When you’re shopping for a shed, it’s easy to assume that steel is steel. The colour looks right. The price looks competitive. And you’re told it’s “basically the same as Colorbond™”.
So you move on, confident you’ve ticked the box.
The problem is, most issues with cheap or imported steel don’t show up straight away. They show up years later, once the shed’s built, paid for, and no longer easy to fix.
f you’ve ever looked at a block of land and thought, “That’s the perfect spot for a shed”, you’re not alone…
Most people do the right things: they measure up, check the zoning, and get a quote.
For a while, everything looks fine… until council gets involved.
Over the years, we’ve seen more shed projects stall, blow out, or die completely before a slab is even poured, and it’s rarely because of the shed itself.
If you’ve ever dealt with council, you already know how painful it can be. And if you haven’t, just ask around. Everyone’s got a horror story.
I’ve never met a single person who’s said, “Yeah, dealing with council was easy.” Not once. It’s always the same story – delays, confusion, missing forms, and red tape that drags on for months.
It’s something we see all the time.
Someone rings up for a quote, gets a few prices, and one bloke comes in cheaper than the rest. He sounds friendly enough and reckons he can “handle everything” for you.
We get it – you’re trying to do the right thing. You’re comparing prices, looking for value, and ready to get your shed underway. But that polished quote stamped “Valid for 7 Days Only” isn’t a promise – it’s a warning. What it really means is, “This price can change, and when it does, the cost is on you.”
We’ve all been there. You start comparing shed prices, jotting down numbers, and one quote lands that’s a few thousand cheaper than the rest. You think, “Perfect – I’m saving money already.”
But that little victory doesn’t last long.
It’s the most common shed size in Australia: the 6×6.
For decades, it’s been stamped onto house plans, sold as the “standard double garage,” and treated as the ‘safe’ choice. Builders recommend it. Catalogues promote it. And most buyers figure, “If everyone else is doing 6×6, that must be what I need too.”
You’ve just moved to your dream rural property. Rolling paddocks, open skies, and finally, space to spread out and breathe. You picture a shed that holds everything: your ride-on mower, a workshop, maybe a pool table and a lounge area for weekend barbecues.
Get ahead with your shed before 31st October to save.