Main laws

South Australia Act

Planning, Development and Infrastructure Act 2016 (SA)

The PDI Act affects South Australian businesses checking development approval, the Planning and Design Code, fitouts and conditions.

In forceSouth AustraliaPlain-English guide4 practical checks

Plain-English explainers, not legal advice. Use the linked official source for section-level detail, and get advice for your situation.

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Quick read

  • The Planning, Development and Infrastructure Act 2016 is South Australia's core planning and development statute.
  • For small businesses, it is important when choosing premises, checking the Planning and Design Code, applying for development approval, managing building rules, dealing with...

Likely relevant if

  • Businesses opening, moving or fitting out premises in South Australia
  • Cafes, clinics, gyms, salons, childcare centres, retailers, warehouses, workshops and venues checking permitted use
  • Landlords, franchisees, developers and buyers doing premises due diligence

Check first

  • Check whether the proposed use, works, signage or activity needs development approval, a planning permit or another local approval.
  • Review zoning, overlays, planning scheme controls, existing consent conditions and building classification before committing to premises.
  • Coordinate planning, building, accessibility, fire-safety, liquor, food, environment and strata approvals where more than one regime applies.

Before you spend money

Planning law is where many premises projects go wrong. A business finds a site, negotiates rent, orders designs and then discovers the use, works, signage, parking, access, heritage or neighbourhood impact needs approval.

The practical move is to check the approval pathway before the commercial commitment becomes hard to unwind. That means reading the lease, planning controls, council requirements, building rules and any existing conditions together.

Key takeaways

  • Check permitted use before signing a lease or buying a site.
  • Build approval timing into the launch budget and contract conditions.
  • Keep planning, building, accessibility and fire-safety checks connected.

Approval checks

Key points

  • Confirm the zoning, permitted use and whether a development approval or planning permit is needed.
  • Check whether the works are exempt, complying, accepted, code assessable or merit assessable under the local system.
  • Review building classification, accessibility, fire-safety, parking, waste, noise, heritage and signage requirements.
  • Ask whether existing approvals or conditions already restrict hours, seating, deliveries, alcohol, outdoor use or emissions.
  • Escalate notices, stop-work issues or information requests from PlanSA, State Planning Commission, councils, accredited professionals and South Australian courts quickly.

Common traps

Key points

  • The agent says the premises is suitable, but no one checks the approved use.
  • The fitout contract starts before planning, building or strata approvals are lined up.
  • A business inherits old approval conditions without realising they control hours, seats, waste, parking or signage.
  • Outdoor dining, signs, exhaust, accessibility or fire-safety work is treated as minor until council or a certifier disagrees.

Plain-English glossary

Development approval or planning permit
A permission that may be required before land can be used, developed, built on, altered or subdivided.
Planning scheme or code
The local planning rules that can control use, height, design, parking, heritage, environmental impacts, signage and assessment pathways.
Conditions
Requirements attached to an approval, such as hours, seating, noise, waste, access, signage, works or ongoing reporting obligations.

Common questions

Should I check this before signing a lease?

Yes. A lease can say the premises may be used for a business, but planning approval, zoning, building classification, accessibility, fire-safety and local conditions may still limit what can actually open there.

Is this just for developers?

No. Planning laws can affect ordinary business decisions like changing use, installing signage, fitting out a shop, using outdoor space, adding seats, changing hours, parking, waste areas and heritage work.

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