19/08/2025
đ§âđ¤âđ§ Worried About Neighbour Objections on Your Planning Permit?
Hereâs how to reduce the risk before you lodge.
The truth isâyou can tick every planning boxâŚ
âŚand still find yourself stalled because a neighbour decides to object.
Not because your design is flawed.
But because one objection can trigger delays, more reports, or even end up at VCAT.
đĄď¸ Think of it as Risk Control
You canât stop neighbours from speaking up.
But you can limit the chance that their concerns throw your project off course.
The aim isnât to please everyone.
Itâs to:
⢠Show youâve acted reasonably
⢠Address potential issues upfront
⢠Give Council confidence youâve thought about amenity impacts
đ Practical Steps You Can Take:
1. Spot the likely objectors
Check which homes have key windows, yards, or living areas close to your boundaries.
2. Adjust designs to avoid red flags
Is there potential for overshadowing, privacy issues, or traffic concerns?
If you can reduce those without hurting the projectâdo it.
3. Create a simple neighbour info pack
This could include:
⢠Overshadowing diagrams
⢠Privacy treatments
⢠Tree protection notes
Keep it briefâ1â2 visuals plus a short summary works well.
4. Reach out, but with strategy
No need to over-promise. Just let them know whatâs being proposed and that youâve considered their amenity.
â ď¸ A Few Realities to Keep in Mind:
⢠Even compliant designs can attract objectionsâbut their impact is limited.
⢠If youâre asking for variations, objections can carry more weightâespecially when tied to real amenity loss.
⢠Neighbour support isnât a guarantee of approvalâbut it certainly helps smooth the process.
đ A Good Architectâs Role
Theyâll help identify the riskiest areas before submission, so you can prepare.
If objections seem likely, theyâll tweak the design or strengthen the supporting documents. Letâs chat. Weâll help you read the site and choose the most effective path forward.