting exhaust fan ducting to a roof vent cap in the roof cavity
Connecting exhaust fan ducting to a roof vent cap in the roof cavity — the duct must terminate outside the building envelope, not just vent into the roof space, or moisture buildup will rot the roof framing over time.

What Affects Exhaust Fan Installation Costs?

1. Access to Roof Cavity

Easy roof cavity access (manhole, pitched roof with crawl space) keeps ducting costs at the low end. Flat roofs, concrete ceilings, or inaccessible roof spaces require more complex installation — add $100–$300 for difficult access. Most SE Melbourne brick veneer homes (Berwick, Pakenham, Narre Warren) have accessible tile roof cavities.

2. Duct Route Length and Material

Standard flexible silver ducting costs $5–$10 per metre. Longer duct runs (over 3m) lose airflow efficiency — use larger diameter rigid ducting (150mm vs 100mm) and ensure smooth bends. Some councils require the duct to terminate at a specific point on the external wall or roof.

3. Timer, Humidity Sensor, or Smart Controls

Basic fans run while the switch is on. Timer fans (run 5–15 minutes after switching off) cost $20–$50 extra and prevent condensation buildup. Humidity-sensor fans ($60–$120 extra) automatically activate when humidity rises above 70–80% — ideal for Melbourne’s humid winter bathrooms and highly recommended for mould prevention.

4. Running Cable

If new wiring is required (no circuit nearby, or upgrading from a pull-cord to switched fan), the electrician must run cable — typically 10–30 minutes of additional work at $80–$150/hr labour rate. A new dedicated circuit from the switchboard adds $150–$350 depending on distance.

Why Exhaust Fan Ventilation Matters in Melbourne

Melbourne’s variable climate — cold humid winters and warm summers — creates ideal conditions for bathroom mould. Bathrooms without adequate mechanical ventilation (fans that don’t duct outside, or no fan at all) accumulate moisture in tiles, grout, paint, and ceiling materials. Black mould (Cladosporium, Aspergillus) causes health issues and expensive remediation. A $300 exhaust fan installation prevents $2,000–$8,000 in mould remediation costs in bathrooms that don’t have window ventilation. Under the National Construction Code, all habitable buildings require compliant ventilation — many Melbourne homes built before 2000 don’t meet current standards.

Common Exhaust Fan Problems

Problem Symptom Action
Fan venting into roof cavity Mould in roof space, moisture staining on ceiling Re-route duct to external vent. This is non-compliant and causes roof damage
Noisy fan Rattling or grinding noise during operation Clean fan blades (often lint-clogged). If persistent, replace motor/fan (may be faster to replace whole unit)
Weak airflow Mirror still fogs after 10-min operation Check duct for kinks or blockages. Upgrade to higher CFM fan — small fans often underpowered for bathroom size
Fan not turning off Runs continuously Timer relay fault — replace timer module or fan. Humidity sensor stuck in high-humidity mode
Condensation at duct exit Water dripping from duct or ceiling Insulate duct in roof cavity (condensation on cold duct surface). Use insulated flexible ducting
Safety warning: All exhaust fan electrical work (new wiring, circuit installation, switchboard connections) must be performed by a licensed electrician in Victoria. DIY electrical work is illegal and invalidates your home insurance. A licensed electrician must also complete a Certificate of Electrical Safety (CES) for the work — request this document and keep it with your home records.
Black mould on a bathroom ceiling caused by inadequate ventilation
Black mould on a bathroom ceiling caused by inadequate ventilation — this is the most preventable bathroom repair issue in Melbourne homes, and a properly installed and ducted exhaust fan eliminates it in most cases.

Top Tips and Gotchas

  1. Always duct outside the building. Venting into the roof cavity (extremely common in older Melbourne homes) causes structural timber rot, insulation moisture damage, and ceiling mould. The duct must exit through the roof or external wall.
  2. Size the fan for the room. A bathroom fan should provide at least 10 air changes per hour. For a standard 2.5m ceiling bathroom of 8–10m², a 150CFM (70 L/s) fan is the minimum. Many cheap fans are under-rated for Melbourne bathrooms.
  3. Run it for 15–20 minutes after showering. Running only during the shower removes steam but leaves residual humidity. A timer that runs 15 minutes after the light turns off is ideal.
  4. Clean the grille every 6 months. Lint and dust clog fan grilles and reduce airflow by 30–50%. A vacuum and wipe twice a year costs nothing and extends fan life.
  5. Humidity sensors pay for themselves. In Melbourne homes with mould history, a humidity sensor fan ($80–$120 premium over basic) automatically runs whenever humidity spikes, even if the occupant forgets. Worth every dollar.
  6. IXL Tastic is the Melbourne standard. Heat + light + fan in one unit ($180–$350) is dominant in SE Melbourne bathrooms. Most electricians stock the IXL 3-in-1 and can install same-day.
  7. Get a Certificate of Electrical Safety. For any new electrical work, your electrician must provide a CES. This is your compliance record and required for home sale Section 32.
  8. Combo units need two circuits. Heat + fan + light combos require separate switching circuits for the heat element and the fan. Confirm this with your electrician upfront — a wiring change adds $50–$100.
Installing a heat, fan, and light combination unit
Installing a heat, fan, and light combination unit — these three-in-one units are the preferred solution in Melbourne bathrooms because they solve ventilation, lighting, and winter heating in a single ceiling opening.

FAQ

Do I legally need an exhaust fan in my Melbourne bathroom?

Yes, for new construction and major renovations. The National Construction Code requires mechanical ventilation in bathrooms and toilets that don’t have an openable window providing 5% of floor area ventilation. Many older Melbourne homes predate this requirement but should still have working fans to prevent mould — particularly apartments and townhouses in Dandenong, Cranbourne, and Officer areas where bathrooms typically lack windows.

Can I install an exhaust fan myself?

No. In Victoria, all electrical work including connecting exhaust fans to house wiring must be performed by a licensed electrician. You can replace a fan grille or clean a fan yourself, but connecting wiring requires an electrician who must provide a Certificate of Electrical Safety. DIY electrical work voids home insurance and is a criminal offence under the Electricity Safety Act 1998 (Vic).

How long does an exhaust fan installation take?

A like-for-like replacement (same wiring, same hole) takes 30–60 minutes. Installing a new fan where none existed, including running cable and cutting a new duct hole, takes 1.5–3 hours. A full ducted rangehood installation with external wall penetration takes 2–4 hours.

Why does my exhaust fan run but the bathroom still gets mouldy?

The most common causes are: (1) the duct terminates in the roof cavity instead of outside; (2) the fan is too small for the bathroom volume; (3) the fan runs only during the shower, not for 15 minutes afterward; (4) the duct has kinks reducing airflow. Check duct routing first — it’s the most common cause of mould despite having a running fan.

What size exhaust fan do I need for my bathroom?

Calculate: room volume (L × W × H) × 10 air changes per hour ÷ 60 = minimum CFM. For a standard 3×2m bathroom with 2.4m ceiling: 3 × 2 × 2.4 = 14.4m³ × 10 ÷ 60 = 2.4 m³/min = 143 CFM. A 150CFM fan (70 L/s) is the minimum for most Melbourne bathrooms. Underrated fans are the most common reason bathrooms mould despite having ventilation.

Local Resources

Final Thoughts

A properly installed exhaust fan is one of the cheapest and most effective mould prevention measures for Melbourne homes. Budget $300–$800 for a new install with external ducting, choose a humidity sensor or timer fan over a basic model, and always get a licensed electrician. The cost is trivially small compared to mould remediation ($2,000–$8,000) or the health impacts of chronic mould exposure. For Melbourne’s humid winters, it’s not optional — it’s essential.