Planning RulesMay 2026

Why your council's DCP setbacks for granny flats are different

The SEPP Housing 2021 sets statewide minimums for granny flat setbacks: 3 m rear, 0.9 m side. But your council's Development Control Plan can add stricter requirements — larger setbacks, separation distances, landscaping rules — that reduce what you can actually build. The same 600 m² lot can have a very different buildable envelope depending on which council it falls under.

Same 600 m² lot, different buildable footprints

Assumes 15 m wide × 40 m deep lot, existing dwelling 12 m from front boundary. Footprints are illustrative.

SEPP minimum (statewide)

Rear: 3 m
Side: 0.9 m
Separation: None specified
~42 m² footprint

Council A (topic-based DCP)

Rear: 5 m
Side: 1.5 m
Separation: 3 m from main dwelling
~30 m² footprint

Council B (dev-type DCP)

Rear: 6 m
Side: 1.5 m
Separation: 4 m from main dwelling
~24 m² footprint

These are simplified examples to show how DCP setbacks reduce buildable area. Actual controls vary by council, precinct, and lot characteristics. Two-storey builds have different side setback requirements.

What the SEPP says vs what DCPs add

The SEPP Housing 2021 sets minimum standards for secondary dwellings approved as complying development. These are statewide — every council in NSW applies the same SEPP. But councils also adopt their own DCPs, which can impose additional controls for secondary dwellings assessed through the DA pathway.

SEPP Housing 2021 standards vs typical DCP additions

ControlSEPP standardTypical DCP rangeNotes
Rear setback3 m3–6 mSome DCPs specify different values for single vs two storey
Side setback0.9 m (single storey)0.9–1.5 mTwo-storey SEPP minimum is 1.5 m; some DCPs go higher
Separation from main dwellingNot specified in SEPP3–4 mCommon DCP addition; affects siting on narrow lots
Landscaped areaMinimum % (varies by lot size)30–50% of site areaDCPs often specify deep soil zones, not just soft landscaping
Private open space24 m² minimum24–35 m²Some DCPs require minimum dimensions (e.g. 4 m width)
Car parking1 additional space1–2 spacesSome DCPs prohibit tandem parking; others allow it
Maximum height8.5 m7–8.5 mSome DCPs set lower maximums in low-density character areas
Design / materialsNot specifiedVaries widelyHeritage areas may require specific materials, colours, roof pitch

The most impactful DCP addition is usually the separation distance between the main dwelling and the granny flat. The SEPP does not specify a separation distance. When a DCP requires 3 to 4 metres of separation, combined with the rear setback, the buildable area shrinks significantly — especially on lots under 700 m².

Why councils have different controls

DCPs are adopted by individual councils to reflect local character, built form priorities, and environmental context. Councils with predominantly low-density, large-lot suburbs may set generous setbacks and landscaping requirements. Councils with tighter inner-city lots may accept smaller setbacks to make secondary dwellings feasible.

There is no statewide standard for DCP content. Each council writes its own, and they are structured differently. Some councils organise DCP controls by development type (a dedicated “secondary dwellings” chapter). Others use topic-based organisation where setback controls apply universally to all residential development, including secondary dwellings.

Three DCP structural types in NSW

Development-type organised: Separate chapters per development category. Secondary dwellings get their own chapter with specific setback tables. Easy to find, but may not capture universal provisions that also apply.
Zone organised: Controls grouped by zone or density area. Secondary dwelling standards sit within the low-density residential zone chapter, sometimes with cross-references to other sections.
Topic / universal: All provisions apply to all development types. There is no dedicated secondary dwelling chapter — setback, height, and landscaping rules apply to granny flats the same way they apply to any other residential addition.

The structural type determines how you find the controls that apply to your build. Topic-based DCPs are the hardest to navigate because the relevant provisions are scattered across multiple sections.

Merged councils: the 3-DCP problem

The 2016 NSW council amalgamations created a particular challenge for DCP navigation. Merged councils often still operate under the former council's DCP for each geographic area. The controls that apply to your property depend on which former council area your lot falls within — not the current council name.

Example: Inner West Council

Inner West Council was formed from three former councils. Each former area still operates under its own DCP:

Former Ashfield

Ashfield DCP 2007Development-type organised

Dedicated secondary dwelling chapter with specific setback tables

Former Leichhardt

Leichhardt DCP 2013Topic / universal

No dedicated secondary dwelling chapter; universal residential setbacks apply

Former Marrickville

Marrickville DCP 2011Zone organised

Secondary dwelling controls within low-density residential section

A property on one side of a street may be under a completely different DCP than the property across the road, even though both are in the same council area.

What happens when SEPP and DCP conflict

This is a common point of confusion. The answer depends on which approval pathway you use:

CDC pathway (complying development)

The SEPP standards apply. DCP controls are not relevant for CDC assessment. If your build meets every SEPP standard and your property is not excluded, the certifier issues the CDC based on the SEPP alone. This is one of the main advantages of the CDC pathway.

DA pathway (development application)

Both the LEP and the DCP apply. Council assesses the application against their DCP controls, which may require larger setbacks, more landscaping, or additional parking. Council has discretion to vary DCP controls, but this is not guaranteed — the DCP is the starting point for assessment.

In practice, this means homeowners whose properties qualify for CDC get a more predictable outcome: the statewide SEPP standards apply, and council DCP variations are irrelevant. Homeowners who must go through DA — because of heritage, flood, or other exclusions — face council-specific DCP requirements on top of the SEPP framework.

How to find your specific DCP controls

Finding the secondary dwelling controls in your council's DCP is not always straightforward. Depending on the DCP structure, the relevant provisions may be in a dedicated chapter, scattered across topic-based sections, or embedded in zone-specific controls.

1. Check your council's website

Most councils publish their DCP as a PDF or web document. Search for “secondary dwelling” or “ancillary dwelling” in the document. If your council was created from a merger, make sure you are reading the correct former-council DCP for your property's location.

2. Use PlotDetect's DCP browser

PlotDetect's DCP browser shows extracted DCP provisions by council, precinct, and development type. For supported councils, you can filter directly to secondary dwelling controls and see the specific setback, height, and landscaping requirements that apply.

3. Speak to a town planner or your certifier

For complex sites (heritage areas, merged council boundaries, precinct-specific controls), a planning consultant can confirm which DCP applies and how the controls interact with the SEPP standards. If you are going through the CDC pathway, your certifier will assess against the SEPP, but understanding the DCP context is still useful for design decisions.

Frequently asked questions

Do DCP setbacks apply if I use the CDC pathway?

No. For complying development, only the SEPP Housing 2021 standards apply. DCP controls are assessed under the DA pathway. This is a key advantage of CDC — the statewide SEPP standards are fixed and predictable, regardless of which council you are in.

What is the minimum rear setback for a granny flat in NSW?

The SEPP Housing 2021 minimum rear setback for a secondary dwelling is 3 metres. Council DCPs may require larger rear setbacks (commonly 5 to 6 metres) for DAs, but cannot reduce below the SEPP minimum.

Why does my council require a separation distance the SEPP does not mention?

The SEPP does not specify a minimum separation distance between the main dwelling and the secondary dwelling. Councils include separation controls in their DCPs to address privacy, access, and fire safety. This is one of the most common DCP additions and can significantly reduce buildable area on smaller lots.

I am in a merged council area. Which DCP applies?

The DCP of the former council area your property falls within. For example, Inner West Council operates under Ashfield DCP 2007, Leichhardt DCP 2013, and Marrickville DCP 2011 depending on location. Check your property's address against the former council boundaries to determine which DCP applies.

Can council vary DCP controls for my DA?

Yes. DCPs are guidelines, not legally binding standards (unlike LEPs and SEPPs). Council can approve a DA that does not fully comply with DCP controls if they are satisfied the development achieves the objectives of the control. However, this is discretionary and should not be assumed.

This content is general information about NSW planning and property matters. It is not planning advice, legal advice, financial advice, or insurance advice, and should not be relied upon as a substitute for professional assessment. Planning controls and regulatory instruments change — verify current provisions at planning.nsw.gov.au and legislation.nsw.gov.au.

Find your council's DCP controls

PlotDetect's DCP browser shows extracted provisions by council, precinct, and development type. See the specific setback, height, and landscaping controls that apply to secondary dwellings in your area.