Enforcement of trade apprenticeships

Skills Commission enforces trade training requirements to protect learners and industry​

The South Australian Skills Commission (the Commission), the state’s independent regulator responsible for overseeing apprenticeships and traineeships is committed to ensuring the protection of learners and ​integrity of trade training across the state in line with the requirements of the South Australian Skills Act 2008.

Institutional-based trade training does not provide the safeguards offered under a formal training contract. Individuals in trades are exposed to high-risk work environments, requiring technical training and higher levels of supervision. The formal apprenticeship model ensures apprentices are safe on the job, are paid for their work, have a structured training plan, and are appropriately supervised on the worksite by an employer registered with the Commission.

The Commission has applied an amnesty until 30 January 2026 for new institutional enrolments in South Australia. Any Registered Training Organisation (RTO) that issues a new enrolment from 31 January 2026, that is:

will be subject to a $315 expiation fee per case and where applicable, penalties up to $5,000.

This action will ensure individuals enter the workforce from the commencement of their training through the proven ‘earn and learn’ apprenticeship pathway. From 31 January 2026, affected learners will be able to complete their qualification and apply to the Commission for a skills assessment under the Occupational Recognition Service. Where they meet the required standards, the Commission will issue an Occupational Certificate, which is recognised by industry.

The Commission is working closely with industry partners and RTOs to enforce strict compliance and ensure learners are certified and protected through recognised apprenticeship pathways.

Institutional-based training for declared vocations (traineeships) in South Australia is not impacted by this enforcement of trade apprenticeships.

Media release

What does this mean for learners?

We recognise that many learners entered these programs in good faith, unaware that the training fell outside the regulated apprenticeship and traineeship system.

For this reason, the Commission is implementing a transition approach designed to protect learners while upholding the integrity of the apprenticeship system.

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