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 2026-06-08

Tyers, VIC 3844 Zoning, development potential & planning controls

Rural Living Zone dominant. 541 lots resolved to zone, overlays and development potential.

Dominant zone
RLZ
Rural Living Zone
Median rent (house)
$435
per week
small second dwelling eligible
160
lots
Total lots
541
41.9 km²

Zoning

What you can build in Tyers

Tyers is dominated by RLZRural Living Zone. Land use, building height, overlays, and permitted development are set per zone in the planning scheme under the Victorian Planning Provisions, with ResCode governing residential design.

RLZ
Dominant
RLZ Rural Living Zone 40.3%
FZ Farming Zone 23.8%
TZ Township Zone 15.3%
LDRZ Low Density Residential Zone 15.0%
PCRZ Public Conservation and Resource Zone 2.0%
TRZ Transport Zone 1.5%
PPRZ Public Park and Recreation Zone 0.9%
RCZ Rural Conservation Zone 0.7%
PUZ Public Use Zone 0.2%
SUZ Special Use Zone 0.2%
Avg max height
7.0 m

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

Theoretical dwellings
1,331

Modelled dwelling capacity if every lot built to its zone controls.

Use mix
Residential56%
Environment3%
Rural24%

Location

Where Tyers sits

Tyers 3844 covers 41.9 km² within Latrobe.

Overlays © NSW Government
Council
Latrobe
Postcode
3844
Area
41.88 km²
Total lots
541

Drill into any lot in Tyers

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 Tyers

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

small second dwelling eligible
160

under the VPP small second dwelling provisions (Clause 52.18 / 54)

Subdivision potential
151

lots that may support subdivision

Total dev potential
160 lots

show at least one development signal

Rezoning signal score
9.0 /100

average uplift signal across the suburb

Own a property in Tyers?

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 Tyers

6% of lots are in mapped flood zones — material for any development; also: 45% of lots are bushfire-prone — a bushfire assessment is likely required; 0% of lots carry a Heritage Overlay.

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

Flood / inundation overlay 6.1%

LSIO / Floodway overlay

Bushfire management overlay 45.3%

BMO — BAL assessment triggered

Heritage Overlay 0.4%

HO — controls on demolition & works

Potentially contaminated None

Near a recorded contaminated site

Market

Tyers property market

Rent and market context from state rental bond and demographic data.

Median rent (house)
$435 / wk
Houses

Sale-price history isn't yet loaded for this suburb — rent and planning data are shown where available.

0

FAQs

Common questions about Tyers

What's the zoning in Tyers 3844?

Tyers is dominated by the RLZ (Rural Living Zone) zone, which covers 218 of 541 lots (40%). The full mix is: RLZ Rural Living Zone (40%), FZ Farming Zone (24%), TZ Township Zone (15%), LDRZ Low Density Residential Zone (15%), PCRZ Public Conservation and Resource Zone (2%), TRZ Transport Zone (2%), PPRZ Public Park and Recreation Zone (1%), RCZ Rural Conservation Zone (1%), PUZ Public Use Zone (0%), SUZ Special Use Zone (0%).

What's the building height limit in Tyers?

Across Tyers, the average maximum building height is 7.0 m. Height is set per zone in the planning scheme (Victorian Planning Provisions) and can be varied by overlays and schedules. For the exact control on a specific address, generate a planning report.

Can I build a small second dwelling in Tyers?

Yes — 160 lots in Tyers appear eligible for a small second dwelling under the VPP small second dwelling provisions (Clause 52.18 / 54), based on lot size, zoning, and frontage. Eligibility is lot-specific: get a planning report on your address to confirm.

What's the median rent in Tyers?

Median weekly rent for a house in Tyers is $435.

What planning constraints apply in Tyers?

Across Tyers, 6.1% flood-affected, 0% with heritage controls, 45.3% 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 Tyers?

160 of 541 lots in Tyers show identifiable development potential — under-developed for the planning controls, eligible for a small second dwelling, or capable of subdivision. Average rezoning signal score: 9.0 / 100.

Get a planning report for any address in Tyers

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 · planning scheme + overlays cross-referenced · cited to source

Methodology & sources

Zoning, height, overlays and development potential computed from the Latrobeplanning scheme (Victorian Planning Provisions) and lot-level cadastre (541 lots). Hazard overlays, demographics and rent drawn from Victorian Planning Provisions & planning schemes, Victorian Building Authority / building permit activity, Victoria in Future, and ABS Census 2021. Aggregated by ZoneDSS · last updated 2026-06-08.

Suburb-wide statistics — your specific lot may vary. Always run a planning report on the actual address before making a decision. How ZoneDSS works →