27/11/2025
Thinking of planting, landscaping, or updating your strata garden?
In NSW, what you can and can’t do in your apartment’s outdoor space is carefully defined by the Strata Schemes Management Act 2015 (NSW) and your specific strata by-laws.
Key takeaways for strata gardening:
- 🌱 Exclusive use doesn’t guarantee unrestricted rights—most planting, landscaping, or removal of plants in common property requires written approval from the owners corporation.
- 🔑 Your by-laws set the detail: Some by-laws allow minor gardening (pots or planter boxes) without permission, but almost all changes to common property, irrigation, or hard landscaping need approval.
- ❌ Prohibited activities: Tree removal, major landscaping, and any works likely to affect structural integrity or waterproofing are typically forbidden without formal consent.
- 📝 Always check by-laws before planting, pruning, or altering paved/grass areas, even if you have a courtyard or garden area attached to your lot.
Breaching gardening by-laws can lead to formal disputes, orders to reinstate, and compliance penalties. To avoid this, clarify your rights with your strata committee or professional advisors before making any changes.
For tailored legal advice and support with gardening disputes or applications, consult the team at PBL Law Group.
Full article here → https://vist.ly/4g7ij
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