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What Is a Development Application (DA) in NSW?

⚠ General Information Only

This article is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Barossa Properties is not a licensed financial adviser. All investment decisions should be made only after obtaining independent legal, financial, and taxation advice from qualified professionals. Past project performance does not predict future results.

A Development Application (DA) is a formal request submitted to local council for approval to carry out development whether that’s subdividing land, constructing a building, or changing the use of a property.

In NSW, most significant development activity requires council approval before it can proceed. Understanding how this process works and what can affect it is fundamental to understanding development risk.

What Does a DA Cover?

Depending on the type of development, a DA typically addresses:

  1. The nature and scope of the proposed development
  2. Compliance with zoning and planning controls under the relevant Local Environmental Plan (LEP)
  3. Compliance with Development Control Plans (DCPs) council’s specific design and development standards
  4. Impact on neighbouring properties (overshadowing, privacy, traffic, noise)
  5. Environmental considerations (flooding, bushfire, contamination)
  6. Infrastructure capacity (water, sewer, stormwater, roads)

What Does the DA Process Look Like?

  1. Pre-DA meeting : many experienced developers request a pre application meeting with council before lodging, to identify likely issues and refine the application. This step can save significant time.
  2. Preparation and lodgement : the application package is assembled (plans, reports, statements, fees) and lodged with council via the NSW Planning Portal.
  3. Notification and public exhibition : most DAs are publicly notified, allowing neighbours and the community to submit objections. This period is typically 14–28 days.
  4. Assessment : council’s planning officer assesses the application against the relevant planning framework, considers any submissions, and may request additional information.
  5. Determination : council approves (with or without conditions), refuses, or defers the application.
  6. Conditions of consent : if approved, development must comply with all conditions before and during construction.

How Long Does a DA Take in NSW?

Processing times vary widely. A straightforward subdivision in a cooperative council may be determined in 3–6 months. A complex application, or one in a council with high application volumes, can take 12–18 months or longer. Objections, requests for additional information, or referrals to other agencies all add time.

Experienced developers build realistic timeframes into their feasibility models not optimistic ones. DA delay is one of the most common causes of project cost overruns, because holding costs (loan interest, rates, insurance) continue to accumulate during the approval period.

What Can Cause a DA to Be Delayed or Refused?

  1. Non compliance with zoning controls or DCP standards
  2. Inadequate documentation or missing reports
  3. Significant neighbour objections requiring hearings
  4. Referral to government agencies (RMS, EPA, DPHI) for comment
  5. Council resource constraints causing processing backlogs
  6. Requests for additional information from the assessing officer
  7. Political sensitivity around the development type or location

Planning approval is not the finish line but it is the most uncertain stage. A development project can be fully funded, fully planned, and fully feasible on paper and still face a 12 month council delay or a refusal. This is why pre DA engagement with council, and conservative timeline assumptions, are fundamental to responsible development practice.

DA Process Summary

  1. A DA is formal council approval to carry out development required for most significant projects in NSW.
  2. Processing times: typically 3–18+ months depending on project complexity and council.
  3. Delays are common and add holding cost conservative timelines are essential in feasibility modelling.
  4. Pre DA meetings with council reduce risk of unexpected refusals or conditions.

⚠ Important Disclaimer

This article provides general information about the NSW development application process. Planning laws and council requirements change frequently. This article does not constitute planning advice, legal advice, or development advice for any specific site or project.

Always obtain advice from a qualified town planner and solicitor before lodging a development application or making development decisions. Barossa Properties Pty Ltd is not a licensed financial services provider. Nothing in this article constitutes financial advice.