Property agency law is where a lot of everyday business risk sits quietly in the background. A sale campaign, commercial lease appointment, property-management arrangement or business-broking mandate can look operational, but it usually depends on a regulated authority to act.
For small agencies, the Act is a compliance system. It shapes who can perform agency work, how an appointment is documented, how money is handled, what can be advertised, what needs to be disclosed and how principals supervise staff or representatives.
For ordinary business owners, the Act still matters when you appoint an agent or property manager. A weak agency agreement, unclear commission trigger, poor trust-money record, undisclosed conflict or overstated listing claim can turn a property decision into a commercial dispute.
For Queensland, the local focus is property-agent licensing, appointment forms, auction conduct, residential letting, trust money, price representations and Office of Fair Trading enforcement. Covered roles commonly include real estate agents, property managers, resident letting agents, auctioneers and property sales representatives, but the exact categories, exemptions and licence names need to be checked against the current local Act and regulations.