Enter your email Address

LookUpStrata

Empowering Strata Together

advert Lannock strata finance
Australia's Top Property Blog Dedicated to Strata Living
  • Home
  • What is strata?
    • Strata Legislation – Rules and ByLaws
    • What is Strata?
    • Glossary of NSW Strata Terms and Jargon
    • Understand Strata Management with this Five-Minute Guide
    • Cracking the Strata Fees Code
    • Strata Finance
  • Strata Topics
    • Strata Information By State
      • New South Wales
      • Queensland
      • Victoria
      • Australian Capital Territory
      • South Australia
      • Tasmania
      • Western Australia
      • Northern Territory
    • Strata Information By Topic
      • By-Laws & Legislation
      • Smoking
      • Parking
      • Noise & Neighbours
      • Insurance
      • Pets
      • Your Levies
      • New Law Reform
      • Maintenance & Common Property
      • Committee Concerns
      • NBN & Telecommunications
      • Building Defects
      • Renting / Selling / Buying Property
      • Strata Managers
      • Building Managers & Caretakers
      • Strata Plan / Strata Inspection Report
      • Apartment Living Sustainability
    • Strata Webinars
      • NSW Strata Webinars
      • QLD Strata Webinars
      • VIC Strata Webinars
      • ACT Strata Webinars
      • SA Strata Webinars
      • WA Strata Webinars
    • Upcoming and FREE Strata Events
  • Blog
    • Newsletter Archives
  • The Strata Magazine
    • The NSW Strata Magazine
    • The QLD Strata Magazine
    • The VIC Strata Magazine
    • The WA Strata Magazine
  • Site Sponsors
  • About Us
    • Testimonials for LookUpStrata
  • Help
    • Ask A Strata Question
    • Q&As – about the LookUpStrata site
    • Sitemap
Home » Committee Concerns » Committee Concerns QLD » QLD: What happens if a committee member resigns before a meeting?

QLD: What happens if a committee member resigns before a meeting?

Published April 7, 2026 By William Marquand, Tower Body Corporate Leave a Comment Last Updated April 7, 2026

Share with your strata community

  • Share
  • LinkedIn
  • Email

This article discusses when a committee member resigns before a meeting quorum is met and how the remaining members can proceed.

Question: We are under the standard module. Our committee has three voting members. After the committee meeting agenda was issued, but before the meeting was held, one of the voting members resigned. No one else is willing to be on the committee. What do we do?

Answer: The committee meeting could go ahead. Provided the other two attended, there would still be a quorum, and the meeting could proceed.

For the standard and accommodation modules, when a committee member resigns, the remaining committee members have 30 days to appoint an eligible person to fill the vacancy. After that, an EGM should be held to appoint a new member.

In your circumstances, the committee could have a committee meeting notice issued, a member could resign, a VOC could be held to appoint a new member, and the meeting could be held with that new person in place.

As you had three members, it’s also possible that the committee meeting could go ahead. Provided the other two attended, there would still be a quorum, and the meeting could proceed. Perhaps a replacement committee member could be appointed at the meeting.

More generally, if a committee is a member short due to one member resigning, the advice is that the committee should carry on but look to hold off on any major decisions until a full committee is appointed. This is not always possible, but the business of the body corporate needs to go on, and at some stage, decisions have to be made. The timelines for calling meetings and making appointments don’t always fit into this structure, so you have to fall back to the reliable standard of making reasonable decisions and move ahead as best you can.

Things get a little more difficult if no one wants to be on the committee. You are supposed to have three members in the standard and accommodation modules. If three can’t be appointed, you are supposed to consider engaging a body corporate manager under a part 5 agreement – one where the manager fills the roles of the committee. However, these can be expensive, and people don’t usually want to hand over control of their scheme.

In reality, many schemes soldier on with one or two committee members, even if this doesn’t align with the legislation. We find that doing things this way is not a problem until it is, and then the problem can become outsized. Schemes may run smoothly for years with only one or two members, but it can be hard to turn the ship around when there is an issue. As such, if a committee can’t fill the vacancies, it is probably worth contacting all owners and advising them of the risks of not having a valid committee. Someone will usually sign up, even if only to fill the technical requirement while not contributing much else.

This post appears in Strata News #674.

William Marquand
Tower Body Corporate
E: willmarquand@towerbodycorporate.com.au
P: 07 5609 4924

Share with your strata community

  • Share
  • LinkedIn
  • Email

About William Marquand, Tower Body Corporate

Will Marquand joined the Tower team as a General Manager and Senior Strata manager in 2020. He has widespread experience across all forms of commercial, industrial and residential schemes. He believes in proactive, ethical strata management and hopes to provide Tower’s customers with the knowledge and support required take their schemes forward into the next generation of body corporate management.

Will has experience working across residential, commercial and industrial schemes. A former journalist and teacher, Will's excellent communication skills help Tower grow its expanding business.

William is a regular contributor to LookUpStrata. You can take a look at William’s articles here .

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search For Strata Answers

  • Advert Stratabox
  • StrataBox Advert
Subscribe banner

Why Our Community Trusts Us

"LookUpStrata should be compulsory reading for every member of a Body Corporate Committee. It provides the most understandable answers to all the common (and uncommon) questions that vex Body Corporates everywhere. Too often Committee members do not understand what Body Corporates are legally able to do and not do. LookUpStrata helps educate everybody living in a Body Corporate environment for free." John, Lot Owner

"It's the best and most professional body corporate information source a strata manager could have! Thanks to the whole team!" MQ, Strata Manager

"I like reading all the relevant articles on important issues on Strata living that the LookUpStrata Newsletter always effectively successfully covers"
Carole, Lot Owner

"Strata is so confusing and your newsletters and website are my go-to to get my questions answered. It has helped me out so many times and is a fabulous knowledge hub." Izzy, Lot Owner

Explore Most Read Topics

  • Contact a Strata Specialist on the LookUpStrata Directory
  • Ask Us A Strata Question
  • New South Wales
  • Queensland
  • Victoria
  • Australian Capital Territory
  • South Australia
  • Tasmania
  • Western Australia
  • Northern Territory
  • ByLaws & Legislation
  • Smoking
  • Parking
  • Noise & Neighbours
  • Insurance
  • Pets
  • Levies
  • Law Reform
  • Maintenance & Common Property
  • Committee Concerns
  • NBN & Telecommunications
  • Building Defects
  • Renting / Selling / Buying
  • Strata Managers
  • Building Managers and Caretakers
  • Strata Reports / Plans
  • Sustainability

Latest Q&A Comments

  • Jason Allen on VIC: Q&A What is the benefit principle for an owners corporation?
  • Lynda Quinn on WA: Q&A Do lot owners need approval to run a business from their lot?
  • William Marquand on QLD: Q&A Majority rules for common property tree removal in strata
  • Frederick Ropp on QLD: Q&A Majority rules for common property tree removal in strata
  • Robert Tiele on ACT: Do I have to pay for balcony repairs if I don’t have a balcony?
  • Nikki Jovicic on QLD: Can a body corporate ban high-powered e-bikes and e-scooters in a scheme?
  • Nikki Jovicic on NSW: Can owners place furniture on common property fire escape routes?
  • Nikki Jovicic on QLD: Can a body corporate ban high-powered e-bikes and e-scooters in a scheme?
  • Nikki Jovicic on NSW: Q&A Who pays for repairs to a leaking internal pipe in a townhouse?
  • Nikki Jovicic on QLD: Payment to committee members. What approval is required?

Quick User Login

Log In
Register Lost Password

WEBSITE INFORMATION

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions of Use
  • Terms of Use for Comments and Community Discussion
  • Advertising Disclosure
  • Sitemap

ASK A STRATA QUESTION

You’ve Found Strata Help!

Ask a strata, owners corporation or body corporate question and we will do our best to source a useful response from our network of strata professionals around Australia. Submit your question here.

Subscribe NOW

Disclaimer

The opinions and/or views expressed on the LookUpStrata site, including, but not limited to, our blogs and comments, represent the thoughts of individual bloggers and our online communities, and not those necessarily of LookUpStrata Pty Ltd. In all instances, information should not be taken as advice and independent legal advice should be consulted.

CONTACT US VIA EMAIL

Copyright © 2026 · LookUpStrata ® Pty Ltd · All rights reserved