Provides for a range of retail, business and community uses that serve the needs of people who live in, work in or visit the local area.

Property-specific answer

Want this answered for your nominated property?

General guides only get you so far. Choose the path that fits what you need.

Free AI Chat

Free
  • Ask any general planning question
  • Instant, no signup, no cost
  • Answers from general planning knowledge — won't know your specific zone, overlays or restrictions
Recommended

AI Planning Report

$39
  • Full zone & overlay analysis for your nominated property
  • Permit triggers, development potential and feasibility
  • Unlimited AI follow-up answered using your property's actual controls
Get AI Planning Report — $39

Tip: combine your planning report with a Title Search (from $30) to surface any covenants, easements or Section 173 agreements that might affect your proposal.

Key Controls and Considerations

  • Replaces former B1 Neighbourhood Centre and B2 Local Centre in many LEPs
  • Shop-top housing and mixed-use development typically permitted
  • Active street frontages encouraged
  • Sits at the local end of the centre hierarchy

How NSW zones work in practice

The Standard Instrument LEP gives each zone a set of objectives and a Land Use Table that lists uses as permitted without consent, permitted with consent (DA required), or prohibited. Each council's LEP also sets minimum lot size, height of buildings, and floor space ratio (FSR) on standard maps.

Zone controls are only one layer. Your project must also comply with relevant SEPPs and LEP overlays, the council's DCP, and any title restrictions (covenants, easements, 88B Instruments).

What does this zone mean for your specific property?

Use the free NSW permit checker for a project-specific answer, or speak to a NSW planner for complex matters.

For DAs, modifications or appeals, talk to our NSW partner firm.

Ask a planning question

Free AI assistant — instant answers