regulation Planning and zoning 12 min read

LEPs (Local Environmental Plans) NSW: how to read them for a residential project

How NSW Local Environmental Plans work: Standard Instrument zoning (R1-R5), FSR and height controls, SEPP hierarchy, and how to look up your site on the Planning Portal.

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TL;DR

Every residential project in NSW sits inside a Local Environmental Plan (LEP). The LEP is the council-level instrument that sets your site’s zone (R1, R2, R3, R4, or R5 for residential), the land uses permitted in that zone, and the key development standards: Floor Space Ratio (FSR) and Height of Buildings (HOB). If your proposal breaches an FSR or HOB control, you need either a DA or a clause 4.6 variation request, neither of which is quick. Look up your LEP on the NSW Planning Portal Spatial Viewer before design starts, not after. SEPPs sit above LEPs in the hierarchy: where a SEPP conflicts with an LEP, the SEPP generally prevails (EP&A Act s 3.28). The Housing SEPP 2021 and the Codes SEPP (behind CDC) are the two that cut across most residential jobs.

In plain English

An LEP is the main planning rulebook for a council area. There are 128 councils in NSW, each with its own LEP, but every LEP follows the same template: the Standard Instrument (Local Environmental Plans) Order 2006. That standard template means the zone names, the land use table structure, and the core development standard clauses are consistent across every council in NSW (verified 2026-05-08, legislation.nsw.gov.au).

LEPs are made under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (NSW) (EP&A Act). They are statutory instruments, not guidelines. A DA application is assessed against the LEP as part of the s 4.15 heads of consideration. Non-compliance with an LEP standard is a legal issue, not just a design preference.

What it requires

Zone: what you can build

Every parcel of land in NSW is assigned a zone code. Residential zones in the Standard Instrument are:

Zone codeNameTypical character
R1General ResidentialMix of housing types, no particular density limit fixed in the zone name
R2Low Density ResidentialDetached houses, dual occupancies, limited multi-dwelling
R3Medium Density ResidentialMedium density: manor houses, terraces, low-rise apartments
R4High Density ResidentialHigh-rise and medium-high apartment development near centres
R5Large Lot ResidentialAcreage-style lots, rural setting, limited density

Source: Standard Instrument (Local Environmental Plans) Order 2006, Part 2 (verified 2026-05-08, planning.nsw.gov.au).

Each zone has a land use table listing what is:

  • Permitted without consent (exempt development, usually minor works)
  • Permitted with consent (needs a DA or CDC)
  • Prohibited (cannot be approved regardless of merit)

A detached dwelling house is typically permitted with consent in R2, R3, and R5. In R4, it may be permitted or prohibited depending on the individual council’s LEP. Check the land use table for your council’s specific LEP, not just the zone name.

Zone objectives sit above the land use table in each LEP. They guide how the consent authority exercises discretion on DAs. If your proposal aligns with the zone’s stated objectives, you have a stronger case; if it cuts against them, expect harder scrutiny.

FSR: how much building area you get

Floor Space Ratio (FSR) is the ratio of a building’s gross floor area to the site area. Clause 4.4 of the Standard Instrument sets the FSR control. Councils map their FSR values on a Floor Space Ratio Map that is part of the LEP maps package.

Example: an FSR of 0.5:1 on a 600 m2 lot allows a maximum gross floor area of 300 m2. An FSR of 0.65:1 on the same lot allows 390 m2.

Key points:

  • FSR values vary significantly from council to council, and sometimes within the same zone in the same LGA (different values shown on the map for different precincts).
  • Some councils apply different FSRs to different land uses within a zone (e.g., dwelling houses vs. multi-dwelling housing).
  • FSR is measured as gross floor area (GFA), which includes all enclosed habitable and non-habitable space. Garages, verandahs (if enclosed), and thick external wall construction can all eat into your GFA budget.
  • If no FSR control is shown on the map for your lot, the Standard Instrument provides that no FSR maximum applies, unless another provision (such as a SEPP) sets one.

Source: Standard Instrument (Local Environmental Plans) Order 2006, cl 4.4; NSW Department of Planning practice note PN 08-001 (verified 2026-05-08, planning.nsw.gov.au).

Height of Buildings (HOB): how tall you can build

Height of Buildings is controlled by clause 4.3 of the Standard Instrument. Height is measured in metres above existing ground level. The maximum height value is shown on the Height of Buildings Map in the LEP maps package.

Key points:

  • HOB is typically expressed as a single number in metres (e.g., 8.5 m, 9 m, 12 m).
  • The measurement point is the highest point of the building, including any roof plant, lift overruns, or parapets that exceed the height standard, unless specifically excluded by the LEP.
  • Some councils set different height limits in different precincts within the same zone, so the map governs, not just the zone code.
  • For Class 1 buildings, the typical limit in suburban R2 zones is 8.5 m or 9 m. Verify against your council’s LEP maps, not a rule of thumb.
  • If no HOB is shown on the map for your lot, no height limit applies under that LEP clause (though DCP and SEPP controls may still apply).

Source: Standard Instrument (Local Environmental Plans) Order 2006, cl 4.3; practice note PN 08-001 (verified 2026-05-08).

Clause 4.6: varying a development standard

Where a proposal cannot comply with an FSR or HOB standard, clause 4.6 of the Standard Instrument allows an applicant to seek a variation. The consent authority (usually council) can approve a variation only if the applicant demonstrates that:

  1. Compliance with the standard is unreasonable or unnecessary in the circumstances, and
  2. There are sufficient environmental planning grounds for the variation.

Clause 4.6 was reformed on 1 November 2023. Some development standards are now excluded from clause 4.6 variation in limited circumstances specified by the consent authority (verified 2026-05-08, planning.nsw.gov.au).

In practice: clause 4.6 is available but not routine. Councils do not grant variations lightly, and the application requires a written justification. It adds cost and time to a DA. Design to comply if possible.

What it doesn’t cover

LEPs do not cover:

  • Design detail: setbacks, landscaping, privacy, solar access, building materials, and other site-specific controls. Those are in the council’s DCP (Development Control Plan). DCPs sit below LEPs in the hierarchy and cannot override them, but they govern much of the practical design.
  • State-wide housing types: secondary dwellings (granny flats), boarding houses, seniors housing, and build-to-rent development are handled by SEPPs (primarily SEPP (Housing) 2021), which can override the LEP’s zone controls.
  • Exempt and complying development: CDC and exempt development rules are set by the Codes SEPP and the Housing Code, not the individual LEP, though the LEP zone is a prerequisite check for CDC eligibility.
  • Heritage and environmental overlays: the LEP identifies heritage items and environmental sensitivity areas but the specific controls for those overlays are often elaborated in the DCP or in specialist SEPPs (Resilience and Hazards SEPP 2021, Biodiversity and Conservation SEPP 2021).

Practical implications

How to pull your LEP information before design

  1. Go to the NSW Planning Portal Spatial Viewer (free, no login required).
  2. Enter the property address or lot and DP number.
  3. Select the Land Zoning Map layer. This shows the zone code for the site.
  4. Select the FSR Map and Height of Buildings Map layers. These show the numerical controls for your site.
  5. Click through to the LEP instrument from the Spatial Viewer. Read the land use table for your zone to confirm your proposed development type is permitted with consent.
  6. Download a Property Report from the Spatial Viewer as a PDF summary of the controls, constraints, and overlays.

Source: NSW Planning Portal Spatial Viewer, planningportal.nsw.gov.au/spatialviewer (verified 2026-05-08).

Reading the land use table for a residential job

Step 1: identify the zone code (from the Spatial Viewer or Section 10.7 Planning Certificate).

Step 2: open the council’s LEP on legislation.nsw.gov.au (or via the Spatial Viewer link). Navigate to the land use table for that zone.

Step 3: check whether your development type appears in:

  • Permitted with consent: you can lodge a DA (or CDC if the Codes SEPP is satisfied).
  • Permitted without consent: you may be able to proceed without approval (check the specific exempt development rules).
  • Prohibited: the project cannot proceed in that zone regardless of merit. A different site or a re-zoning proposal is required.

Step 4: for dual occupancy, secondary dwelling, manor house, or attached dwelling, check whether the use is listed. The Standard Instrument allows councils to include or exclude these housing types from each zone. Many councils have restricted dual occupancies or multi-dwelling housing in R2 zones to protect the character of low-density areas.

SEPP vs LEP: when SEPPs override

Under s 3.28 of the EP&A Act, where a SEPP and an LEP are inconsistent, the SEPP generally prevails to the extent of the inconsistency (verified 2026-05-08, legislation.nsw.gov.au).

In residential practice, the main override scenarios are:

ScenarioSEPP that may override the LEP
CDC application on a residential lotSEPP (Exempt and Complying Development Codes) 2008 (the Housing Code). If the lot meets the Housing Code criteria, a CDC can be issued even if the LEP zone doesn’t expressly list the development type as complying development.
Secondary dwelling (granny flat)SEPP (Housing) 2021. A secondary dwelling is permissible on any lot with a primary dwelling in most residential zones, regardless of what the LEP land use table says about secondary dwellings, as long as the SEPP criteria are met.
Low- and mid-rise housing reformsSEPP (Housing) 2021 amendments. From 2024 onward, the NSW Government has been progressively applying low-rise and mid-rise housing reforms through the Housing SEPP, which override some restrictive LEP zone controls near train stations and town centres. Check the current state of these provisions at planning.nsw.gov.au.

What the LEP doesn’t tell you

A common mistake: reading the LEP zone and FSR and thinking that is all the assessment will turn on. The DCP layers that sit below the LEP also matter at design stage: setbacks from boundaries, side and rear setback rules, landscaping ratios, car parking, and solar access can all be harder constraints than the FSR in practice.

Pull both the LEP controls and the council’s DCP early. The pre-DA meeting is the right moment to have council identify which controls are hard (LEP standards, requiring a clause 4.6 if you breach them) versus soft (DCP guidelines, where variation is considered on merit without a formal variation request).

References

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-08. Verified: 2026-05-08. Quarterly review for currency.