How to Lodge a DA in NSW: A Step-by-Step Guide

A Development Application (DA) is the formal process for seeking council approval to carry out development in New South Wales. It applies to a wide range of projects — from home additions and new dwellings to change of use applications and multi-unit developments.

The process can seem complex, but it follows a consistent structure. This guide walks through every step from checking your planning controls to receiving your consent — written by our town planners who do this every day.

Not sure if you need a DA? Some development can be approved as Complying Development — a faster, private certifier pathway. Read our guide on DA vs CDC before you start.

Step 1 — Check your planning controls

1

Understand what applies to your property

Before anything else, you need to know the planning controls that govern your property. These come from two main sources:

You can check your controls using the NSW Planning Portal (planningportal.nsw.gov.au) or your council's online mapping tools. Enter your property address to see which zone applies and what development is permitted.

The key things to establish at this stage are: is your proposed development permissible in the zone? Does it comply with the height and bulk controls? Are there any heritage, flood, bushfire or environmental overlays that apply?

If controls are unclear — and they often are — this is the point at which a town planner adds the most immediate value. We read these documents daily and can give you a clear picture quickly.

Step 2 — Determine the right approval pathway

2

DA or Complying Development?

Not all development in NSW requires a DA. If your proposal meets specific pre-set standards in the Housing SEPP or other applicable policies, it may qualify as Complying Development — a faster pathway assessed by a private certifier rather than council.

Choosing the wrong pathway costs time and money. A town planner can assess your project against the relevant SEPP provisions quickly and confirm which pathway is appropriate — and which is faster for your specific situation.

Step 3 — Engage your professional team

3

Who you'll need on your team

The consultants required for a DA depend on the nature and complexity of your project. At minimum, most DAs require:

Depending on your site, you may also need reports from a surveyor, heritage consultant, ecologist, traffic engineer, acoustic consultant, arborist or bushfire consultant. Your town planner can advise which reports are required for your specific DA.

Step 4 — Consider a pre-DA meeting with council

4

Get council feedback before you lodge

A pre-DA meeting is an optional but often valuable step. It gives you the opportunity to present your proposal to council's assessment team before formal lodgement and receive written feedback on the key issues they expect to be addressed.

Many experienced planners use pre-DA meetings strategically — not just to get council's view, but to establish a relationship with the assessing officer and get an indication of how council is likely to approach specific issues. That intelligence is worth a lot before you commit to a design.

Step 5 — Prepare your DA documents

5

What a DA submission includes

A standard residential DA submission typically includes:

Your town planner will review your council's DCP to identify every document required and prepare the checklist before lodgement. Missing documents are a common cause of delays.

Step 6 — Lodge via the NSW Planning Portal

6

Online lodgement through planningportal.nsw.gov.au

All DAs in NSW are now lodged online through the NSW Planning Portal. The lodgement process involves:

Once lodged, council has 5 business days to accept your application as complete, or issue a notice requesting additional information before acceptance.

Step 7 — The assessment process

Once accepted, council assigns a planning officer to assess your DA. The assessment process typically involves:

Public notification

Most DAs are publicly notified — adjoining property owners are notified by letter, and the application is published on the council's DA tracker for a set period (usually 14–28 days). Submitters can make written submissions in support or objection, which the assessing officer must consider.

Agency referrals

Where your proposal triggers referral to a government agency — Roads and Maritime Services, NSW Rural Fire Service, Environment Protection Authority, Heritage NSW, or others — council is required to refer the DA and wait for their response before determination.

Requests for Information (RFIs)

Council may issue a Request for Further Information (RFI) at any stage of assessment. The DA clock stops while you respond to an RFI. Responding promptly and completely is important — delays in RFI responses are one of the most common reasons DAs take longer than expected.

Timeframe reality check: Statutory timeframes in NSW are 40 business days for most residential DAs and 60 for complex proposals. In practice, many councils are running 3–6 months for residential DAs due to workload, notification periods and RFI time. The better your application, the less time is lost.

Step 8 — Determination

8

Approval, refusal or deferral

Council will issue one of three determinations:

DA timeframes at a glance

StageTypical timeframe
Pre-DA meeting (if applicable)2–6 weeks to arrange
DA preparation (plans, reports, SEE)4–12 weeks
Lodgement acceptance5 business days
Public notification period14–28 days
Council assessment40–60 business days (statutory)
Total (well-prepared residential DA)3–6 months typical

Common mistakes that slow DAs down

Do you need a town planner?

You are legally permitted to lodge a DA yourself. But the SEE is a technical planning document, the controls are complex, and the consequences of getting it wrong — refusal, delays, or costly redesigns — fall on you.

Most property owners and developers in Sydney who are spending meaningful money on a project engage a town planner for good reason: the process is smoother, the application is better positioned, and the planner knows how to navigate council.

Next: DA vs CDC — What's the Difference? →

Ready to start your DA?

Tell us about your project and we'll give you a clear picture of what's involved — before you commit to anything.