Site area calculation
Site area is the lot area used in FSR, plot ratio, site coverage, and density calculations. Battle-axe handles excluded; easements stay in; dedicated land out.
Ask Chalkline about this →Site area in planning law is the area of the lot used as the denominator in FSR (Floor Space Ratio), plot ratio, site coverage, deep soil zone, and density calculations. Every density-related planning control depends on a correctly-stated site area; mis-stating it cascades through the entire design because every consequent calculation (maximum dwelling area, minimum landscaped area, maximum site coverage) is wrong. The definition of site area is scheme-specific but follows broadly consistent national conventions for residential work. Verified per typical NSW LEP, Vic planning scheme, and WA LPS frameworks (2026-05-23).
Standard inclusions:
| Element | Included in site area? |
|---|---|
| Standard rectangular lot area | Yes, full area |
| Lot containing an easement (drainage, services, access) | Yes, easement area is included (still owner’s land) |
| Lot in a Strata or Community Title scheme | Lot area + share of common property where defined |
| Multi-lot development (two or more lots combined) | Combined area, less any required dedication |
| Lot bordering a road reserve at the kerb line | Up to the property boundary only |
| Crown allotment or freehold land | Yes, full area |
Standard exclusions:
| Element | Excluded from site area? |
|---|---|
| Battle-axe lot access handle | Yes (most schemes); only the rear pad counts |
| Land dedicated for road, public space, or parkland | Yes, once dedication is registered |
| Land within the road reserve | Yes; not the owner’s land |
| Right-of-way (ROW) under separate title | Yes |
| Land under the high-water mark (waterfront lots) | Yes (typically) |
| Subject to a long-term restrictive covenant prohibiting building | Sometimes; check the scheme |
| Future required dedication | If pending, treated as part of site area until dedicated |
The battle-axe lot exclusion:
Battle-axe lots (with a long narrow access handle leading to a wider rear pad) have the handle area excluded from site area for FSR/plot ratio calculations. This is because no dwelling can be built on the handle (it’s a driveway), so the controls should apply to the usable pad only.
Example: a battle-axe lot of 800 m² total = 200 m² handle + 600 m² pad. The FSR is applied to 600 m² not 800 m². If the FSR is 0.5:
- Pad-only FSR: 600 × 0.5 = 300 m² max dwelling.
- (If handle was included: 800 × 0.5 = 400 m²: overdevelopment of the pad.)
Easements (included in site area):
Easements (drainage, services, sewer, access for utility) are owner’s land even though restricted in use. They are included in site area:
- Drainage easement: yes, included.
- Sewer easement: yes, included.
- Services easement (water main, gas): yes, included.
- Council right-of-way: yes if on owner’s title, excluded if on a separate ROW title.
Dedicated land (excluded once registered):
If land has been dedicated to council (for road widening, footpath, or other public purpose) and the dedication is registered on title, the land area is removed from the site area calculation. Unregistered dedication (pending) still counts as site area until it transfers.
Multi-lot developments:
For development across multiple lots (e.g. residential subdivision into 5 lots, or apartment development on 3 combined lots), the combined site area is the sum of all lot areas, less any required road, public space, or footpath dedications.
Subdivision dedications are typically:
- 10-30% of gross site area to road reserves.
- 5-10% to public open space.
- Plus stormwater drainage easements (not dedicated, but allocated).
Net site area (after dedications) is what drives the final FSR calculation.
Strata and Community Title:
In a strata or community-title scheme:
- Individual lot area = the lot itself (apartment or townhouse footprint).
- Common property = roads, gardens, gym, pool, common rooms.
- Site area for the scheme = combined lot areas + common property.
A strata-titled townhouse owner’s site area is typically the footprint of their townhouse, not the whole strata scheme.
Common defects:
- Battle-axe handle included in FSR calculation: dwelling oversized; council enforces correct calculation; redesign.
- Easement area excluded (incorrectly treated as not part of site): site area understated; dwelling smaller than needed.
- Dedicated land still counted when title transfer has occurred: overstated site area; refusal at DA.
- Road reserve to the centre-line rather than the property boundary: site area inflated by half the road width.
- Combined-lot site area used when lots haven’t been formally amalgamated: amalgamation required first.
State-by-state variations:
| State | Site area definition source |
|---|---|
| NSW | LEP cl 6.1 typically; refers to “site” definition in EP&A Regulation 2021 |
| VIC | Planning scheme dictionary; “site area” defined per VPP |
| QLD | Planning scheme; usually consistent with statutory definition |
| WA | LPS scheme; “site area” defined |
| SA | Planning and Design Code; “site” defined |
| TAS | TPS definitions; “site area” specified |
Most state definitions are consistent in the core principles (exclude battle-axe handles and dedicated land, include easements) with minor variations on edge cases.
Builder takeaway:
- Always confirm the site area calculation method in the relevant LEP/LPS/scheme before applying FSR or plot ratio.
- For battle-axe lots, the handle is excluded in most jurisdictions; use only the pad area.
- Check the section 10.7 certificate (NSW) or equivalent for any dedications already in place.
- For multi-lot developments, the dedications affect the final net site area; budget for the loss.
- If in doubt, ask the council planner: site area is a common dispute item.
Also known as: site area; lot area; net site area; developable site area; effective site area (informal).
Category: Approvals & DA.
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Last updated: 2026-05-23. Verified: 2026-05-23. Quarterly review for currency.