{{ propApi.searchIcon }}
{{ propApi.closeIcon }}
Our industry
Our industry $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
Housing industry insights Economics Insights Data & forecasts Tailored research & analysis Advocacy & policy Advocacy Policy priorities Position statements Submissions News & inspiration Industry news Member alerts Media releases HOUSING Online
Business support
Business support $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
For your business Contracts Online Safety systems & solutions Advertise jobs HIA SafeScan Member perks Toyota vehicles The Good Guys Commercial Ampol fuel savings See all Industry insurance HIA Insurance Services Construction works insurance Home warranty insurance Tradies & tool insurance Apprentices Why host a HIA apprentice? Hire an apprentice Support & guidance Contracts & compliance support Building & planning services
Resources & advice
Resources & advice $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
Building it right Building codes National Construction Code Australian standards Getting it right on site See all Building materials & products Concrete, bricks & walls Getting products approved Use the right products for the job See all Managing your business Dealing with contracts Handling disputes Managing your employees See all Managing your safety Safety rules Working with silica See all Building your business Growing your business Communication for your business See all Other subjects Getting approval to build Sustainable homes See all
Careers & learning
Careers & learning $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
A rewarding career Become an apprentice Apprenticeships on offer How do I apply? Frequently asked questions Study with us Find a course to suit you Qualification courses Learning on demand Professional development courses A job in the industry Get your builder's licence Continuing Professional Development (CPD) Further your career
HIA community
HIA community $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
Join HIA Sign me up How do I become a member? What's in it for me? Mates rates Our podcasts Made To Build Built Different HIA Building Australia Building the Hunter Our initiatives HIA Building Women GreenSmart Kitchen, bathroom & design hub Get involved Become an award judge Join a committee Partner with us Support for you Charitable Foundation Mental health program Get to know us Our members Our people
Awards & events
Awards & events $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
Awards Awards program People & Business Awards GreenSmart Australian Housing Awards Awards winners Regional Award winners Australian Housing Award winners 2026 Australian Home of the Year Enter online Industry events Events in the next month Economic outlook National Conference Events calendar
HIA shop
HIA shop $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
Most popular products National Construction Code Vol 1 & 2 Waterproofing wet areas AS 3740:2021 HIA Guide to Waterproofing HIA Guide to NCC Livable Housing Provisions Top categories Building codes & standards Contracts & documents Guides & manuals Safety products Signage For your business Contracts Online Digital Australian Standards Digital Resource Library Forecasts & data
About Contact Newsroom
$vuetify.icons.faTimes
$vuetify.icons.faMapMarker Set my location Use the field below to update your location
Address
Change location
{{propApi.title}}
{{propApi.text}} {{region}} Change location
{{propApi.title}}
{{propApi.successMessage}} {{region}} Change location

$vuetify.icons.faPhone1300 650 620

Planning reform will make or break Australia's housing ambition

Planning reform will make or break Australia's housing ambition

{{ tag.label }} {{ tag.label }} $vuetify.icons.faTimes
With complex planning systems suppressing housing supply and inflating costs, reform is urgently needed. HOUSING investigates where we are winning and losing in the journey to achieving the NHA targets.

Australia has clearly articulated housing targets and an agreed framework for planning reform. Yet the translation of that framework into practical, on-the-ground outcomes remains uneven and uncertain.

Under the National Housing Accord (NHA), governments have committed to delivering 1.2 million new homes over five years. But as the HIA Planning Blueprint Scorecard – 2026 Update makes clear, planning systems across the country remain a critical constraint on turning that ambition into the homes Australians need.

Housing shortages are no longer an abstract policy problem, and all levels now agree that increasing supply is the solution. While many factors influence housing delivery, including labour availability, construction capacity, materials and building rules, planning is the system-defining factor. Planning systems determine whether land is suitable for housing, what yield is permitted, how designs are assessed and how long projects sit in approval queues. Planning reform is not peripheral to the housing debate; it is the key battleground.

HIA members have access to the new HIA Planning Blueprint Scorecard – 2026 Update.
The Scorecard shows that meaningful reform is achievable.

From commitment to capability

National Cabinet took an important step in August 2023 by endorsing the 10 point National Planning Reform Blueprint. It recognised what industry has long understood: fragmented, slow and overly complex planning systems are actively suppressing housing supply and pushing up costs.

HIA’s Planning Blueprint Scorecard was established to test whether that commitment is being matched by action. The 2026 update paints a mixed picture. Some jurisdictions are embracing reform with genuine intent and momentum. Others remain stuck in business-as-usual approaches, despite mounting evidence that existing systems are failing to deliver.

The consequences are already clear. In 2024–25 alone, housing completions were almost 67,000 dwellings short of the annual target implied by the NHA. That shortfall has compounded the task ahead, meaning Australia must now deliver around 260,000 new homes per year nationally to meet the five year target.

Bold reform is possible

The Scorecard shows that meaningful reform is achievable. New South Wales stands out as the most ambitious reformer. State-led rezonings, expanded complying development pathways, pre-endorsed design pattern books and the creation of a development coordination authority all signal a serious attempt to tackle delays across the housing pipeline. While it remains early days, these reforms represent the most substantial overhaul of the NSW planning system in decades.

Western Australia and South Australia continue to perform strongly, recording the highest overall planning scores for 2026. Both states have combined streamlined approval frameworks with consistent design codes and major land-release programs. South Australia’s Housing Roadmap, supported by a modern, digital planning system and land supply dashboard, demonstrates how cutting red tape and planning for long-term supply can work together.

Victoria is beginning to gain momentum through deemed-to-comply standards for townhouses and low rise housing and reforms that reduce the need for planning permits for single dwellings. However, the benefits of these reforms risk being undermined by additional taxes and charges that threaten the commercial viability of new housing projects.

Where reform is stalling

Queensland again records one of the lowest scores. Despite clear recommendations from the independent Queensland Productivity Commission, meaningful statewide planning reform has stalled. The lack of standardisation across 77 local government planning schemes continues to impose unnecessary cost, delay and complexity, a burden ultimately borne by Queensland’s homebuyers and renters.

Tasmania and the Northern Territory also require significant reform to unlock housing supply. Both face weak strategic planning frameworks, slow approvals and limited delivery of shovel ready land. Without stronger alignment between long-term housing strategies and statutory planning controls, housing pipelines in these jurisdictions will remain constrained.

The HIA Scorecard makes clear that faster decisions do not mean lower standards.
It also makes clear that faster decisions do not mean lower standards.

Red tape is a bigger problem than resources

Across jurisdictions, the causes of delay are strikingly similar. Overlapping rules, subjective decision-making, repeated requests for additional information and inconsistent local interpretations add time, cost and uncertainty to projects of all scales.

In some jurisdictions, HIA members report waiting six to nine months for planning approval on a simple house or granny flat, in many cases spending more time waiting for paperwork than actually building onsite. These timeframes are fundamentally incompatible with the scale of housing delivery now required.

The HIA Scorecard makes clear that faster decisions do not mean lower standards. They require clearer rules, better alignment between planning and building systems, and broader use of streamlined, code based assessment pathways that prioritise low risk housing development.

All housing types must be enabled

There is no single solution to Australia’s housing crisis. Focusing narrowly on one housing type or location will not deliver the volume or diversity required.

Australia needs more homes delivered up, out and in-between, including more greenfield estates, high-rise apartments and smaller-scale infill development such as townhouses, duplexes, terraces and secondary dwellings. Planning systems must facilitate all forms of housing, in appropriate locations, with infrastructure delivered in step.

Restrictive zoning, out-dated density controls and excessive overlays continue to limit housing choice, particularly in well-located urban areas. In some capital cities, up to 80 per cent of residential land is locked into low density zoning, severely constraining supply. Unlocking this land is essential to restoring affordability.

A call for leadership and accountability

Amid an overcrowded landscape of housing announcements, the HIA Planning Blueprint Scorecard is designed to improve transparency and accountability. It shows where reform is occurring, where it is stalling and where urgent change is needed to empower the building industry to deliver more homes.

Disappointingly, no jurisdiction scores higher than three out of five in the 2026 assessment. This underlines how much work remains. HIA is calling for stronger Commonwealth leadership to support states and territories with best-practice tools, including digital planning portals, land-supply dashboards, design pattern books and emerging AI-assisted assessment technologies, that can be adopted nationally to accelerate housing delivery.

The housing crisis will not be solved by targets alone. It will be solved when planning systems shift from being gatekeepers to enablers of supply. The message from the 2026 Scorecard is clear: reform is possible, but only if governments act decisively and consistently. Australia cannot afford to wait.

You might also like:

View all $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
In Focus Development Approval (DA) Low rise construction Strategic planning
Planning reform will make or break Australia's housing ambition
With complex planning systems suppressing housing supply and inflating costs, reform is urgently needed. HOUSING investigates where we are winning and losing in the journey to achieving the NHA targets.
Apr 26
2 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
Building developments In Focus Small business Strategic planning
Small builders, big contribution
Onerous reporting obligations, regulatory changes and tight margins: the 2026 HIA Small Business Conditions Survey reveals the pressures facing the small business operators who build the majority of Australia’s new homes.
Apr 26
4 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
Environment Energy efficiency In Focus Risk management
From risk to resilience
As Australia races to meet housing demand, builders face a critical task – designing and constructing homes that withstand extreme weather, protect communities and remain affordable for future generations.
Feb 26
2 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
Apprentice Education Plumbing In Focus
Best grade for trades
With a shortage of skilled trades and a considerable housing target, major changes need to take place, including a return to technical colleges.
Feb 26
3 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
In Focus Residential Construction National Construction Code (NCC)
Building momentum
Australia’s residential building industry faced major challenges this year, but smart reforms and industry collaboration are paving the way for meaningful progress and lasting change.
Dec 25
2 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
HIA members In Focus Standards Regulations
Working hard for members 2025
HIA – the voice of the residential building industry – continues to provide strong advocacy and quality services. Here’s how the Association has supported our industry throughout 2025.
Dec 25
2 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
In Focus National Construction Code (NCC) Regulations Budget
In the round
With housing roundtables now complete, was it a three-day talk fest or are real productivity and economic reforms unearthed?
Nov 25
2 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
Budget In Focus Renovations Small business
Outlook: Sunny with a chance of renovations
After several successive interest rate cuts helping to relieve pressure on household finances, the industry finally appears to be positively geared towards growth for 2026.
Oct 25
2 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
In Focus GreenSmart Sustainability Standards
The future needs resilience
From game-changing eco-builds to bold policy calls, Australia’s housing future is being reimagined through innovation, collaboration and fearless ideas — all on full display at HIA’s recent Future Homes Forum in Sydney.
Oct 25
3 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
In Focus Affordable Construction Election
Relief for first home buyers
The federal government’s decision to remove the requirement for first home buyers to purchase lenders mortgage insurance will ultimately lower rents and house prices.
Oct 25
3 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
Business structure Building developments Regulations In Focus
Taking the lead
Meet HIA’s new National President, Ian Hazan.
Sep 25
2 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight
Business plans Financial planning In Focus Tax
Negative gearing and CGT: Sorting facts from fiction
Calls to change negative gearing and capital gains tax are gaining momentum, but many of the arguments driving this debate don’t stack up when tested against industry data and real market behaviour.
Sep 25
4 mins
Read full article $vuetify.icons.faArrowRight