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Merit assessment (DA, NSW)

Merit assessment is the NSW DA decision under EP&A Act s4.15 weighing LEP, DCP, SEPPs, impacts, suitability, public submissions, and public interest.

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A merit assessment in NSW planning law is the council (or panel) assessment of a Development Application (DA) under section 4.15 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (NSW), weighing multiple factors to decide whether the proposal should be approved, conditioned, deferred, or refused. It is distinguished from the Complying Development Certificate (CDC) pathway, which is a checklist-only assessment with no merit judgement. Merit assessment is judgement-based: the council weighs LEP and DCP requirements, SEPP overrides, likely impacts on the site and surrounds, site suitability, public submissions, and the public interest. Verified per EP&A Act 1979 s4.15 (2026-05-16).

The s4.15 matters to be considered:

FactorWhat it means
Provisions of the LEPLocal Environmental Plan zoning, setbacks, FSR, etc.
Provisions of the DCPDevelopment Control Plan: design controls, character, layout
Provisions of SEPPsState Environmental Planning Policies (e.g. Housing, Heritage, Infrastructure)
Likely impactsBuilt environment, natural environment, social, economic
Suitability of the siteIs the site appropriate for the proposed development?
Submissions from the publicPublic consultation results; any objections weighed
Public interestBalance of community benefit and individual rights

These factors are weighed; not all need to be satisfied. A proposal that fails one DCP control may still be approved if it is otherwise consistent with the LEP and serves the public interest.

Merit assessment outcomes:

OutcomeWhat it means
Approval (unconditional)DA approved; construction can commence on issue of CC
Approval with conditionsDA approved subject to specific conditions (e.g. tree retention, hours of operation, noise limits)
Deferred commencementDA approved but with prerequisites that must be met before the consent operates (e.g. soil contamination remediation)
RefusalDA refused; reasons given; appeal to Land and Environment Court available

Merit vs CDC: the fundamental distinction:

AspectMerit assessment (DA)CDC checklist
Decision-makerCouncil planner / certifier / IHAP / RDCPrivate certifier or council certifier
Time6 weeks to 6+ months10-20 business days
CostHigher (DA fee + public notice + assessment)Lower (CDC fee only)
DiscretionSubstantial; judgement-basedNone; checklist-only
Public notificationUsually requiredNot required (with limited exceptions)
SubmissionsPublic can commentGenerally no public input
Variations from controlsPossible if justifiedStrictly no; outside CDC envelope means refusal
Heritage / environment / characterConsideredExcluded (heritage items can’t use CDC)

The “satisfaction” test:

For each s4.15 matter, the council asks: “Have we considered this matter sufficiently?” Not “Does it satisfy?” The council can approve a non-compliant proposal if other matters justify it, or refuse a compliant proposal if substantial issues exist.

Common merit-assessment dispute grounds:

GroundFrequency
Bulk and scale incompatible with characterVery common
Setbacks not respecting precinct rhythmCommon
Insufficient solar access to neighboursCommon
Traffic generation impactCommon in commercial / mixed-use
Heritage impact on the streetscapeCommon in HCAs
Tree removal not justifiedCommon
Stormwater impact not adequately addressedCommon
Overlooking and privacy to adjoining propertiesCommon

Public notification process:

Most DAs require public notification:

  1. Notification letter sent to neighbours (typically 14-21 days).
  2. Site signs posted on the property.
  3. Council website publishes the application + supporting documents.
  4. Submission period for objections + supporting submissions.
  5. Council considers submissions; may meet with objectors.
  6. Decision referred to council resolution or delegated officer.

Determination authorities:

AuthorityDA value / type
Council delegated officerMost residential DAs under $5m
Council planning panelLarger residential, sensitive sites
Independent Hearing and Assessment Panel (IHAP)Most NSW LGAs use IHAP for residential DAs above thresholds or with conflict-of-interest
Regional Planning Panel (RPP)Regional NSW, larger residential, environmental conditions
Land and Environment Court (Class 1 appeal)Appeal from any of the above
Sydney District CourtClass 1 (Land and Environment Court has primary jurisdiction in NSW)

Builder takeaway:

  • DA work is inherently uncertain. The s4.15 matters give the council judgement; predict the outcome by understanding past decisions and applicable controls.
  • Pre-DA meetings with the council planner (free, recommended) signal likely issues.
  • Address every s4.15 matter in the Statement of Environmental Effects (SEE) accompanying the DA.
  • Where multiple controls are unmet, prepare a clause 4.6 variation request (NSW LEP) explicitly justifying the variance.
  • Don’t assume “we did this last year”; council case law and panel rotation matter.

Also known as: EP&A s4.15 assessment; discretionary assessment; full assessment; council DA; judgement-based assessment.

Category: Approvals & DA.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16. Quarterly review for currency.