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Town planner (consultant)

Town planners prepare SoEEs, manage DAs, draft Clause 4.6 variations, and represent owners at planning panels. PIA membership signals standing. Fee $2-15k typical.

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TL;DR

A town planner is a private consultant who prepares Statements of Environmental Effects (SoEE / SEE), manages DA lodgement and assessment, drafts Clause 4.6 variations (NSW) or equivalent merit-based variations in other states, and represents owners at planning panels and tribunals. Required for any non-trivial DA, integrated development, or zoning amendment. Membership of the Planning Institute of Australia (PIA) signals professional standing. Typical fees range $2,000-$15,000+ for a residential DA package depending on complexity. Engaging the planner early in design saves rework; engaged late, costs grow fast.

What a town planner does

ServiceTypical scope
Pre-lodgement adviceRead Section 10.7 / equivalent, identify constraints, advise on DA vs CDC pathway
Statement of Environmental Effects (SoEE / SEE)The narrative compliance document accompanying every DA
Clause 4.6 / merit variation requestWhen the build doesn’t meet a standard, drafted argument for variation
Public consultation managementNeighbour notification, objection response
Planning panel representationAttendance and advocacy at Local Planning Panel hearings
Tribunal advocacyNCAT, VCAT, QPlanning Court hearings
Zoning amendmentApplication to rezone land (longer-form work)

For a typical residential DA in NSW, the planner’s deliverable is the SoEE plus all supporting analysis. They coordinate with the architect, structural engineer, and any specialist consultants.

When to engage a town planner

Build typePlanner needed?
CDC-eligible single dwellingNo (certifier handles)
Standard DA single dwelling, no overlaysOptional (designer often suffices)
DA with one minor variationRecommended
DA with multiple variations or merit-based variationYes
Integrated development (DA + multiple approvals)Yes
Heritage-listed lotYes (plus heritage consultant)
Bushfire-prone with BALYes (plus bushfire consultant)
Multi-residential / duplex / townhousesYes
SubdivisionYes
Pre-DA pre-lodgement meeting prepYes (recommended)

Professional standing

The Planning Institute of Australia (PIA) is the peak professional body. Membership grades:

  • MPIA (Member, full): typical mid-career private planner.
  • FPIA (Fellow): senior planner, often with management or specialist work.
  • CPP (Certified Practising Planner): industry credential, separate from PIA membership.

Council planners are often public-sector members; many transition to private consultancy after government experience. Private planners with strong working relationships with the council in your area are particularly valuable on contentious DAs.

Fee structure

ScopeTypical fee (residential, 2026 AUD ex-GST)
Pre-DA opinion letter (1-2 hour consult + brief letter)$500-$1,500
Standard residential DA SoEE$2,000-$5,000
DA with multiple variations / Clause 4.6$4,000-$10,000
DA with heritage / BAL / contaminated / flood overlay$5,000-$15,000+
Integrated development with multiple approvals$10,000-$30,000+
Planning Panel representation$1,000-$5,000 per hearing (often added to base fee)
NCAT / VCAT / Planning Court appeal$5,000-$50,000+ depending on complexity

Fees are usually time-and-materials with a fixed-fee cap for standard work.

Brief the planner well

Provide:

  1. Section 10.7 certificate (current, ≤30 days old).
  2. Survey (current, with site contours).
  3. Architectural plans (proposed development).
  4. Site analysis (existing features, neighbouring built form).
  5. Specific concerns or constraints you already know about.
  6. Council pre-DA meeting notes (if held).

A well-briefed planner can produce a sound SoEE faster and cheaper. A poorly briefed one bills extra for the discovery.

What goes wrong

  • Engaged too late: design lock-in before planner consults; design fails a standard; planner can write a Clause 4.6 variation but it’s no longer the cheapest path.
  • Wrong planner for the council area: a planner with no working relationship with the assessing planner can struggle on complex variations.
  • No pre-DA meeting: pre-DA with council ($300-$800 typical 2026) often surfaces issues that would otherwise come up at assessment. Planner attendance recommended.
  • Public consultation underestimated: a neighbour objection on a marginal DA can stretch assessment from 60 days to 9 months. Plan accordingly.

Working with the rest of the design team

A town planner sits alongside:

  • Architect / designer: who designs the building.
  • Structural engineer: who certifies the structure.
  • Surveyor: who provides site contours and boundaries.
  • Bushfire / heritage / acoustics consultants: as required.
  • Stormwater / hydraulic engineer: for drainage design.

The planner integrates these outputs into the SoEE. Some planning firms also offer design services; combining design + planning in one firm can speed coordination but reduce design optionality.

For builders

  1. Engage a town planner at design lock-in for any non-trivial DA. The pre-DA opinion letter is the cheapest insurance.
  2. Choose a planner with local experience in the council area. Working relationships with council planners matter more than credentials on contentious DAs.
  3. Brief them with complete documents. Discovery work is the most expensive billable.
  4. Attend pre-DA meetings with the planner. Council guidance there is often the cheapest path through assessment.
  5. Plan for an objection even on builds you think are uncontentious. Neighbour notification can stretch timeframes.

References

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-15. Verified: 2026-05-15.