The ACT Planning Directorate has confirmed that amendments to the Territory Plan, formally lodged in late June 2026, will expand medium-density zoning across 14 established suburbs — a shift that developers and residents' groups say is the most significant rewrite of Canberra's planning framework in over a decade. The changes take effect from 1 September 2026.
The timing matters. Canberra's median house price is sitting around $835,000 and rental vacancy rates remain stubbornly below one per cent across most inner suburbs. The government has been under sustained pressure from housing advocates and the development industry to accelerate supply. These amendments are the practical response — but they come bundled with stricter design quality requirements that have put some smaller builders on notice.
What the New Zones Actually Allow
Under the revised Territory Plan, blocks zoned RZ2 in suburbs including Belconnen, Charnwood and parts of Tuggeranong will now permit three-storey townhouse developments without a merit track assessment, cutting the approval timeline by up to four months. Previously, anything above two storeys in those areas triggered a full development application review by the ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal if a neighbour objected.
Gungahlin — already the ACT's fastest-growing district with more than 80,000 residents — gets a different treatment. Sections of Amaroo and Nicholls near the Gungahlin Town Centre have been reclassified to RZ3, effectively greenlighting four and five-storey apartment blocks on arterial roads. The Directorate has flagged Hibberson Street as a priority corridor for higher-density approvals over the next 18 months.
But the density concessions come with conditions that have sharpened debate among developers. The new Design Quality Standards — a 47-page document released alongside the Territory Plan amendments — mandate minimum ceiling heights of 2.7 metres in new units, specific solar access requirements, and a requirement for at least eight per cent of any development site's footprint to be retained as deep-root planting. For projects under 10 units, that last provision alone is adding an estimated $15,000 to $30,000 per project according to the Housing Industry Association's ACT division.
Smaller Builders Squeezed, Bigger Players Positioned
The design requirements are proving divisive. Large developers with existing land holdings near Northbourne Avenue and around the Woden Town Centre have largely welcomed the certainty the new framework provides. The revised planning code also fast-tracks pre-DA consultation through the new Planning Bureau — a single-entry-point agency launched in March 2026 — which is intended to cut the average assessment time from 11 months to under seven months for complying developments.
Smaller operators, many of them boutique builders working in suburbs like Kaleen and Florey, argue the design compliance costs are disproportionate. The HIA's July 2026 survey of 60 ACT builders found 38 per cent were reconsidering projects in the sub-$2 million range because the new standards had eroded margins below viable thresholds. Critics say the result could be fewer two and three-bedroom townhouses — the exact dwelling type first-home buyers and downsizers need most.
The ACT Greens have pushed for mandatory inclusionary zoning — requiring 15 per cent of units in any development above eight dwellings to be sold at below-market rates — to be attached to the density uplifts. That proposal has been deferred to a separate policy review due to report by December 2026. Whether it lands before the next ACT election, scheduled for late 2027, will shape how much of the new density pipeline actually translates into affordable supply.
For buyers and investors watching the calendar, the September start date creates a narrow window. Development applications lodged under the current Territory Plan before 1 September will be assessed under the existing rules — no deep-root planting mandate, no 2.7-metre ceiling requirement. Conveyancers and planning consultants in the city are already reporting a spike in pre-lodgement inquiries as developers scramble to beat the changeover date.