NSW Planning Intelligence
NSW Planning Guide

How to Read a NSW Planning Proposal: Documents, Signals and Due Diligence

Due diligence guide · 10 min read · Updated May 2026

A NSW planning proposal is not a single document — it's a package. Depending on the size and complexity of the site, a full proposal submission can run to thousands of pages across a dozen reports. Knowing which documents tell you what, and what to look for first, is a material skill for anyone doing serious planning due diligence.

This guide walks through the standard components of a NSW planning proposal package, what each document tells you, and the seven key signals that most reliably indicate whether a proposal is likely to succeed.

The standard planning proposal package

Not every proposal will have all of these documents. A simple, low-constraint, low-scale rezoning might have only the planning proposal document itself and a brief justification. The presence of multiple technical reports typically indicates a more complex proposal on a more constrained site — which means more risk of delay, but also more potential uplift if it succeeds.

Seven signals to check first

When you encounter a new proposal and need to quickly assess whether it's worth deeper investigation, these are the most diagnostic signals:

  1. Zone transition — What is the proposal going from and to? The zone transition tells you the intent immediately. RU2 → R2 is fringe expansion. IN1 → MU1 is industrial conversion. R2 → R4 near a station is densification. The transition also indicates the value uplift potential.
  2. Proposed HOB and FSR — Height of Buildings and Floor Space Ratio determine the development yield and therefore the land value uplift. A proposal that doubles permitted height and FSR on a well-located site is fundamentally different from one that makes a marginal adjustment.
  3. Has it received gateway? — The single most important filter for probability of success. A proposal that has received a positive gateway determination (even conditional) has been reviewed by DPHI and found to have sufficient merit. Pre-Exhibition proposals have not yet cleared this hurdle.
  4. Who is the proponent? — Track record matters significantly. Experienced proponents with a history of Made proposals navigate the process faster and more effectively. Search the proponent's name in Lodgd to see their outcomes across the NSW portfolio.
  5. Which council? — Approval rates and typical timelines vary significantly by LGA. Some councils are facilitators; others are historically resistant to private planning proposals. Lodgd's Council Profiles show approval rates and median timelines for each council.
  6. Site area in hectares — Scale determines complexity and timeline. A 0.5ha site-specific rezoning is a fundamentally different proposition from a 50ha precinct plan. Larger proposals require more technical studies, more agency consultation, and more post-exhibition resolution.
  7. Environmental constraints — Flood-affected? Heritage-listed? Significant vegetation? Potentially contaminated? Each constraint adds both time and risk. The cleaner the site's environmental profile, the faster the typical pathway to Made.

Green flags and red flags at a glance

Positive signals
  • Gateway determination issued
  • Consistent with District Plan
  • Supportive council history
  • Experienced proponent
  • No environmental constraints
  • Incremental, well-justified uplift
  • Near existing infrastructure
Risk signals
  • Stalled at Pre-Exhibition 2+ years
  • Conflicts with District Plan
  • Heritage or biodiversity constraints
  • Transport network capacity issues
  • First-time proponent in the area
  • Large site with complex conditions
  • Contested exhibition history

Making a submission during exhibition

If a planning proposal is On Exhibition, any person can make a written submission to council during the exhibition period (minimum 28 days). Submissions are public record and considered in the post-exhibition report.

For a submission to carry weight, it should address specific planning merit issues — strategic policy consistency, infrastructure capacity, or site-specific constraints — rather than general objections to density or change. Generic objections carry little weight in council's post-exhibition assessment.

Submissions in support of a proposal (from abutting landowners, local businesses, or infrastructure providers) are equally valid and can strengthen a proponent's case.

Where to access planning proposal documents

All NSW planning proposals on exhibition are publicly accessible on the NSW Planning Portal. Documents are attached to each proposal listing. For proposals not yet on exhibition, the planning proposal document may not be publicly available — though Lodgd tracks these proposals from first detection and provides AI-generated summaries where available.

Research any NSW planning proposal in seconds.
Lodgd provides AI summaries, zone transition data, proponent information, and stage history for 4,800+ proposals — so you can assess opportunities without reading every document.

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