Enter a South Australian address. We match it against PlanSA's official Planning and Design Code zone and overlay polygons — telling you the zone's intent, your subdivision rights, and every active overlay that affects the property (heritage, bushfire, flooding, road widening, aircraft noise, native vegetation and more).
Enter a SA address to see its zone, subdivision rights, and every active planning constraint
The zone (e.g. Suburban Neighbourhood Zone) sets the high-level land use rules. The Technical and Numerical Variation (TNV) is the locality-specific number — minimum site area, frontage, setback — that overrides any zone-level default. For most SA residential zones the TNV is the rule that actually matters; only General Neighbourhood Zone has zone-level baseline numbers.
PlanSA, the SA Government's official planning portal. We pull the published polygon data (zones, overlays, TNVs) and run point-in-polygon lookups against it locally in your browser.
Easements (sewer mains, drainage, rights-of-way) live on the property's Certificate of Title, not in PlanSA's open data. The Form 1 vendor disclosure must list them — use our Form 1 Decoder to check what's been disclosed.
The tool tells you what the SA Planning and Design Code says. Whether a subdivision will be approved depends on the council's assessment of the specific block — always confirm with the council planner before lodging.
Nominatim sometimes geocodes addresses to a slightly wrong point (e.g. the middle of a long road). Try a nearby address, or verify on SAPPA (sappa.plan.sa.gov.au).