Heavy Vehicle Accreditation (HVA)

Australia's new national accreditation framework replacing NHVAS — raising the standard for heavy vehicle safety and compliance.

What is the HVA Scheme?

The Heavy Vehicle Accreditation (HVA) scheme is the new national framework administered by the National Heavy Vehicle Regulator (NHVR). It replaces the National Heavy Vehicle Accreditation Scheme (NHVAS) and introduces a modern, risk-based approach to accreditation for transport operators across Australia.

HVA is designed to ensure that operators who manage safety well are formally recognised, while also providing a clearer pathway for operators to demonstrate compliance with their obligations under the Heavy Vehicle National Law (HVNL).

Key Point

HVA is not just a rebrand of NHVAS. It introduces a fundamentally different approach — moving from prescriptive module-based compliance to a whole-of-business safety management system (SMS) framework aligned with the SMS Standard 2026.

Why is NHVAS Being Replaced?

NHVAS has been the national accreditation framework since 1999. While it served the industry well, several limitations have driven the need for a modern replacement:

HVA addresses all of these issues by requiring a genuine, functioning safety management system that covers the whole business — not just isolated compliance areas.

The Two-Tier Framework

HVA introduces two tiers of accreditation, each designed for different levels of operational maturity:

Tier 1: General Safety Accreditation (GSA)

The entry-level accreditation for all operators. GSA requires a functioning safety management system (SMS) that covers the core elements of the SMS Standard 2026. It demonstrates that your business has systems in place to manage safety across all operations.

Key benefit: Replaces the need for separate mass, maintenance, and fatigue modules. One accreditation covers your whole business.

Learn more about GSA →

Tier 2: Advanced Compliance Accreditation (ACA)

For operators who want to demonstrate a higher level of compliance maturity. ACA builds on GSA and adds specific compliance modules for mass management, maintenance management, and fatigue management — with regulatory concessions attached.

Key benefit: Unlocks concessions such as higher mass limits (CML/HML), extended maintenance intervals, and BFM/AFM fatigue scheme access.

Learn more about ACA →

Important: GSA is a Prerequisite for ACA

You cannot apply for ACA without first holding GSA. The safety management system required for GSA forms the foundation that ACA builds upon. If you currently hold NHVAS accreditation, you will need to transition to GSA before you can access ACA modules.

NHVAS vs HVA: What's Changed?

Aspect NHVAS (Old) HVA (New)
Structure Separate modules (Mass, Maintenance, Fatigue) Two tiers: GSA (whole-of-business) + ACA (specific modules)
Approach Prescriptive checklists Risk-based safety management system (SMS)
Scope Individual compliance areas only Whole-of-business safety management
Foundation Module-specific standards SMS Standard 2026
Audit Focus Document existence System effectiveness and genuine safety outcomes
Entry Level Any single module GSA required first (whole-of-business)
Concessions Tied to individual modules Tied to ACA modules (requires GSA + specific module)
Risk Management Not explicitly required Central requirement — identify, assess, control, monitor
Maintenance Separate maintenance module Maintenance Assurance Program (MAP) built into GSA
Accreditation Period 2 years 2 years (unchanged)

Transition Timeline

The transition from NHVAS to HVA is being managed by the NHVR with a structured timeline to give operators time to prepare:

1

Now – Preparation

Begin reviewing your current systems against the SMS Standard 2026. Identify gaps in your safety management approach. Start building or updating your SMS documentation.

2

HVA Opens

New applications for GSA and ACA become available. Operators can begin applying for HVA accreditation through the NHVR.

3

Transition Period

Existing NHVAS operators transition to HVA. Your current accreditation remains valid until its expiry date, at which point you must transition to GSA (and ACA if applicable).

4

NHVAS Closes

NHVAS ceases to exist. All operators must hold HVA accreditation to access concessions and demonstrate accredited status.

Don't Wait Until the Last Minute

The transition to HVA requires genuine system changes — not just paperwork updates. Operators who start preparing now will have a smoother transition and avoid the rush of last-minute applications competing for auditor availability.

What Operators Need to Do

Whether you currently hold NHVAS accreditation or are new to accreditation, here's what you need to prepare:

1. Understand the SMS Standard 2026

The SMS Standard is the foundation of HVA. It sets out five categories of requirements that your safety management system must address: Leadership & Commitment, Planning, Support, Operation, and Performance Evaluation & Improvement.

2. Conduct a Gap Analysis

Compare your current systems against the SMS Standard requirements. Identify where you have gaps — particularly in risk management, document control, competency management, and internal review processes.

3. Build or Update Your SMS

Develop the policies, procedures, registers, and records required by the SMS Standard. This isn't about creating paperwork for its own sake — your SMS must be a genuine, functioning system that your people use every day.

4. Implement the Maintenance Assurance Program (MAP)

GSA requires a MAP that covers scheduled maintenance, fault reporting and repair, pre-trip inspections, and maintenance record keeping. If you currently hold NHVAS Maintenance accreditation, you'll need to ensure your systems align with the new MAP requirements.

5. Train Your People

Everyone in your business needs to understand their role in the SMS. This includes executives, managers, supervisors, drivers, and administrative staff. Training must be documented and competency verified.

6. Prepare for Audit

HVA audits will assess whether your SMS is genuinely functioning — not just whether documents exist. Be prepared to demonstrate that your systems are implemented, monitored, and continuously improved.

How ATCC Can Help

Australian Transport Compliance Centres (ATCC) has been helping transport operators manage compliance since 1998. We were among the first to develop registered Codes of Practice for the transport industry, and we've supported hundreds of operators through NHVAS accreditation.

We're now helping operators prepare for the transition to HVA:

Gap Analysis

We'll review your current systems against the SMS Standard 2026 and identify exactly what needs to change. No guesswork — a clear, prioritised action plan.

SMS Development

We build complete safety management systems tailored to your operation. Not generic templates — systems designed for how your business actually works.

Compliance Easy™

Our all-in-one compliance management software covers fatigue, maintenance, mass, speed, incidents, and more — all in one portal. Purpose-built for HVA readiness.

Training via Edify Easy©

Online training for all duty holders — executives, managers, drivers. Role-based modules with progress tracking and completion certificates.

Audit Preparation

We prepare you for the HVA audit process. Internal reviews, evidence gathering, and system testing to ensure you're ready before the auditor arrives.

Ongoing Management

Accreditation isn't a one-off event. We provide ongoing compliance management to keep your systems current, effective, and audit-ready at all times.

Ready to Prepare for HVA?

Don't wait for the transition deadline. Start preparing now and ensure your business is ready for Australia's new accreditation framework.

Contact ATCC Today Call 02 4392 2000