The contamination testing industry in Australia is completely unregulated. Anyone can buy sampling equipment, complete a weekend course, and call themselves a 'certified meth tester.' This lack of regulation means the responsibility falls on you to verify who you're hiring.
Why These Questions Matter
A single meth test can determine whether you proceed with a property purchase, face tens of thousands in remediation costs, or become embroiled in legal disputes. Yet most property owners have no idea how to evaluate the person they're trusting with this critical assessment.
The wrong tester can cost you far more than their fee. Improper sampling methodology, biased results, or inability to determine contamination source can lead to:
- Unnecessary remediation costing $50,000-$150,000+
- Results rejected by courts and insurance companies
- Missing genuine contamination that affects your family's health
- Legal liability if you sell without proper disclosure
Question 1: What Are Your Tertiary Qualifications?
This is the most important question, and the answer should be specific. You're looking for:
- A degree in chemistry, forensic science, or environmental science
- From an accredited Australian university
- Not a certificate from a weekend training course
Red flag: If they mention only 'industry certification' or training courses without tertiary qualifications, they lack the scientific foundation to interpret results correctly.
Weekend courses that award 'certification' have no regulatory standing. They may teach basic sampling technique but don't provide the chemistry knowledge to interpret what results actually mean.
Question 2: Are You a Member of RACI?
The Royal Australian Chemical Institute (RACI) is the professional body for chemists in Australia. Membership levels include:
- MRACI: Member of RACI — indicates recognised chemistry qualifications
- CChem: Chartered Chemist — indicates verified competence through experience and assessment
These credentials can be verified directly through RACI. A legitimate professional will be happy to provide their membership number for verification.
Question 3: Does Your Testing Company Use NATA-Accredited Laboratories?
NATA (National Association of Testing Authorities) accreditation means a laboratory has been independently audited and certified to meet ISO/IEC 17025 international standards. What matters is that the laboratory analysing your samples holds current NATA accreditation — this is the critical link in the chain of evidence.
Why it matters:
- NATA-accredited results are accepted by courts and tribunals
- Insurance companies require NATA-accredited testing
- Non-accredited results may be worthless for legal or insurance purposes
Many reputable testing companies use independent, third-party NATA-accredited laboratories rather than operating their own lab. This is a legitimate and often preferable model — it maintains arms-length independence between field assessment and laboratory analysis. Ask for the laboratory's NATA accreditation number and verify it on the NATA website.
Question 4: What Sampling Methodology Do You Use?
The industry standard is NIOSH 9111 — the internationally recognised method for surface sampling. A qualified tester should be able to explain:
- The sampling technique used
- How sample locations are selected
- Quality control procedures
- Chain of custody documentation
Red flag: If they can't clearly explain their methodology, they may not understand the science behind what they're doing.
Question 5: Where Will You Collect Samples?
This question exposes whether the tester uses legitimate representative sampling or deliberately targets outlier locations to inflate results.
Appropriate locations: Walls at standard height, door frames, kitchen benchtops — surfaces that represent normal occupant exposure.
Outlier locations to avoid: Window frames, ceiling fans, exhaust vents — these naturally accumulate higher concentrations but don't represent what occupants are exposed to.
A window frame might show 3.0 µg/100cm² while walls in the same room are 0.3 µg/100cm². Using window frame results to declare a property 'contaminated' misrepresents the actual risk to occupants.
Question 6: Do You Also Provide Remediation Services?
If the answer is yes, you have a significant conflict of interest. A company that profits from remediation has financial incentive to:
- Find contamination where it may not be significant
- Recommend more extensive (expensive) remediation than necessary
- Fail to distinguish between manufacturing and use contamination
The Australian contamination guidelines emphasise that assessors must remain at arms length from remediation services. This is not a suggestion — it is a fundamental principle of objective assessment.
Be aware that some companies disguise their remediation interests. They may operate cleaning or remediation businesses under different trading names, or receive referral fees from remediation contractors. Ask directly: "Does your company, or any related entity, have any ownership interest in a cleaning, remediation, or restoration business?"
Test Australia has no ownership interest in any laboratory, cleaning company, or remediation firm. Independent testing — where the assessor has no involvement in remediation — eliminates this conflict entirely.
Question 7: Can You Determine Contamination Source?
The difference between manufacturing and use contamination can mean the difference between $10,000 and $150,000+ in remediation costs. Ask:
- Can you determine if contamination is from manufacturing or use?
- What methodology do you use for source determination?
- What additional testing is required?
Reality check: Most 'meth testers' cannot determine source — they only measure methamphetamine levels. Forensic source determination requires chemistry expertise and additional analysis.
Question 8: What Will Your Report Include?
A comprehensive professional report should include:
- Assessor qualifications and credentials
- Detailed methodology description
- Sample locations documented with photographs
- NATA-endorsed laboratory certificates
- Results interpretation with guideline comparison
- Source determination (if applicable)
- Clear recommendations
If a report lacks these elements, question the quality of the assessment.
Question 9: What Is Your Professional Indemnity Insurance?
Professional indemnity insurance protects you if the assessor makes an error that costs you money. A legitimate professional will have:
- Current professional indemnity insurance
- Coverage appropriate to the work they perform
- Willingness to provide certificate of currency on request
If they don't carry insurance, consider what recourse you have if their assessment is wrong.
Question 10: Can I Verify Your Credentials?
A qualified professional will provide:
- Copies of qualification certificates
- RACI membership number (verifiable online)
- Laboratory NATA accreditation number
- References from previous clients
Red flag: Reluctance to provide verifiable credentials suggests something to hide.
The Bottom Line
Taking time to verify credentials before engaging a meth tester can save you tens of thousands of dollars and significant stress. The contamination testing industry's lack of regulation means unqualified operators flourish — but they can't survive scrutiny.
Ask these questions. Verify the answers. Protect yourself.
