Short answer: “modular,” “portable” and “transportable” are three different products with three different structural systems, three different compliance pathways and three very different commercial outcomes. Buyers who conflate them usually end up with the wrong asset for the wrong reason — and pay for it later in durability, resale, compliance or insurance.
This guide breaks down the real distinction — built for builders, developers, operators and procurement officers evaluating a build in 2026. Written from the inside of a modular supply business, not from a marketing brochure.
The 30-Second Definition
| Type | Structural System | NCC Classification | Typical Life | Intended Use |
| Modular | Structural steel or engineered timber volumetric modules, fixed permanent foundations | Class 1a, 1b, 2, 3, 6, 7, 9a, 9b, 9c | 50+ years | Permanent residential, commercial, institutional |
| Portable | Lightweight steel chassis designed to be lifted, relocated, reused | Typically Class 10a or temporary Class 9b (site shed) | 10–25 years | Temporary site offices, construction sheds, event spaces |
| Transportable | Steel or timber frame on trailerable chassis (skids, wheels, sledge) | Class 1a (home) or 1b (cabin), variable | 15–30 years | Rural homes, granny flats, park cabins, relocatable offices |
Modular Construction — Permanent, Compliant, Multi-Storey Capable
Modular construction is permanent volumetric building. Modules are manufactured offsite in a factory (typically China, Malaysia or Australia), shipped to site as complete 3D volumes, and craned onto permanent foundations where they are structurally connected, services-interfaced and finished. The finished product is indistinguishable from a traditional on-site build — because structurally, it is the building.
What defines a modular building
- Structural steel (or heavy engineered timber) frame. Load-bearing capacity for stacking (up to 8+ storeys with appropriate design), long spans, complex geometry.
- Permanent foundations. Pad footings, strip footings, pile caps, slab-on-ground or screw piles. Not designed to be lifted and moved.
- Full NCC compliance. Every relevant class — 1a (houses), 2 (apartments), 3 (hotels / dormitories), 6 (retail), 7 (storage), 9a (hospitals / aged care clinical), 9b (schools / childcare), 9c (residential aged care).
- Evidence of Suitability package. Structural certification, fire reports, acoustic testing, thermal modelling, CodeMark or equivalent — certified by Australian RPEQ/CPEng.
- 50+ year design life. Same as traditional construction.
- Bank/insurance accepted: Major-bank mortgageable, LMI-insurable, standard commercial insurance.
Typical modular projects
- 50–100 place childcare centres (NCC 9b, 500–800m²)
- Schools and classroom blocks (NCC 9b, VSBA / DoE procurement)
- 60-bed aged care wings (NCC 9c)
- Hotel, motel and student accommodation up to 8 storeys (NCC 3)
- Social and affordable housing (NCC 1a / 2)
- Commercial office and retail fit-outs (NCC 5 / 6)
Cost
Supply typically $2,000–$4,500/m². Delivered installed (builder adds foundations, services, external works) typically $3,500–$7,000/m² depending on sector class. See our modular construction cost guide for sector-specific benchmarks.
Portable Buildings — Temporary, Relocatable, Low-Compliance
Portable buildings are designed to be moved. Site sheds, lunchrooms, temporary classrooms, event offices, election booths — these are portable. The structural system is a lightweight steel chassis (typically C-section portal frame) with lightweight wall and roof panels, engineered for repeated lifting onto truck beds and transported from site to site over decades.
What defines a portable building
- Lightweight steel chassis — designed for lift-and-shift, not permanent load.
- Temporary foundations — typically jacked levelling stumps, concrete piers, or just timber pads.
- Typically NCC Class 10a or temporary 9b with waiver / limited compliance depending on duration and use.
- 10–25 year life, with significant refurbishment required between uses.
- Not typically mortgageable as a permanent asset.
- Relocation cost — typically $5,000–$25,000 per move depending on size.
When portable is the right answer
- Short-term site accommodation (construction sheds, lunchrooms)
- Temporary classrooms with a known relocation date (less than 5 years on site)
- Event spaces, temporary retail, temporary medical
- Remote mining camps where assets are decommissioned at mine close
When portable is the WRONG answer
- Anything intended as a permanent asset
- Anything that needs full NCC compliance for occupation (Class 1a, 2, 3, 9a, 9b, 9c)
- Anything requiring a 25+ year depreciation schedule
- Anything going into a finance / valuation process
- Childcare centres, aged care, schools, accommodation — these need modular or traditional, not portable
Transportable Buildings — The Middle Ground (with Caveats)
Transportable buildings sit between modular and portable. They are built to be transported once (occasionally relocated) on a chassis or skids, but intended to operate as a permanent or semi-permanent asset. Rural homes, granny flats, park cabins, country motels and some classroom blocks often come under the transportable banner.
What defines a transportable
- Steel or timber frame on a trailerable chassis — often a bolt-on skid or integrated steel base that the building rides on for transport.
- Permanent or semi-permanent foundations — pad footings, concrete piers, screw piles.
- NCC Class 1a, 1b or 2 with full compliance required for occupation.
- 15–30 year design life, depending on frame system and exposure.
- Bank/insurance acceptance variable — depends on whether it’s tied to permanent foundations and certified as a permanent structure.
The gotcha with transportables
The word “transportable” covers a huge quality range. A high-spec steel-frame transportable with proper engineering certs is functionally equivalent to a modular home. A low-spec timber-frame transportable on a trailer-grade chassis can fail inspection, fail insurance and fail resale. Buyers need to look at the engineering certs, not the marketing label.
When transportable is the right answer
- Rural homes on acreage where factory finish and site delivery are the only practical pathway
- Granny flats and secondary dwellings on existing title
- Park cabins and short-stay accommodation (but check the NCC 1b compliance depth)
- Rural/remote offices where a full modular programme is uneconomic
How the Three Compare on Real Procurement Criteria
| Criterion | Modular | Portable | Transportable |
| Structural system | Heavy steel / engineered timber, multi-storey capable | Light steel chassis | Steel or timber on chassis/skid |
| NCC classes covered | All permanent classes | Class 10a / temporary 9b | Class 1a, 1b, 2 (typically) |
| Design life | 50+ years | 10–25 years | 15–30 years |
| Foundations | Permanent | Temporary levelling | Pads / piers / screw piles |
| Multi-storey | Up to 8+ storeys | Single storey only | Single storey typical |
| Evidence of Suitability | Full package | Limited / waiver pathway | Variable — check certs |
| Bank mortgage | Standard | Chattel finance only | Variable |
| Supply cost/m² | $2,000–$4,500 | $900–$1,800 | $1,800–$3,500 |
| Relocation | Not designed to move | Designed to move | Designed for one transport |
| Resale value | Full property value | Depreciating asset | Partial property value |
How to Choose Between Them
Start with the end use, not the building type. Ask:
- Is this a permanent asset on a permanent site? If yes, you need modular (or traditional). Portable and most transportable products will not meet your compliance, finance or insurance requirements.
- Is this a temporary asset with a known decommissioning date under 5–10 years? If yes, portable is cheaper, faster and the right commercial choice.
- Is this a rural single-dwelling or secondary dwelling on a title where factory finish is the only practical pathway? If yes, a high-spec transportable can work — but check the structural engineering and NCC compliance depth carefully.
- Is this a childcare centre, school, aged care facility, hotel, motel, social housing, apartment block or commercial building? You need modular construction. Portable is not compliant; transportable is typically not scaled for these classes.
The 5 Most Common Mistakes Buyers Make
- Buying portable where they need modular. A 6-classroom portable block bought as a “cheap modular alternative” fails Education Department compliance and becomes an expensive 3-year asset instead of a 30-year asset.
- Buying transportable without checking the engineering certification depth. Low-spec timber-frame transportables without proper structural certs can fail council inspection, fail insurance renewal, and be uninsurable after a weather event.
- Assuming “prefab” means one specific thing. Prefab is the umbrella term — modular, portable, transportable, panelised and kit-home are all prefab. The compliance and commercial profile are completely different.
- Underestimating the site works cost on modular. Supply cost is 50–65% of delivered cost. Site prep, foundations, services, external works and fit-out are the other 35–50%. See our costs guide for the full breakdown.
- Buying from a supplier without an Evidence of Suitability package. If the supplier can’t produce certified structural, fire, acoustic and thermal reports, the building cannot be certified for permanent occupation. See our Evidence of Suitability guide.
Where EcoPrestige Fits
EcoPrestige supplies permanent modular construction — structural steel volumetric modules manufactured in China under Australian engineering oversight, delivered to site crane-ready with full Evidence of Suitability compliance. We do not supply portable or temporary buildings. Our products are engineered, certified and insured as permanent assets — mortgageable, depreciable at building rates, and compliant across NCC Class 1a, 1b, 2, 3, 6, 7, 9a, 9b and 9c.
Typical projects: 50–100 place childcare, classroom blocks, 60-bed aged care wings, 60–80 room motels, holiday park cabin upgrades, modular social housing, modular worker accommodation for infrastructure projects. If you’re evaluating modular vs portable vs transportable for a live project, send us the brief and we’ll tell you which product actually fits.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is “modular” the same as “prefab”?
No. Prefab is the umbrella term covering all offsite construction — modular, portable, transportable, panelised, kit-home. Modular specifically refers to volumetric (3D box) factory-built buildings assembled on permanent foundations.
Can I get a bank mortgage on a modular building?
Yes, on permanent structural modular construction tied to the land title. Major Australian banks treat modular houses and apartments the same as traditional builds, provided there’s a council-issued Certificate of Occupancy and standard structural/engineering certification.
Can I get a mortgage on a portable building?
Generally no. Portables are chattel assets — financed via chattel mortgage or asset finance, not real-estate mortgage, because they’re not permanently tied to the land.
Are transportable buildings insurable?
Variable. Transportables tied to permanent foundations with full structural certification are insurable as standard residential dwellings. Transportables still on chassis/wheels or without engineering certification are often difficult or expensive to insure.
Which is cheapest — modular, portable or transportable?
Portable is cheapest per m² (around $900–$1,800/m²), transportable is mid-range ($1,800–$3,500/m²), modular is highest ($2,000–$4,500/m² supply). But cheapest initial cost isn’t cheapest life-cycle cost — portable with a 15-year life is more expensive per year than modular with a 50-year life for a permanent asset.