Development Finance

Typical Development Project Timelines

Quick answer

Many smaller projects run for

12 to 24 months

From early planning through to completion and exit

  • Typical approval stage 3 to 12 months
  • Typical construction stage 6 to 18 months
  • Typical settlement and loan exit 1 to 3 months
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A development project timeline usually starts well before construction. Site search, feasibility, design, planning approval, finance approval, construction, marketing and settlements all take time and each stage affects the next.

For smaller townhouse, duplex and subdivision projects, a full cycle can sometimes fit within 12 to 18 months, while larger apartment or mixed use developments can extend materially longer.

From a lender perspective, time matters because longer approval periods, delayed builds and slower settlements can increase interest costs, reduce profit and create refinancing pressure.

What stages affect the timeline?

Every development project moves through a series of stages, and each one can add weeks or months to the overall timeline

The total timeframe depends on approval complexity, civil and construction scope, weather, consultant response times, lender conditions and the speed of presales or end settlements

Typical timeline stages include:

  • iconSite search and due diligence
  • iconConcept design and feasibility
  • iconDevelopment application and approvals
  • iconFinance approval and documentation
  • iconConstruction and progress inspections
  • iconSales, settlement or refinance exit

How Development Finance Works

No two developments run to exactly the same schedule, but there are common ranges lenders and developers work around

Simple projects can move relatively quickly. More complex sites, councils or building programs can push the timeline out significantly.

A common end to end sequence may look like:

  • 01 Site search and acquisition
  • 02 Feasibility and design
  • 03 DA and approvals
  • 04 Finance approval
  • 05 Construction
  • 06 Sales and settlement

In practice, the approval stage is often the biggest variable. Construction timing is usually easier to forecast than planning timing.

Typical Timing By Stage

Development timelines are usually discussed in stage ranges rather than one fixed number:

Method 01

Pre construction and approvals

Often around 3 to 12 months, but faster or slower depending on council, design complexity and whether further information is requested

Method 02

Construction and completion

Often around 6 to 18 months for smaller to mid sized projects, with larger or staged developments running longer

Common full project range 12 to 24 months
  • Simple duplex or townhouse projects may finish faster
  • Complex apartment or mixed use projects may run well beyond 24 months

The working timeline for finance should include buffers for approvals, wet weather, builder availability, variations and slower than expected settlements.

Development Feasibility

Most delays happen because one stage takes longer than expected rather than because the whole project fails outright

Developers and lenders both need to watch the timeline closely because time blowouts usually mean higher holding costs

Common causes of delay include

  • iconSlow council or consultant turnaround
  • iconDesign revisions and conditions of consent
  • iconBuilder availability and trade shortages
  • iconWeather and site complications
  • iconCost overruns and contract variations
  • iconDelayed presales or slower buyer demand
  • iconValuation issues or lender rework
  • iconLonger settlement or refinance timing
12 - 24 months
A practical rule is that even when a project looks straightforward on paper, the real world programme often needs contingency. Conservative timelines usually outperform optimistic ones.

Pre Sales

Different development types often run on very different programmes

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Small duplex or townhouse build

Often the shortest format. A cleaner site, simpler approvals and a single builder contract can make the total timeline more manageable.

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Subdivision project

Subdivision timing often depends heavily on servicing works, authority approvals and title registration rather than vertical construction alone.

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Larger apartment or mixed use project

These projects generally have the longest timelines because they can involve deeper design, more planning complexity, presale conditions and staged settlements.

Common problems

Projects often drift off schedule when early assumptions are too aggressive or the programme does not allow enough buffer

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Approval Delays

Council assessment, neighbour objections, redesign requests or authority referrals can extend the pre construction period materially

Ways to reduce the impact include:
  • icon Lodging a complete, well prepared application
  • icon Using experienced town planners and consultants
  • icon Allowing realistic buffer time in the finance term
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Construction Delays

Wet weather, latent site issues, labour shortages and builder sequencing can all stretch the build programme

Common responses include:
  • icon Tighter project management and reporting
  • icon Using contingencies in both time and cost
  • icon Keeping variations under control
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Slow Sales Or Settlements

Completed projects do not always repay the facility immediately. End buyer finance delays or slower take up can push out the exit

Developers often manage this by allowing longer tail periods or arranging residual stock or exit finance.
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Funding Term Too Short

Even a viable project can come under pressure if the original loan term does not allow enough time for approvals, build and exit

Possible solutions include:
  • icon Building realistic time buffers into the initial facility
  • icon Negotiating extension options where available
  • icon Monitoring milestones early so refinance is not left too late

Typical Development Timeline Stages

Step

01

Find a suitable site and complete early due diligence

Step

02

Prepare concept plans, feasibility and consultant reports

Step

03

Lodge the development application and respond to council requests

Step

04

Arrange formal finance approval and satisfy lender conditions

Step

05

Complete construction, inspections and practical completion items

Step

06

Sell, settle or refinance the completed project and repay the facility

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Speak with a Development Finance Specialist

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Project timing can vary significantly depending on the site, the approval pathway, the size of the build and the exit strategy.

A specialist can help estimate a more realistic timeline and match the project with lenders whose terms fit the likely programme.

Speak with a finance specialist about your project timeline.

Submit the short form below and a development finance specialist will review your project and discuss likely timing, finance structure and possible funding options.

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