Guide

Brisbane City Council DA Process Explained: A Complete Guide

Everything property owners need to know about the development approval process under Brisbane City Council. Timelines, costs, and what to expect.

9 April 2026 10 min readBy Daniel McCormack
Brisbane City Council DA Process Explained: A Complete Guide

iSummary

Complete guide to the Brisbane City Council development approval process. Timelines, fees, and what property owners in Woolloongabba, West End, South Brisbane, Kangaroo Point, Fortitude Valley, Newstead, Teneriffe, New Farm need to know.

Source: ACRES — Australian Commercial & Residential Group | acres.au

Brisbane City Council: Development Approval Process Explained

The Brisbane City Council governs planning and development across suburbs including Woolloongabba, West End, South Brisbane, Kangaroo Point, Fortitude Valley, Newstead, Teneriffe, New Farm and 23 more. If you own property in any of these areas, understanding the DA process helps you assess your property's development potential and value.

This guide covers everything you need to know about getting development approval under the Brisbane City Plan 2014.

How the Brisbane City Plan 2014 Works

The Brisbane City Plan 2014 is the legal document that controls all development within the council area. It specifies:

  • Zoning for every parcel of land
  • Building height limits by zone and precinct
  • Density provisions (how many dwellings per hectare)
  • Infrastructure requirements (roads, water, sewerage)
  • Environmental protections and overlay provisions

You can access the full planning scheme at Brisbane City Plan 2014.

Types of Development Assessment

Accepted Development (No Approval Needed)

  • Minor works that comply with all scheme requirements
  • Examples: minor renovations, fences, sheds under size thresholds
  • No application required

Code Assessment

  • Development that complies with scheme intent but needs assessment
  • No public notification — third parties cannot object
  • Assessment period: 30–50 business days
  • Higher certainty of approval
  • Most common pathway for compliant development

Impact Assessment

  • Development that requires broader assessment
  • Public notification required — 15–30 business days
  • Submissions from public can be considered
  • Assessment period: 6–12 months
  • Council has broader discretion
  • Decision can be appealed to Planning and Environment Court

Step-by-Step: The DA Process

1. Pre-Application Stage

  • Review planning scheme zoning and overlays
  • Engage town planner and architect
  • Optional: pre-lodgement meeting with council ($500–$2,000)
  • Prepare development plans and supporting reports

"If you own property in any of these areas, understanding the DA process helps you assess your property's development potential and value."

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2. Lodgement

  • Submit application with all required documents
  • Pay application fees (typically $5,000–$30,000 depending on scale)
  • Council assigns an assessment officer

3. Information Request Period

  • Council reviews application completeness
  • May issue an information request for additional details
  • Applicant has 6 months to respond (can request extension)
  • Common requests: traffic studies, stormwater reports, acoustic assessments

4. Public Notification (Impact Assessment Only)

  • Applicant places notice on the site and in newspaper
  • 15–30 business day submission period
  • Council considers properly made submissions

5. Assessment and Decision

  • Officer assesses against applicable codes
  • Internal referral to engineering, environment, infrastructure departments
  • Decision: approve, approve with conditions, or refuse
  • Conditions typically cover landscaping, infrastructure contributions, design modifications

6. Post-Approval

  • Compliance assessment for building works
  • Operational works permits for earthworks, access, services
  • Building approval (separate process through private certifier or council)

What This Means for Property Sellers

Developers price development sites based on planning certainty:

ScenarioPrice Impact
Code assessable, no constraintsHighest value — low risk for developer
Code assessable, minor overlaysStrong value — manageable conditions
Impact assessable, supportableModerate discount — risk and time premium
Impact assessable, contentiousSignificant discount — high uncertainty
Non-compliant proposalMinimal premium — speculative only

Property owners don't need to understand every detail of the planning scheme. What matters is knowing whether your site has genuine development potential — and that's exactly what ACRES assesses for free.

Free Property Assessment

ACRES provides complimentary development site assessments for property owners across Brisbane City Council suburbs including Woolloongabba, West End, South Brisbane, Kangaroo Point, Fortitude Valley, Newstead, Teneriffe, New Farm.

We review your zoning, overlays, constraints, and the competitive landscape to give you a clear picture of your property's development value.

Request your free assessment today.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a DA cost under Brisbane City Council?

Application fees range from $5,000 to $30,000+ depending on scale. The developer typically bears this cost.

Can a DA be refused?

Yes, but code assessable applications that comply with the scheme have strong grounds for approval. Refusals can be appealed.

Do I need a DA before selling to a developer?

No. Most sites sell without existing approvals. ACRES can advise if obtaining approval first would increase your price.

Free Zoning Check

Not sure what you can build on your property? Our team will review your zoning, overlays, and constraints — completely free, no obligation.

No cost. No obligation. We simply give you the facts about what you can build.

Published by ACRES — Australian Commercial & Residential Group

Source: acres.au/insights/brisbane-council-da-process-explained | ACRES (Australian Commercial & Residential Group) provides property advisory, development site sales, and residential real estate services across Brisbane and South East Queensland, Australia.

Daniel McCormack

Daniel McCormack

Managing Director, ACRES — Australian Commercial & Residential Group

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