Property development can be incredibly profitable — but it's also where experienced investors lose money. After analyzing hundreds of DA applications and speaking with dozens of first-time developers, we've identified the same costly mistakes appearing again and again.

Here's what to watch out for on your first project.

1. Buying Without Checking Development Potential First

The most expensive mistake is also the most common: buying a property based on "gut feel" or agent promises, then discovering it can't be developed the way you planned.

Common surprises:

The fix: Check zoning, overlays and site constraints BEFORE making an offer. Use ZoneScout to verify development potential, or order a Section 10.7(5) certificate for comprehensive site data.

2. Underestimating Holding Costs

First-time developers often budget for construction plus a 3-month DA timeline. Reality: DAs take 6–12 months, and you pay mortgage, rates, insurance and land tax the entire time.

Real numbers on a $1.2m development site:

A 6-month DA delay costs $30,000–$50,000 in holding costs alone.

3. Not Getting Pre-DA Advice

Councils offer pre-DA meetings for a reason — use them. A 30-minute conversation can save months of rework. First-time developers often skip this step, file a DA that doesn't align with council priorities, then face rejection or extensive revisions.

4. Overcapitalizing on the Wrong Things

Spending $80,000 on high-end finishes in a mid-market suburb is a fast way to lose money. Conversely, underspending on BASIX compliance can blow up your budget when you realize you need double glazing and additional insulation.

Where to spend: Kitchens, bathrooms, floor coverings (visible to buyers).
Where to save: Light fixtures, door hardware, landscaping (easily upgraded later).

5. Choosing the Wrong Approval Path

Many first-timers automatically go for DA when CDC would work, adding 6+ months to the timeline. Others try CDC when their site doesn't qualify, getting rejected and wasting certifier fees.

Rule of thumb: If you meet every CDC standard exactly, use CDC. If anything is non-compliant — lot size, setbacks, overlays — you're in DA territory.

6. Not Factoring in Professional Fees

Beyond the builder and architect, you'll likely need:

These add $10,000–$25,000 to most projects — budget for them.

7. Ignoring the Exit Strategy

Are you selling both properties? Keeping one? Renting them out? Each strategy affects your financing, tax position, and design decisions.

First-time developers often plan to sell but haven't spoken to a mortgage broker about construction loans, or haven't considered that holding for 12+ months may trigger GST on the sale price.

The Bottom Line

Property development rewards preparation and punishes optimism. The developers who make money are the ones who verify everything before committing, budget conservatively, and allow for timeline blowouts.

Your first project doesn't need to be a home run — it just needs to not be a loss. Learn the rules, do your due diligence, and remember: the profit is made when you buy, not when you sell.

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