Adelaide Guide · June 2026

Subdivisions in Adelaide 2026: The Complete SA Guide

Everything South Australian homeowners and investors need to know about subdividing land in Adelaide — eligibility, costs, approvals, and the best suburbs for subdivision opportunity in 2026.

$1M+
Adelaide median house price (2026)
12.1%
Annual property price growth
$40–65K
Typical all-in subdivision cost
Contents
  1. Overview
  2. What Is Land Subdivision?
  3. Is My Property Eligible?
  4. The Approval Process
  5. Costs in 2026
  6. Recent Planning Reforms
  7. Hot Suburbs for Subdivision
  8. Common Pitfalls
  9. Working with Professionals
  10. Key Resources

Overview

Subdividing land in Adelaide remains one of the most accessible and rewarding property strategies available to South Australian homeowners and investors. With Adelaide's median house price surpassing $1 million in 2026 and annual growth running at 12.1%, splitting a block can unlock substantial equity — but navigating the rules, costs, and approvals process requires careful planning.

What this guide covers: eligibility and zoning under the PlanSA Planning and Design Code, the step-by-step approvals process, 2025–26 costs including SA Water augmentation fees, the latest reforms under the Greater Adelaide Regional Plan, and the best suburbs to target right now.

What Is Land Subdivision?

Land subdivision (called land division in South Australia) is the process of dividing one parcel of land into two or more separately titled allotments. The most common scenario is a standard one-into-two split — retaining the front house and creating a rear allotment for sale or development. More ambitious projects can divide a block into three or more lots, subject to council approval.

Is My Property Eligible?

Minimum Land Size

The single biggest eligibility factor is block size. As a general rule, a site needs to be at least 700 square metres to be considered for a standard two-lot subdivision in the Adelaide metropolitan area. The precise minimum lot size for each new allotment depends on zoning:

ZoneMin. New Lot SizeNotes
Residential (General)300 m²Most common suburban zone
Suburban Neighbourhood250–350 m²Varies by council
Urban CorridorSmaller permittedEspecially near transit routes
Hills Face / Rural FringeSeveral hectaresStrict restrictions apply

Always verify your zone in the PlanSA Planning and Design Code before committing to anything.

Other Key Eligibility Factors

The Approval Process Step by Step

South Australia's planning system — modernised in 2021 under the Planning, Development and Infrastructure Act 2016 — operates through PlanSA and the ePlanning portal.

01

Pre-Application Research

Use the PlanSA portal to check your property's zone, overlays, and deemed-to-satisfy (DTS) provisions before spending money on plans. A pre-application meeting with a surveyor or planner is money well spent.

02

Engage a Licensed Surveyor

A licensed surveyor must prepare the plan of division — mandatory under the Real Property Act 1886. They design lot boundaries, road/access arrangements, and easements.

03

Lodge the Development Application

The DA is lodged through the ePlanning portal and assessed by either the relevant local council or the State Commission Assessment Panel (SCAP) for more complex divisions.

04

Assessment and Referrals

Assessed against the Planning and Design Code; may be referred to SA Water, SAPN, or other agencies. Qualifying infill applications receive a guaranteed 5-business-day consent under recent planning reforms.

05

Planning Consent and Conditions

If approved, planning consent is issued with conditions (stormwater, kerbing, crossover, trees, etc.). All conditions must be satisfied before the final certificate is issued.

06

Land Division Certificate and New Titles

Once conditions are met and SA Water approvals are in place, the Surveyor-General issues a Land Division Certificate. The surveyor lodges the deposited plan at the Lands Titles Office and new Certificates of Title are created.

Costs: What to Budget in 2026

A standard one-into-two subdivision in metropolitan Adelaide typically costs $30,000–$34,000 in professional fees and government charges alone — before any civil works on site.

Professional Fees

ServiceTypical Cost
Licensed surveyor (plan, lodgement, pegging)$8,000 – $14,000
Town planner / planning consultant$1,500 – $4,000
Conveyancer / solicitor (new titles)$1,500 – $3,000

Government and Authority Fees (2025–26)

ChargeAmount
Planning portal lodgement fee~$600 – $1,500
Land Division Certificate fee~$600 – $900
Open Space Contribution (state levy)~$3,000 – $6,000
SA Water augmentation — infill (water + wastewater)$5,120 per additional connection
SA Water augmentation — greenfield$10,240 per new allotment
LTO title registration~$300 – $600

Civil and Infrastructure Works

Work ItemTypical Cost
Stormwater detention tank$5,000 – $15,000
New crossover / driveway$3,000 – $8,000
Kerbing and footpath works$2,000 – $6,000
Underground power connection$2,000 – $5,000
💡
All-in budget: For a simple one-into-two split (fees + civil works), budget $40,000–$65,000. Complex sites with trees, unusual access, or stormwater overlays can significantly exceed this. Always get a civil contractor to assess before committing.

Recent Planning Reforms

Greater Adelaide Regional Plan (2025)

The SA Planning Commission's updated 30-year framework includes:

5-Day Fast-Track Approvals

Residential infill subdivisions that satisfy deemed-to-satisfy criteria now receive planning consent within 5 business days, and assessment can be performed by a private accredited certifier rather than council.

⚠️
Watch out: The 5-day approval only applies where every deemed-to-satisfy provision is met. Any discretionary element reverts to standard timeframes, which can take weeks or months.

Hot Suburbs for Subdivision in 2026

Salisbury Elizabeth South Angle Vale Munno Para Andrews Farm Paralowie Prospect Klemzig Nailsworth Mitcham Modbury Tea Tree Gully Morphett Vale Reynella Osborne Semaphore Park

The northern corridor — Salisbury through to Angle Vale — is driven by the $15.4B North-South Corridor motorway and the $30B AUKUS submarine yard at Osborne. Inner ring suburbs like Prospect, Klemzig, and Nailsworth are tipped for major capital growth in 2026. The southern corridor (Morphett Vale, Reynella) offers accessible entry prices at $570K–$735K with strong investor yields.

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

Not checking the zone first

Always verify zoning and overlays on PlanSA before purchasing a site. Hills Face Zones, flood overlays, or heritage precincts can prevent subdivision entirely.

Underestimating civil works costs

Professional fees are predictable; civil conditions imposed post-approval often are not. Get a civil contractor to assess the site before you commit.

Ignoring the Open Space Levy

Frequently overlooked by first-timers. Payable to the state when new titles are created — can run to several thousand dollars per additional allotment.

Tree issues

State regulations and many councils protect significant trees. A protected tree near a proposed boundary can block a subdivision or impose costly conditions.

Assuming the 5-day approval applies

The fast-track only applies where every deemed-to-satisfy provision is strictly met. Any discretionary element reverts to standard, much longer timeframes.

Working with Professionals

A successful Adelaide subdivision typically requires a team of specialists. A licensed surveyor is mandatory — they prepare the plan of division and must be registered with the Surveyors Board of South Australia. A town planner adds value for complex sites; look for members of the Planning Institute of Australia (SA Division). A civil engineer is required for stormwater design on most sites, and a conveyancer or solicitor handles new Certificates of Title.

Key Resources

ResourceWhat It's For
PlanSA — Planning and Design CodeCheck zoning, overlays, and DTS provisions
ePlanning PortalLodge development applications
SA Water — Developer Charges2025–26 augmentation fee schedules
Greater Adelaide Regional Plan30-year land use and housing supply framework
Lands Titles Office SATitle registration and deposited plans
Surveyors Board of SAFind a licensed surveyor

Explore Other Cities

Planning to subdivide in another state? Read our complete guides for every Australian capital city:

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