Every planning control identified for any lot | Every planning rule & overlay cross-referenced in one query | Approval likelihood scored for every control | Conflicts and overrides resolved automatically | Every answer cited to the source clause | Ask planning questions in plain English | Results in under 1 second | Every planning control identified for any lot | Every planning rule & overlay cross-referenced in one query | Approval likelihood scored for every control | Conflicts and overrides resolved automatically | Every answer cited to the source clause | Ask planning questions in plain English | Results in under 1 second |
Suburb planning guide · Updated 2026-04-27

Tea Gardens, NSW 2324 Zoning, development potential & planning controls

Low Density Residential dominant. Median sale $870K over the last 24 months. 83% of decided DAs approved.

Dominant zone
R2
Low Density Residential
Median sale (24m)
$870K
117 sales
DA approval rate
83%
57 of 69 approved
Total lots
1,955
Marketplace

Need a builder, surveyor or planner near Tea Gardens? See local experts ↓

Zoning

What you can build in Tea Gardens

Tea Gardens is dominated by R2Low Density Residential. Land use rules, height, FSR, and permitted developments are set per zone in the Local Environmental Plan and refined by the Development Control Plan.

R2
Dominant
R2 Low Density Residential 64.6%
RU2 Rural Landscape 20.7%
C2 Centre Support 6.2%
R5 Large Lot Residential 4.4%
R3 Medium Density Residential 4.1%
Avg max height
8.3 m

Limit varies by lot — check your address for the exact figure.

Avg max FSR
0.50:1

Floor Space Ratio — total floor area as a multiple of lot area.

Use mix
Residential67%
Commercial5%
Environment6%
Rural19%

Location

Where Tea Gardens sits

Tea Gardens 2324 covers an undefined area within Mid-Coast Council.

Overlays © NSW Government
Council
Mid-Coast Council
Postcode
2324
Area
Total lots
1,955

Drill into any lot in Tea Gardens

Open the interactive map — click any address to see its zone, height, FSR, overlays, and approval likelihood.

Open interactive map

Development potential

Where the upside is in Tea Gardens

We score every lot for development signal — under-built relative to the controls, eligible for a granny flat, or sized for subdivision.

Underdeveloped
1,063

lots with remaining GFA capacity

granny flat eligible
1,287

under SEPP (Housing) 2021

Subdivision potential
1,128

lots that may support subdivision

Site assembly
2

adjoining lots with combined upside

Total dev potential
1,844 lots

show at least one development signal

Rezoning signal score
23.7 /100

average uplift signal across the suburb

Theoretical capacity if every lot built to its limit: 343,874 dwellings, with 33,856,582 m² of unused GFA across the suburb.

Own a property in Tea Gardens?

Check your lot's exact development potential — height, FSR, granny flat, subdivision, dual-occ.

Run a report on your address

Constraints & risks

What could stop you in Tea Gardens

45% of lots are bushfire-prone — a bushfire assessment is likely required; also: 8% of lots carry heritage controls; 10.9% of lots intersect a Threatened Ecological Community; 5.0% of lots are exposed to projected sea-level rise.

Suburb-wide percentages — your specific lot may have all, some, or none of these.

Flood-affected None

Mapped flood-prone land

Bushfire-prone 44.7%

RFS bushfire-prone land mapping

Heritage controls 7.5%

Heritage item or Conservation Area

Near contaminated land None

Within 100 m of EPA-listed site

Threatened ecology (TEC) 10.9%

Mapped TEC vegetation

Sea-level rise exposure 5.0%

Coastal hazard mapping

Flight noise contour None

ANEF / aircraft noise

CENTURY 21 Coastal Properties

Real estate agent · serves Tea Gardens, NSW

Shop 1/71 Marine Dr, Tea Gardens NSW 2324

View profile

Market

Tea Gardens property market

Sales, rent, and yield data drawn from NSW Property Sales Information and rental bond data over the past 24 months.

Median sale price (24m)
$870,000
117 sales · land value $445K
Median rent (house)
$555 / wk
Houses
Gross rental yield
2.7%
House, gross of costs

DA activity

Development applications in Tea Gardens

69 development applications for Tea Gardens addresses were decided by Mid-Coast Council over the past 24 months. 57 approved — a 83% approval rate. Average processing time: 53 days.

83%
Approved
DAs lodged (24m)
69
Approved
57
New dwelling DAs
58
Building approvals (12m)
19

Demographics & lifestyle

Who lives in Tea Gardens

ABS Census 2021 population data combined with lot-level amenity, healthcare, lifestyle, and crime indices.

Green cover
48%
Amenity score
80.5 /100

Walkable amenity within 1 km

Healthcare access
80.5 /100

GP / hospital / pharmacy proximity

Lifestyle score
80.9 /100

Cafés, parks, schools, transport

FAQs

Common questions about Tea Gardens

What's the zoning in Tea Gardens 2324?

Tea Gardens is dominated by the R2 (Low Density Residential) zone, which covers 1,161 of 1,955 lots (65%). The full mix is: R2 Low Density Residential (65%), RU2 Rural Landscape (21%), C2 Centre Support (6%), R5 Large Lot Residential (4%), R3 Medium Density Residential (4%).

What's the height limit and FSR in Tea Gardens?

Across Tea Gardens, the average maximum building height is 8.3 m and the average maximum Floor Space Ratio (FSR) is 0.50:1. Individual lots can vary materially — height and FSR are set per zone in the Local Environmental Plan (LEP) and can be modified by overlays. For an exact figure on a specific address, generate a planning report.

Can I build a granny flat in Tea Gardens?

Yes — 1,287 lots in Tea Gardens appear eligible for a granny flat under SEPP (Housing) 2021, based on lot size, zoning, and frontage. Eligibility is lot-specific: get a planning report on your address to confirm.

What's the median property price in Tea Gardens?

The median sale price in Tea Gardens over the past 24 months is $870,000, across 117 sales. Median unimproved land value is $445,000.

What's the median rent in Tea Gardens?

Median weekly rent for a house in Tea Gardens is $555. Gross rental yield works out to 2.7%.

What's the development application approval rate in Mid-Coast Council?

Mid-Coast Council decided 69 development applications for Tea Gardens addresses over the past 24 months, with 57 approved (83% approval rate). Average processing time is 53 days. Processing time depends heavily on application complexity, council backlog, and whether the application requires referral to other agencies.

What planning constraints apply in Tea Gardens?

Across Tea Gardens, 8% with heritage controls, 44.7% 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.

What's the development potential of Tea Gardens?

1,844 of 1,955 lots in Tea Gardens show identifiable development potential — under-developed for the planning controls, eligible for a granny flat, or capable of subdivision. Average rezoning signal score: 23.7 / 100.

Myall Coast Realty Pty Ltd

Real estate agent · serves Tea Gardens, NSW

189 Myall St, Tea Gardens NSW 2324

View profile

Get a planning report for any address in Tea Gardens

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$29

14-section report · LEP + SEPP + DCP cross-referenced · cited to source

Methodology & sources

Zoning, height, FSR, and overlays parsed from the Mid-Coast 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 →