Rural Landscape dominant. Median sale $632.5K over the last 24 months. 100% of decided DAs approved.
Paynes Crossing 2325 spans 2 councils: Cessnock City Council (146 lots), Singleton Council (82 lots). The dominant council (Cessnock City Council) sets the canonical URL for this page.
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Zoning
Paynes Crossing is dominated by RU2 — Rural Landscape. Land use rules, height, FSR, and permitted developments are set per zone in the Local Environmental Plan and refined by the Development Control Plan.
Limit varies by lot — check your address for the exact figure.
Floor Space Ratio — total floor area as a multiple of lot area.
Location
Paynes Crossing 2325 covers an undefined area within Cessnock City Council.
Drill into any lot in Paynes Crossing
Open the interactive map — click any address to see its zone, height, FSR, overlays, and approval likelihood.
Development potential
We score every lot for development signal — under-built relative to the controls, eligible for a granny flat, or sized for subdivision.
under SEPP (Housing) 2021
lots that may support subdivision
show at least one development signal
average uplift signal across the suburb
Own a property in Paynes Crossing?
Check your lot's exact development potential — height, FSR, granny flat, subdivision, dual-occ.
Constraints & risks
100% of lots are bushfire-prone — a bushfire assessment is likely required; also: 2% of lots carry heritage controls; 9.6% of lots intersect a Threatened Ecological Community.
Suburb-wide percentages — your specific lot may have all, some, or none of these.
Mapped flood-prone land
RFS bushfire-prone land mapping
Heritage item or Conservation Area
Within 100 m of EPA-listed site
Mapped TEC vegetation
Coastal hazard mapping
ANEF / aircraft noise
Market
Sales, rent, and yield data drawn from NSW Property Sales Information and rental bond data over the past 24 months.
DA activity
1 development applications for Paynes Crossing addresses were decided by Cessnock City Council over the past 24 months. 1 approved — a 100% approval rate.
ZoneDSS Marketplace
0 businesses serving Paynes Crossing and nearby.
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Paynes Crossing is dominated by the RU2 (Rural Landscape) zone, which covers 130 of 228 lots (57%). The full mix is: RU2 Rural Landscape (57%), RU4 Primary Production Small Lots (18%), C1 Local Centre (15%), C3 Commercial Core (9%), RU3 Forestry (2%).
Most lots in Paynes Crossing aren't eligible for a granny flat under SEPP (Housing) 2021 — typically because the dominant zoning (RU2) doesn't permit it, or lot sizes fall below the minimum. Always verify on the specific address.
The median sale price in Paynes Crossing over the past 24 months is $632,500, across 4 sales. Median unimproved land value is $641,000.
Median weekly rent for a house in Paynes Crossing is $460. Gross rental yield works out to 1.6%.
Cessnock City Council decided 1 development applications for Paynes Crossing addresses over the past 24 months, with 1 approved (100% approval rate). Processing time depends heavily on application complexity, council backlog, and whether the application requires referral to other agencies.
Across Paynes Crossing, 2% with heritage controls, 100.0% bushfire-prone. These are suburb-wide percentages — every lot has its own combination. A planning report on a specific address shows exactly which controls apply.
0 of 228 lots in Paynes Crossing show identifiable development potential — under-developed for the planning controls, eligible for a granny flat, or capable of subdivision. Average rezoning signal score: 3.0 / 100.
Continue exploring
Compare zoning, development potential, and DA activity across other suburbs in Cessnock City Council and nearby postcodes.
Suburb-wide stats are useful for context. For a buy-or-walk decision on a specific lot, you need every control, every constraint, and every clause cited to source.
Run a report — from A$2914-section report · LEP + SEPP + DCP cross-referenced · cited to source
Verify with official sources
Don't take our word for it. Every figure on this page is computed from authoritative New South Wales Government data — and you can verify any of it directly with the source.
Official zoning, height, FSR, and overlay maps for any NSW address. The primary source for everything on this page.
planningportal.nsw.gov.au
Cadastral lot boundaries, aerial imagery, easements, and environmental overlays from NSW Spatial Services.
maps.six.nsw.gov.au
State-listed heritage items and Heritage Conservation Areas. Search by suburb to see what's listed in Paynes Crossing.
hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au
Sites notified to the EPA under the Contaminated Land Management Act. Critical for due diligence on any address.
apps.epa.nsw.gov.au
Rural Fire Service map of bushfire-prone land categories. Triggers BAL assessment requirements for new builds.
rfs.nsw.gov.au
Australian Bureau of Statistics QuickStats for postcode 2325 — population, age, household composition, income, tenure.
abs.gov.au
Zoning, height, FSR, and overlays parsed from the Cessnock City Council Local Environmental Plan, applicable State Environmental Planning Policies, and the Development Control Plan. Property sales drawn from NSW Property Sales Information. DA history aggregated from the NSW Planning Portal. Heritage, flood, bushfire, contaminated land, TEC, sea-level rise, and aircraft noise overlays from the NSW Spatial Services and EPA registers. Population, age, income, and tenure from ABS Census 2021. Aggregated by ZoneDSS · last updated 2026-04-27.
Suburb-wide statistics — your specific lot may vary. Always run a planning report on the actual address before making a decision. How ZoneDSS works →