With the recent amendment to the State Environmental Planning Policy (Housing) 2021, NSW Government is committed to reaching the National Housing Accord target of 377,000 homes by mid-2029. In order to achieve this, the Minns Government is holding local and state governments accountable through a range of performance measures.
The Housing SEPP amendment has brought about reforms to the low- and mid-rise housing policy that aim to increase the supply of homes in all R2 low-density residential zones in NSW. Approximately 85% of all residential development applications are submitted through council, so with the expected surge in submissions, “tracking their performance is critical”, says Paul Scully, Minister for Planning and Public Spaces. Ultimately, the Minns Government expects that both local and state governments will work together to efficiently deliver homes that accommodate all facets of the community.
Monitoring local government performance
To streamline and provide transparency over assessment timeframes, the NSW Government has introduced the Faster Assessments program. For local government areas, a new Statement of Expectations Order has been released as part of this program. The order provides a benchmark for timeframes on DA assessments, planning proposals and strategic planning. For councils that meet these new standards, $200 million of financial incentives will be dispersed to fund more green spaces and road maintenance. For councils that continually fall short of the new standards, a Performance Improvement Order will be issued by the Minister for Local Government. This order identifies the actions that need to be taken to improve their performance.
Updates to the Statement of Expectations Order 2024 include:
- new minimum performance standards for assessing DAs
- new lodgment timeframes
- new completion timeframes for various stages of planning proposals as outlined in the Local Environmental Plan-Making Guideline
- new completion timeframes of local strategic planning statements and local planning strategies as specified by department
- new Minister considerations for council performance:
- council’s individual circumstances
- whether council is meeting housing expectations.
Below is an excerpt from the order outlining these timeframes.
5 Minister’s Expectations
Development assessment
A council should:
- Prepare assessment reports for a regionally significant development application and refer to the relevant Sydney district and regional planning panel as soon as practical and within an average of 250 days from lodgement.
- Lodge development applications for which it is the consent authority as soon as practical and within an average of:
- From 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025: 14 days from submission
- From 1 July 2025 onwards: 7 days from submission.
- Determine development applications for which it is the consent authority (including DAs determined by a local planning panel) as soon as practical and whichever is the lesser of council’s previous financial year average, or an average of:
- From 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025: 115 days from lodgment
- From 1 July 2025 to 30 June 2026: 105 days from lodgment
- From 1 July 2026 to 30 June 2027: 95 days from lodgment
- From 1 July 2027 onwards: 85 days from lodgment.
- Comply with the procedural and reporting requirements prescribed in the Guide to Varying Development Standards, for development applications that involve variations to development standards.
Monitoring state government performance
In addition to the guidelines set out for local government areas, state government performance will also be held to account to ensure the timely delivery of housing and other community infrastructure and facilities. The following data will be published in August 2024, September 2024 and 2025, respectively:
- Regionally Significant Development Applications referral times to planning panels
- State Significant Development assessment timeframes for infill affordable housing
- Transport Oriented Development Accelerated Precinct assessment timeframes.


