glossary Glossary 6 min read

Accepted development (Qld)

Qld Planning Act 2016 category for development needing no DA. Just a Building Approval. Covers most standard houses on residential lots in compliant zones.

Ask Chalkline about this →

Accepted development is the Queensland Planning Act 2016 category for development that can proceed without a Development Approval (DA), needing only a Building Approval. It is the lowest-friction Qld pathway: no council planning assessment, no public notification, no merit review. Most standard detached houses on residential lots in compliant zones qualify. The category sits below code-assessable (DA required, code-based assessment) and impact-assessable (DA required, full merit assessment, often notification). Verified per Planning Act 2016 (Qld) s.43-44 and Planning Regulation 2017 (Qld) (2026-05-24).

The four Qld assessment categories

CategoryDA required?Public notification?Assessment basis
ProhibitedN/A (cannot occur)N/ACannot lodge
Accepted development (this)NoNoSelf-assess against acceptable outcomes
Code-assessableYesNoAgainst assessment benchmarks (code)
Impact-assessableYesYes (typically 15-30 business days)Full merit assessment + impacts

Accepted development sits one step above prohibited and one step below code-assessable. It is the Qld “exempt-equivalent” pathway, though the Qld terminology and structure differ from NSW exempt development.

Two flavours of accepted development

The Planning Regulation 2017 (Qld) distinguishes:

Sub-categoryDetail
Accepted development (no conditions)Proceed once Building Approval is in place; no planning self-assessment required
Accepted development subject to requirementsMust comply with stated acceptable outcomes (setbacks, height, lot coverage); if non-compliant, project bumps up to code-assessable

For typical residential builders, the “subject to requirements” path is most common: the house design must comply with the local planning scheme’s acceptable outcomes (setbacks, height, lot coverage, etc.) to remain accepted. Falling short bumps the project into code-assessable territory.

What typically qualifies as accepted

Project typeStatus (typical)
Class 1a detached house in low- to medium-density residential zoneAccepted (subject to requirements)
Secondary dwelling/granny flat in approved zoneAccepted (subject to requirements)
Class 10a detached garage/shed in residentialAccepted (subject to requirements)
Domestic outbuilding under floor-area thresholdAccepted (no conditions)
Single dwelling in established residentialAccepted if meets acceptable outcomes
Multi-unit residential (Class 2)Typically code-assessable, not accepted
House on flood-prone or character-overlay landOften bumped to code-assessable
Heritage-listed siteCode-assessable or impact-assessable

Specific eligibility is set by:

  1. The local government area’s planning scheme (each council adopts a scheme under the Planning Act).
  2. The State Planning Regulation (sets baseline state-wide accepted development).
  3. Overlays (flood, character, heritage, bushfire) which often elevate the category.

Acceptable outcomes (the self-assessment standards)

Accepted development “subject to requirements” must meet acceptable outcomes specified in the planning scheme. Typical residential acceptable outcomes:

StandardTypical Qld residential acceptable outcome
Building height8.5 m maximum (low-density), 9.5 m (medium-density)
Site cover50% maximum (typical, varies by zone)
Front setback6 m minimum from primary street
Side setback1.5 m minimum (single storey), 2.0 m (two storey)
Rear setback6 m minimum (typical)
Plot ratio0.5 (low-density), 0.6-0.8 (medium-density)
Driveway width6 m maximum across frontage
Site coverage by impervious70-80% maximum

If the design fails any acceptable outcome, the project is not accepted and a DA (code-assessable) is required.

Builder workflow for accepted development

  1. Confirm zone and overlays in the local planning scheme (council website or QPlan).
  2. Test the design against acceptable outcomes in the scheme code.
  3. If compliant: proceed straight to Building Approval with a private building certifier. No DA, no council planning lodgement.
  4. If non-compliant by any outcome: lodge a DA for code-assessable development; council assesses against the same code but with a formal decision pathway.
  5. Building Approval: certified by a QBCC-licensed certifier (Class A or B). Required regardless of planning category.

Accepted development vs NSW exempt development

AspectQld accepted (subject to requirements)NSW exempt (Codes SEPP)
DA required?NoNo
Building Approval required?YesSometimes (CDC may apply)
Self-assessmentBuilder/owner against acceptable outcomesBuilder/owner against Codes SEPP standards
Council involvementGenerally noneGenerally none
Bump-up pathwayCode-assessableComplying development → DA

The pathways are conceptually equivalent: low-risk standard residential proceeds without DA in both states.

Common reasons a Qld project gets bumped from accepted to code-assessable

ReasonFrequency
Site cover exceeds acceptableVery common
Front setback below acceptableCommon (battle-axe lots, irregular shapes)
Site in flood overlay with no flood-resilient designCommon in flood-prone councils
Site in character overlay (Brisbane queenslander character, etc.)Common in older suburbs
Heritage overlayAlways bumped
Bushfire overlay (medium or high)Usually bumped
Lot frontage below minimumSometimes
Multi-dwelling on lotBumped to code-assessable in most schemes

Builder takeaway

  • For most Qld Class 1a houses, accepted development is the default pathway. Confirm the zone and overlays first.
  • The design must comply with every acceptable outcome to remain accepted. One non-compliance bumps to code-assessable.
  • Building Approval is still required under the Building Act 1975 (Qld), regardless of planning category.
  • Read the local planning scheme’s code carefully. Acceptable outcomes vary by council.
  • Overlays (flood, character, heritage, bushfire) commonly bump the project. Check first.

Cross-state equivalents

StateEquivalent low-friction pathway
QLDAccepted development (this)
NSWExempt development (Codes SEPP)
VIC”No permit required” under planning scheme
WAExempt development under Planning Regulations
SAAccepted development under PDI Act 2016
TAS”No permit required” or Accepted under TPS
NTPermitted use category
ACTExempt development under Planning and Development Regulation

Also known as

Accepted development; accepted dev (informal); no-DA pathway (informal); exempt-equivalent Qld.

Category: Approvals & DA.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-24. Verified: 2026-05-24. Quarterly review for currency.