The NSW Planning and Environment Amendment (Housing Supply) Bill 2026 requires local councils including Central Coast to meet state-set annual dwelling targets through rezoning in existing urban zones.
Central Coast Council emerged from administration in 2024 and now faces new obligations under the bill to update its local environmental plan within 18 months. The timing aligns with the Department of Planning release of revised population projections that factor in continued migration from western Sydney along the existing rail line to Newcastle.
Daily implications for residents in Gosford and surrounding suburbs
Households in Gosford CBD and the Wyong employment lands may encounter faster development applications for townhouses and apartments within 800 metres of train stations. Policy analysts note that these changes remove some discretionary height controls previously held by council staff, shifting decisions toward state codes for complying development.
Local advocates note the bill links directly to the Gosford CBD redevelopment masterplan adopted in 2023, where new housing is expected to support retail tenancies along Mann Street. Flood resilience provisions in the same legislation require updated stormwater modelling for any site within the 1-in-100-year flood extent mapped by Central Coast Council in 2025.
The 2025-26 NSW Budget papers list $47 million for Central Coast transport and drainage works tied to growth precincts, with releases conditional on councils demonstrating progress against the new dwelling targets. Implementation guidance released by the Department of Planning states that first quarterly reporting from Central Coast Council begins in September 2026.
Further public consultation on the bill’s regulation schedule closes on 22 July, after which the legislation is listed for final reading in the Legislative Council before the spring recess.