Zoning
Council rules that classify land into zones and control what activities and types of buildings are allowed in each area.
What is a Zoning?
Zoning is the primary tool councils use to manage land use across their districts. Every piece of land in New Zealand is assigned a zone under the local district plan (or unitary plan in Auckland). The zone determines what you can build, how big it can be, and what activities you can carry out on the site.
Common residential zones include Single House, Mixed Housing Suburban, Mixed Housing Urban, and Terrace Housing and Apartment Buildings โ each with progressively more permissive building rules. There are also zones for business, industrial, rural, and special purposes.
Zoning rules control things like building height, site coverage (how much of the land your buildings can cover), setbacks from boundaries, height in relation to boundary (how close to a neighbour's boundary you can build high), and the number of dwellings permitted on a site.
Zoning can change over time as councils update their district plans. A property zoned for single houses today could be rezoned to allow higher density in the future โ which may increase land value but also change the character of the neighbourhood.
Why It Matters for Due Diligence
Zoning determines the development potential of your property, which directly affects its value and what you can do with it. Check the zoning before buying to confirm it supports your intended use โ whether that's living in a quiet residential area, running a home business, or developing the site for multiple dwellings.
Also check the zoning of surrounding properties. If the land next door is zoned for high-density development, your quiet street may not stay quiet. Proposed plan changes can signal upcoming rezoning that could affect your property.
How to Check
Check your council's online planning maps (GIS viewer) โ every council has one. Enter the property address to see the current zoning and any overlays. The LIM report also states the property's zoning. For Auckland, use the Auckland Council GeoMaps tool to check the Auckland Unitary Plan zoning.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I do anything that the zoning doesn't allow?
Potentially, but you'll need resource consent. The ease of getting consent depends on how much your proposal deviates from the zone rules. Minor infringements are common and often approved. Major departures from the zone's intent are much harder to get approved and may face opposition from neighbours.
How do I find out if the zoning is going to change?
Check your council's website for any proposed plan changes or plan reviews. Councils must publicly notify proposed changes and allow submissions. Your council's forward planning team can also provide information on upcoming reviews.
Related Terms
District Plan
GlossaryThe local council's rulebook that sets out how land in the district can be used, developed, and subdivided.
Unitary Plan
GlossaryAuckland's combined planning document that merges the functions of a district plan and regional plan into a single set of rules for all land and resource use.
Resource Consent
GlossaryPermission from the local council to carry out an activity that affects the environment, required under the Resource Management Act 1991.
LIM Report
GlossaryA Land Information Memorandum โ an official council report summarising everything the council knows about a property.
Medium Density Residential Standards (MDRS)
GlossaryNational building standards that enable up to three homes of up to three storeys on most residential sites in New Zealand's major urban areas.
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