ResCode (Victoria residential design provisions)
ResCode is Vic's residential design standard, embedded as Clauses 54-55 in every planning scheme. Sets siting, setbacks, overlooking, amenity for houses and units.
Ask Chalkline about this →ResCode is Victoria’s residential development provisions, embedded as Clauses 54, 55, and 56 of every Victorian planning scheme under the Planning and Environment Act 1987 (Vic). It is the Victorian counterpart to the WA R-Codes and the NSW Apartment Design Guide. ResCode governs siting, setbacks, overlooking, amenity, parking, and design quality for dwellings (Clause 54), residential land use (Clause 55), and small-lot subdivisions (Clause 56). Every Vic council’s planning scheme calls up ResCode as the residential design framework. Verified per Victoria Planning Provisions (2026-05-23).
The three ResCode clauses
| Clause | Scope |
|---|---|
| Clause 54 | One dwelling on a lot (single house, primary dwelling) |
| Clause 55 | Two or more dwellings on a lot (dual occupancy, multi-unit) |
| Clause 56 | Residential land subdivision (creating new lots) |
A typical residential development addresses Clause 54 (single houses) or Clause 55 (multi-unit). Clause 56 applies to subdivision proposals.
Clause 54 (single dwelling)
Clause 54 covers:
| Topic | Key requirement |
|---|---|
| Site planning | Lot size, building envelope, building height |
| Site coverage | Maximum % of site covered by buildings (typically 60%) |
| Setbacks | Front, side, rear; specified by zone (or council variation) |
| Building height | Maximum height per zone (typically 9m or 11m) |
| Solar access | Setbacks ensuring solar access to neighbours |
| Visual bulk | Setbacks ensuring building doesn’t overwhelm neighbours |
| Overlooking | Windows above ground level must be set back or screened |
| Overshadowing | Restrictions on shadow impact on adjoining outdoor space |
| Privacy | Setback and screening of habitable rooms |
| Daylight to existing windows | Setbacks to maintain neighbour’s window light |
| Energy efficiency | NatHERS rating + solar orientation |
| Site services | Stormwater, sewerage, garbage |
| Parking | Garage/carport requirements per zone |
| Landscape | Minimum landscape area and design |
Many councils calibrate these requirements through their planning scheme overlay. For example, a Garden Suburban Character precinct may require a 40% site coverage limit instead of 60%.
Clause 55 (multi-unit)
Clause 55 covers the same topics as Clause 54 plus:
| Additional topic | Detail |
|---|---|
| Density | Number of dwellings per lot; sometimes regulated by zone |
| Dwelling diversity | Mix of dwelling types and sizes |
| Communal open space | Shared outdoor area for multi-unit |
| Building separation | Setbacks between buildings on the lot |
| Apartment internal amenity | Internal layout, light, ventilation |
| Acoustic separation | Sound separation between units |
| Universal access | Accessibility provisions |
| Cars and bicycles | Higher parking and bicycle requirements |
Apartments (3+ storeys) typically trigger Clause 55 + additional planning controls under SEPP 65-equivalent provisions in Vic; these are integrated into Vic planning schemes.
Clause 56 (subdivision)
Clause 56 covers:
- Lot layout and dimensions.
- Road network design.
- Public open space dedications.
- Stormwater and drainage.
- Sewer connection.
- Tree retention.
- Landscape character.
For residential subdivision, Clause 56 is mandatory.
The standards / objectives model
ResCode operates on a standards / objectives structure (similar to NSW DTS / Design Principle):
| Layer | Description |
|---|---|
| Standard | The specific measurable criterion (e.g. “5.0m front setback”) |
| Objective | The qualitative outcome the standard aims to achieve (e.g. “Consistent streetscape character”) |
If you meet the standard, council approves routinely. If you miss the standard, you can argue against the objective that the proposal still achieves the planning intent. This is called the decision guidelines pathway.
Decision guidelines (off-standard pathway)
Each ResCode standard has corresponding decision guidelines. The applicant argues:
- The standard missed is named.
- The objective behind it is identified.
- How the proposal achieves the objective despite missing the standard.
A well-argued decision guidelines case has a high success rate; a weak case fails.
Common Clause 54 measurements
| Standard | Typical value (zone-dependent) |
|---|---|
| Site coverage | 60% maximum (Garden Suburban Character: 40%) |
| Front setback | 4-6 m typical |
| Side setback | 1.5-3 m typical |
| Rear setback | 3-6 m typical |
| Building height (wall) | 7.5-9.0 m (zone-dependent) |
| Building height (overall) | 9.0-11.0 m |
| Pergola/eave projection | 0.5-1.0 m beyond setback |
| Overshadowing | No reduction below 75% of standard solar access |
| Overlooking | Windows >1.7 m above ground require screening within 9 m of property line |
| Energy | 6.5 stars NatHERS + Clause 55.05 / Clause 54.05 |
(All zone-dependent; check the specific planning scheme.)
ResCode and the Vic planning permit process
A Vic development requiring a planning permit:
- Pre-application meeting with council (recommended).
- Permit application lodged via the council’s portal.
- ResCode compliance demonstrated: standards met or decision guidelines argued.
- Public notification if required by the scheme.
- Decision by council or by tribunal (VicSmart pathway) or VCAT on appeal.
Most residential planning permits in Victoria are decided under ResCode standards or via decision guidelines arguments.
ResCode vs WA R-Codes
| Aspect | Vic ResCode | WA R-Codes |
|---|---|---|
| Embedded in | Vic planning schemes (Clauses 54-55-56) | SPP 7.3 called up by LPS |
| Structure | Standards + Objectives | Deemed-to-Comply + Design Principle |
| Off-standard pathway | Decision guidelines | Design Principle |
| Density framework | Zone-based | R-code-based (R10-R200+) |
| Volume split | Single comprehensive code | Volume 1 (houses + grouped) + Volume 2 (apartments) |
| Author requirement | Designer/architect at applicant’s discretion | Same for Volume 1; architect recommended for Volume 2 |
The frameworks are equivalent in intent; terminology and structure differ.
VicSmart and ResCode
VicSmart is Vic’s streamlined permit pathway for low-risk applications. For ResCode purposes:
- VicSmart eligibility requires the proposal to meet ResCode standards (no decision guidelines arguments).
- Standard permit allows decision guidelines arguments.
- VicSmart’s 10-day decision is faster but limited to clear-cut compliance.
Common defects under ResCode
| Defect | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Site coverage exceeds 60% without justification | Refusal grounds |
| Front setback below standard without character justification | Refusal grounds |
| Overlooking unscreened | Refusal grounds |
| Overshadowing reduces neighbour amenity | Refusal |
| Insufficient landscape area | Refusal |
| Tree retention not addressed | Refusal if significant trees affected |
Council variations
Each Vic council can vary ResCode standards through their planning scheme:
| Council action | Effect |
|---|---|
| Lower site coverage (40%) | Tighter design constraint |
| Higher setback requirement | Larger front yard |
| Specific design character (Heritage Overlay, Design and Development Overlay) | Bespoke controls per precinct |
| Solar protection requirements | Site-specific |
| Tree retention overlay | Particular trees protected |
Always check the specific council planning scheme for local variations.
Recent updates
ResCode is periodically updated. Recent amendments:
- Energy efficiency updated to align with NCC 2022 7-star requirements.
- Tree retention strengthened in established precincts.
- Garage prominence controls added.
- Climate resilience considerations introduced.
Check the current Planning and Environment Act 1987 (Vic) and Victoria Planning Provisions for the most recent version.
Builder takeaway
- For Vic residential, ResCode is the design framework. Get the Clause 54 (or 55 / 56) requirements before concept design.
- Use VicSmart for clean-cut Clause 54 applications; standard permit for anything requiring decision guidelines.
- Council variations are common; check the planning scheme overlay first.
- The decision guidelines pathway adds 2-4 months to the assessment timeline.
- Pre-application consultation with council is recommended for non-standard designs.
References
- Planning and Environment Act 1987 (Vic) (verified 2026-05-23)
- Victoria Planning Provisions: ResCode (verified 2026-05-23)
Related
See also
Last updated: 2026-05-23. Verified: 2026-05-23. Quarterly review for currency.