Land and Environment Court (LEC, NSW)
The NSW Land and Environment Court hears planning appeals, third-party objector appeals on designated development, and merit reviews of DA decisions.
Ask Chalkline about this →The Land and Environment Court (LEC) of NSW is the specialist court that hears planning appeals, third-party objector appeals on designated development, and merit reviews of DA decisions. Established under the Land and Environment Court Act 1979 (NSW), it is one of the few specialist environmental courts in Australia and handles a higher volume of planning and environmental matters than equivalent generalist courts. Most NSW planning appeals end up here. Verified per Land and Environment Court Act 1979 (NSW) (2026-05-23).
LEC class structure
The LEC has six classes of jurisdiction, each handling specific matter types:
| Class | Matter type | Typical case |
|---|---|---|
| Class 1 | Environmental planning and protection appeals (merit review) | Applicant appeal of council DA refusal/conditions |
| Class 2 | Local government and regulatory appeals | Council orders, infrastructure |
| Class 3 | Land valuation and compensation | Compulsory acquisition, valuations |
| Class 4 | Environmental enforcement and civil enforcement | Stop work order disputes, regulator-driven enforcement |
| Class 5 | Criminal jurisdiction (summary) | Environmental prosecutions |
| Class 6 | Criminal jurisdiction (judge alone) | More serious environmental prosecutions |
| Class 7 | Appeals from criminal jurisdiction (LEC) | (Higher courts above) |
For residential builders, Class 1 (planning appeals) and Class 4 (stop work / enforcement) are the most relevant.
Class 1: Planning appeals
Class 1 appeals are the bread-and-butter of the LEC. Most appeals follow this pattern:
| Appellant | Trigger |
|---|---|
| Applicant | Council refused the DA |
| Applicant | Council imposed unacceptable conditions |
| Applicant | Council failed to determine within statutory time (deemed refusal) |
| Objector (designated development) | Council approved despite objections; third-party right |
| Objector (some categories) | Specific category gives standing |
The court reviews the merit of the decision against the EP&A Act s.4.15 factors, the LEP, the DCP, and the public interest. The court can:
- Affirm the council’s decision (uphold the refusal or approval as-is).
- Vary the decision (different conditions, partial approval).
- Set aside and replace with its own determination.
Class 1 process
- Notice of appeal filed within 6 months of council decision (12 months for objectors).
- Directions hearing 4-8 weeks after filing.
- Mediation typically required for residential matters (free, voluntary settlement attempt).
- Pre-hearing directions to prepare evidence.
- Expert evidence (planners, ecologists, traffic, acoustic) lodged.
- Contested hearing 6-12 months from filing.
- Decision by Commissioner (specialist judge) or Judge.
- Appeal to Court of Appeal if further dispute.
A typical Class 1 residential appeal takes 8-18 months from filing to decision.
Class 1 mediation
For residential and minor commercial matters, the LEC strongly encourages mediation:
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|---|
| Free | No additional cost to the parties |
| Voluntary | Either party can decline; not all matters settle |
| Conducted by | LEC Commissioner or Mediator |
| Outcome | Settlement (50-70% of mediations) or referral to hearing |
| Conduct | Conditions, scope, design changes negotiated |
A successful mediation avoids the cost and time of a contested hearing.
Costs
Class 1 appeals in the LEC have no general “costs follow event” rule:
| Party | Typical costs |
|---|---|
| Applicant | $50,000-$250,000+ for residential appeal (lawyers, expert witnesses) |
| Council | Similar; council bears its own costs |
| Objector | Similar if they engage representation; mediation can be cheaper |
| Court fees and disbursements | $3,000-$15,000 |
The “no costs” principle is a deliberate policy to make appeals accessible. Unsuccessful applicants typically pay their own costs, not the council’s. Successful applicants similarly pay their own (with limited cost orders in exceptional cases).
Class 4: Civil enforcement
Class 4 hears civil enforcement matters:
| Matter | Triggered by |
|---|---|
| Stop work order appeals | Builder/developer appealing a council or Building Commission order |
| Council enforcement action | Council seeking court order to enforce planning law |
| Regulator-driven action | Environment Protection Authority (EPA) seeking enforcement |
| Public interest litigation | Environmental groups seeking enforcement against breaches |
Class 4 matters can move quickly (4-12 weeks) due to the urgency of the underlying enforcement action.
Commissioners
LEC Commissioners are specialist judges with planning and environmental expertise. The bench has:
- Commissioners specialising in residential and commercial planning.
- Specialists in environmental science (ecology, water, contamination).
- Specialists in heritage and Aboriginal cultural heritage.
- Judges for complex Class 4 enforcement.
Decisions are made by a single commissioner (or judge for complex matters); panel decisions are rare in this court.
Recent trends
- Increase in Class 1 residential appeals in mid-density and inner-city precincts.
- Class 4 enforcement actions rising under the RAB Act and DBP Act.
- Mediation success rates consistent at 50-70% in residential.
- Specialist evidence requirements increasing; planning consultants and lawyers commonly engaged.
Filing fees
| Class | Filing fee (2026, indicative) |
|---|---|
| Class 1 (planning) | ~$1,400-$3,000 |
| Class 4 (enforcement) | ~$500-$2,000 |
Plus additional fees for directions, mediation, expert evidence, and trial preparation. Fees are typically a small share of total costs.
When residential builders encounter the LEC
| Trigger | LEC class |
|---|---|
| Applicant appealing DA refusal | Class 1 |
| Applicant appealing conditions | Class 1 |
| Stop work order to defend | Class 4 |
| Objector challenging an approval (designated) | Class 1 |
| Council enforcement of consent conditions | Class 4 |
| Building Commission enforcement under RAB Act / DBP Act | Class 4 |
Practical tips
- Engage early: a planning lawyer should be involved from the council decision date.
- Mediation is your friend: most disputes settle there; cheaper, faster, less public.
- Expert evidence is decisive: the planner’s report, ecology, traffic, etc. usually determine the outcome.
- Costs are your own: budget accordingly; “no costs” rule means even winning, you pay.
- Compliance during appeal: a stop work order may continue while you appeal; sometimes a stay of operation can be obtained.
Cross-state equivalents
| State | Equivalent specialist court / tribunal |
|---|---|
| NSW | Land and Environment Court (this) |
| VIC | VCAT (Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal), Planning and Environment List |
| QLD | Planning and Environment Court |
| WA | State Administrative Tribunal (SAT) |
| SA | Environment, Resources and Development (ERD) Court |
| TAS | Resource Management and Planning Appeal Tribunal |
| NT | Lands, Planning and Mining Tribunal |
| ACT | ACAT (ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal) |
Each state has a specialist tribunal or court; NSW’s LEC is the largest in volume and procedurally most developed.
Also known as
LEC; Land and Environment Court of New South Wales; NSW planning court; environment court (informal).
Category: Regulators.
Related
See also
Last updated: 2026-05-23. Verified: 2026-05-23. Quarterly review for currency.