Planning & Zoning
Hinterland properties in the Noosa shire are governed by the Noosa Plan 2020, the same planning scheme that applies to coastal properties, but the checks required are materially different. Where a coastal residential block might have a single flood overlay question to resolve, a rural residential property like 109 Laguna Grove sits at the intersection of multiple overlays: bushfire hazard, biodiversity and waterways, koala habitat, and potentially landslide risk depending on topography. These are not abstract concerns; they directly shape what can be built, cleared, or altered on the land, and they determine what a buyer is committing to when they sign a contract.
The first step is confirming the zone and all applicable overlays for the specific lot through the Noosa Council interactive mapping portal and the DA register. This report identifies the checks that a buyer should have completed. Not all findings can be confirmed from publicly available information alone, but the questions can be clearly framed.
| Item | Finding | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Zone | Rural Residential Zone | Noosa Plan 2020 |
| Location | Doonan hinterland, cul-de-sac position, end of Laguna Grove | Listing / mapping |
| Land Area | 8,640m² (approximately 2.14 acres), fully usable, level | Title / Listing |
| Flood Overlay | No flood overlay expected for elevated hinterland position; confirm at parcel level | Noosa Council DA Portal |
| Bushfire Hazard Overlay | Likely applicable. Doonan sits within the SEQ Bushfire Prone Area mapped under the State Planning Policy. The SPP IMS and BRC MapViewer (QFD) are the tools to confirm intensity class at parcel level. | Noosa Plan 2020 Bushfire Hazard Overlay / SPP IMS / QFD BRC MapViewer |
| Biodiversity / Vegetation Overlay | Doonan is within a region with active biodiversity and koala habitat mapping. Any native vegetation on the allotment may be subject to the Biodiversity, Waterways and Wetlands Overlay or State vegetation management controls. Confirmation required at parcel level. | Noosa Plan 2020 / DNRME |
| Koala Habitat | The Noosa hinterland, including Doonan, is an active koala habitat area under the Noosa Plan 2020. Development and clearing can trigger assessable development if koala habitat trees are present. Parcel-level mapping required. | Noosa Plan 2020 Schedule 7 |
| Landslide / Slope Hazard | Not anticipated given the listing's description of flat, fully usable acres. Confirm via Council mapping. | Noosa Council DA Portal |
Bushfire Hazard
Doonan sits in the Noosa hinterland, a landscape characterised by eucalypt vegetation, undulating terrain, and in many pockets mapped bushfire hazard. The Noosa Plan 2020 Bushfire Hazard Overlay is derived from the State Planning Policy (SPP) Bushfire Prone Area (BPA) mapping, produced by CSIRO in conjunction with the Queensland Fire Department (QFD, formerly QFES, renamed 1 July 2024). This mapping classifies potential fire-line intensity into three categories: Very High, High, and Medium, plus a Potential Impact Buffer covering all land within 100 metres of any mapped hazard class. All four categories are treated as Bushfire Prone Area for planning purposes.
There are two public tools for checking BPA status. The SPP Interactive Mapping System (SPP IMS) is the operative planning layer, the one Noosa Council's overlay is derived from and the one that determines whether an allotment is formally within a Bushfire Prone Area. The Queensland Fire Department's Bushfire Resilient Communities (BRC) MapViewer, updated in January 2025, is the more detailed tool: it layers the BPA mapping with vegetation hazard class, fire weather severity (FFDI contours), and regional ecosystem data, and replaced the former Catalyst tool. For a pre-purchase desktop check, the SPP IMS gives the planning answer; the BRC MapViewer gives the technical context behind it.
The listing describes a "natural bushland backdrop" to the property, which is both a selling point and a planning signal. Bushland backdrop typically means proximity to native vegetation beyond the allotment boundary, which is precisely the context in which the BPA overlay applies. Any future building work, extension, or new structure on the property within a mapped hazard class will need to meet specific construction standards under Australian Standard AS3959-2018.
| Item | Finding | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| State BPA Mapping: SPP IMS | The SPP Interactive Mapping System (SPP IMS) is the operative planning layer for Bushfire Prone Area mapping in Queensland. Noosa's Plan 2020 Bushfire Hazard Overlay is derived from it. Doonan falls within the SEQ region covered by this mapping, which includes Noosa Shire Council. The SPP IMS classifies BPA into Very High, High, and Medium intensity, plus a 100m Potential Impact Buffer around all three classes. All four are treated as Bushfire Prone Area. | The SPP IMS is the first check; it determines whether the allotment is formally within a Bushfire Prone Area and at what intensity class. Publicly accessible at planning.qld.gov.au |
| BRC MapViewer (QFD): detailed tool | The Queensland Fire Department's Bushfire Resilient Communities (BRC) MapViewer, updated January 2025, replaces the former Catalyst tool. It layers BPA mapping with vegetation hazard class, FFDI fire weather severity contours, and regional ecosystem data. The 2024 BPA dataset in the BRC MapViewer uses updated modelling aligned to AFDRS fire behaviour standards. | The BRC MapViewer is the most detailed publicly accessible tool for understanding bushfire hazard at a site level. It shows not just whether an allotment is in the BPA, but what vegetation class and fire weather conditions drive that classification, directly relevant to a BAL assessment. |
| Noosa Plan 2020: Bushfire Hazard Overlay | Noosa's Bushfire Hazard Overlay is derived from the SPP BPA mapping. It identifies Very High, High, and Medium hazard areas across the shire, plus the 100m Impact Buffer. Hinterland areas including parts of Doonan sit within this overlay. The Noosa Plan 2020 uses the SPP Potential Bushfire Intensity (PBI) mapping to prioritise Council's own fire management activities across its bushland reserves. | If the allotment or any part of it falls within a Very High, High, Medium, or Impact Buffer class, new building work is subject to Australian Standard AS3959-2018 construction requirements and a BAL assessment is required before a DA will be approved |
| Existing Dwelling | The existing house was constructed under approvals predating the current overlay mapping. It is not necessarily built to current BAL standards. | No immediate issue for buyers living in the existing home, but any renovation or extension in a hazard area would trigger current code requirements |
| Vegetation Context | The listing describes "natural bushland backdrop" and "beautifully established low-maintenance gardens." Both suggest native vegetation close to or adjacent to the dwelling. | Proximity to native vegetation is the primary driver of BAL rating; the further from bushland, the lower the rating. Actual separation distance should be assessed by a qualified BAL assessor. |
| Clearing Restrictions | Clearing native vegetation near a dwelling for fire management purposes is generally permitted under Queensland law, but clearing for other purposes on a Rural Residential lot in a koala habitat area may require approval. | The two considerations, bushfire clearing and vegetation protection, can pull in different directions. Understanding which applies and where requires a careful reading of both overlay layers. |
Vegetation & Koala Habitat
The Noosa Plan 2020 includes a Biodiversity, Waterways and Wetlands Overlay that regulates the management, clearing, and development near native vegetation. Noosa Shire Council has also developed its own koala habitat mapping, considered by the Council itself to be more detailed and accurate than the State's mapping, and this mapping is embedded in the planning scheme via Schedule 7. Together, these layers can create meaningful constraints on what can be cleared, where structures can be built, and what activities require development approval.
For a property with 8,640m² of "fully usable" land and a "natural bushland backdrop," the vegetation question is not academic. The listing's appeal is partly built on the landscape that surrounds the home. Whether that landscape can be altered, and to what extent, depends on which vegetation is mapped and what protection applies to it.
| Item | Finding | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Noosa Koala Habitat Mapping | Doonan is within an area actively mapped for koala habitat under the Noosa Plan 2020. Noosa Council has conducted detailed surveys and the Schedule 7 mapping identifies koala habitat areas at parcel level. | If koala habitat is mapped on the allotment, clearing of those areas for development or landscaping requires assessment against the Biodiversity Overlay Code, and in some cases is prohibited under State law |
| Biodiversity Overlay | Properties in the Doonan hinterland regularly fall within the Biodiversity, Waterways and Wetlands Overlay, particularly those with remnant vegetation or proximity to waterways. | Clearing or disturbing areas within the overlay without approval is an offence under both the Planning Act and the Vegetation Management Act 1999 |
| Renovation Scope Impact | The listing explicitly invites buyers to "update the bathrooms and kitchen" and mentions a "multipurpose room that could serve as a sixth bedroom", but any external structural addition or footprint expansion on a constrained lot requires overlay checking first. | A buyer who purchases expecting straightforward renovation or external expansion should verify the overlay position before committing, as planning constraints may limit where on the allotment new structures can be placed |
| Vegetation Management Act (State) | Queensland's Vegetation Management Act 1999 applies independently of the Noosa planning scheme. Properties with mapped regulated vegetation cannot clear it without a development permit, regardless of what the local planning scheme says. | Two separate approval pathways can apply: local and State. A buyer planning landscape changes should understand which applies before purchase. |
Building Approval History
The Noosa Council DA portal is searchable by address and records all development applications lodged for a property, including building approvals for the existing dwelling and any subsequent works. For a property presented as having renovation potential, the approval history is relevant in both directions: it confirms what was legitimately approved and constructed, and it may reveal whether any unapproved works were added over time.
The listing describes the property as a "substantial and comfortably liveable" family home with clear "scope to renovate and elevate over time." For any buyer taking up that invitation, the starting point is understanding what is already on the approval record.
Sales History & Price Context
Understanding a property's transaction history and pricing relative to the local market is standard due diligence. For a hinterland acreage property, comparable sales analysis requires additional care, as lot size, usability, dwelling quality, and planning constraints all affect comparability in ways that a pure suburb median does not capture.
The transaction history here has one notable data point: the December 2024 buyer resold the property just 15 months later, in March 2026, at a nominal gain of $15,000. Before transaction costs, including agent commission, legal fees and holding costs, that is a real loss on a $1.84 million purchase. That pattern is worth understanding before committing to the same asset.
Property Profile & Genuine Merits
This report focuses on risk and planning context. That is its purpose. But a thorough assessment acknowledges what genuinely works in a property's favour. 109 Laguna Grove has a compelling set of attributes for a hinterland buyer, and those attributes are real. The question is whether a buyer understands the full planning picture alongside those merits.
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Land & Position | 8,640m² (2.14 acres) described as fully usable and level, a genuine point of difference in a market where much hinterland acreage involves steep or constrained land. End-of-cul-de-sac position adds privacy and no through-traffic. Electric gate entry. |
| Residence | Five bedrooms across two levels. Four bedrooms including one with ensuite on the lower level. Upstairs master retreat with ensuite and separate parent living area. Three bathrooms total. Spotted gum / blackbutt timber floors. Gas kitchen with walk-in pantry. Two formal living rooms downstairs. Six car spaces (unusual for the area). |
| Outdoor / Lifestyle | Inground pool. Established, low-maintenance gardens. Natural bushland backdrop creating a private country-feel setting. The full land usability, flat, cleared and functional, is uncommon in Doonan where many acreage properties involve challenging terrain. |
| Flexibility | Layout described as suitable for families or dual occupancy. Multipurpose room could serve as sixth bedroom or home office. The scale of the layout provides genuine flexibility for multigenerational living without renovation. |
| Renovation Potential | The listing identifies bathrooms and kitchen as areas for improvement. The existing bones, timber floors, gas cooking and a generous floor plan, are solid. The renovation opportunity is real, but its scope must be understood in the context of the planning overlays discussed in sections 2 and 3. |
| Market Context | Doonan median house price approximately $1,875,000–$1,900,000 (early 2026). Approximately 74–82 houses sold in Doonan over the past 12 months. The hinterland market has softened from its pandemic peak, with average vendor discounting around 9% and average time on market 73 days. |
Signals: What the Pattern Suggests
The individual findings in this report are each manageable. No single element, whether the bushfire overlay, the vegetation constraints, or the short resale hold, is unusual in isolation. What matters is whether a buyer approached the purchase with an understanding of all of them simultaneously, and with a realistic view of what the renovation opportunity actually represents given those constraints.
The combination of a renovation-marketed property, in a planning overlay-heavy location, with a prior owner who bought 15 months earlier and sold at a likely net loss, creates a specific due diligence obligation for the March 2026 buyer. It doesn't answer the question of why, but it does make the question worth asking.
What a Diligent Buyer Would Do Next
This property has now sold. The steps below are published as an illustration of what a diligent buyer of the March 2026 transaction should have completed before going unconditional, and what any future buyer of this property would need to complete if it were to transact again.
- 01 Search the Noosa Council interactive planning portal for this allotment. Confirm the zone (Rural Residential), and check all applicable overlays: Bushfire Hazard, Biodiversity Waterways and Wetlands, Koala Habitat (Schedule 7), and any Landslide or other hazard mapping. Record the overlay level (e.g. medium, high, very high bushfire) because it directly affects renovation scope and insurance cost.
- 02 Search the Noosa Council DA portal for all development applications lodged for this address. Confirm the building approval for the original dwelling, any subsequent approved works, and verify that all existing structures, including the six car spaces and any outbuildings, are within the scope of approved applications. Any unapproved structures need to be identified before purchase, not after.
- 03 Check the SPP IMS (planning.qld.gov.au/planning-framework/mapping) for this allotment's Bushfire Prone Area status and intensity class: Very High, High, Medium, or Impact Buffer only. Then open the Queensland Fire Department's BRC MapViewer (fire.qld.gov.au) to see the vegetation hazard class and FFDI fire weather severity underlying that classification. Both tools are free and public. If the allotment falls within any BPA class, not just Very High, a formal BAL (Bushfire Attack Level) assessment under AS3959-2018 from a qualified bushfire consultant is required before any DA for new or extended structures will be approved. The BAL rating determines construction standards and is a material input to both renovation cost planning and insurance pricing. This step should happen before contract, not after.
- 04 Ask the vendor through your solicitor why the December 2024 buyer purchased and resold within 15 months. Vendors are not always obliged to disclose their reasons for selling, but the question and its response are both informative. Also ask whether any building inspections, planning inquiries, or specialist assessments were commissioned by the December 2024 buyer during their ownership, and request copies of any reports obtained. A vendor who cannot or will not answer these questions is not necessarily concealing anything, but the gap in information should inform how cautiously a buyer proceeds to unconditional.
- 05 Commission a pre-purchase building and pest inspection briefed specifically to assess the condition of the dwelling relative to its renovation opportunity. Ask the inspector to identify any structural issues, moisture or termite evidence (hinterland properties are higher risk for termites than coastal ones), and to comment on the condition of the roof, subfloor, and any outbuildings. The renovation framing in the listing language should make the inspector's scope broader, not narrower.
- 06 If the Biodiversity or Koala Habitat mapping applies to vegetation on the allotment, obtain a vegetation assessment from a qualified ecologist before committing to any landscaping or clearing plans. Clearing koala habitat trees without approval is an offence under both the Planning Act and the Vegetation Management Act. Understanding what can and cannot be cleared before purchase is significantly more useful than discovering the constraint after settlement.
- 07 Obtain a bushfire insurance quote from at least two insurers before going unconditional, particularly if the BPA mapping returns a Very High or High intensity class. The difference in annual premium between a standard property and one with a high BAL rating in an active hazard area can be material at a $1.855 million price point. Confirm coverage availability, any exclusion clauses, and the annual cost as part of your hold-cost modelling.
- 08 Confirm the warranty position on the 2019 dwelling. The QBCC structural defects window runs for 6 years and 6 months, meaning coverage on a 2019 build is likely still active. Start by requesting the home warranty insurance certificate from the vendor — it should have been issued at the time of construction and the vendor should produce it. If the vendor cannot, a formal insurance search can be lodged through the QBCC via myQBCC ($53.05; available to prospective buyers and their solicitors). Confirm the policy is in force, the commencement date, and that no prior claims have been made. Lodge an insurance search via the QBCC →
Free public searches via the Noosa Council DA Portal confirm when a building application was submitted and whether it reached finalisation — but they do not show the date the final certificate was issued, which is when practical completion is formally recorded. Confirming the exact completion date requires a paid council records search. This matters for warranty calculations, where the 6-year 6-month structural window runs from the earliest of contract date, premium payment, or commencement of work. A buyer who wants certainty on the exact warranty commencement date should request the final certificate from the vendor or commission a council records search before contract.
A hinterland acreage property markets beautifully: two usable acres, bushland privacy, end-of-cul-de-sac peace. Those things are real and valuable. What is also real is a planning environment that is more complex than a coastal residential block, with overlays that directly shape what a buyer can do with the land they are purchasing. The job of desktop due diligence is to surface that planning layer before money changes hands, not after. The checks described here are mostly free, publicly accessible, and routinely skipped by buyers who assume that a finalised sale means a clear planning picture. It does not mean that. It means the seller was satisfied with the price.