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how to apply for planning permission Hong Kong

How to Apply for Planning Permission in Hong Kong (section 16), Step‑by‑step

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Any developer, landowner or occupier proposing a use or development that is not automatically permitted under the relevant Outline Zoning Plan (OZP) must understand how to apply for planning permission in Hong Kong through the Section 16 route established by the Town Planning Ordinance (Cap. 131). A Section 16 application is the principal mechanism by which the Town Planning Board (TPB) grants permission for uses listed in Column 2 of an OZP, uses that require the Board’s explicit approval before they may lawfully proceed. The TPB updated its Application Guide on 8 January 2026, tightening expectations around pre‑application consultation evidence and digital submission formats, making it essential for applicants to align their preparation with the current guidance.

This article sets out the full planning permission process in Hong Kong: who is eligible, what documents are needed, the realistic timeline from preparation to decision, the costs involved, and the practical steps required to avoid the most common causes of delay or refusal.

Overview of the Section 16 Process and Who It Applies To

Under Section 16 of the Town Planning Ordinance (Cap. 131), any person may apply to the TPB for permission to undertake development, or to carry on a use that falls within Column 2 of the Notes to the relevant OZP. Column 2 uses are those that the Board may permit, with or without conditions, as distinct from Column 1 uses that are always permitted. Where a proposed development does not conform to the OZP zoning at all, rather than simply requiring Board discretion, the applicant may need to pursue a Section 12A amendment to the OZP instead. Section 16 is not the correct route for rezoning; it is for seeking permission within an existing zoning framework.

Applicants may be registered landowners, developers holding an agreement for sale and purchase, occupiers, or authorised agents acting with written consent. There is no nationality restriction on who may file. The TPB acts as the decision‑maker, while the Planning Department, specifically, the relevant District Planning Office (DPO), handles day‑to‑day processing, public display and departmental consultation. Where the proposed development also involves building works, the Buildings Department (BD) will separately assess compliance with the Buildings Ordinance, though the two processes can run in parallel.

The planning permission process in Hong Kong under Section 16 is fundamentally a two‑stage exercise: prepare and submit a compliant application package, then respond to public and departmental scrutiny before the Board makes its decision.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for a Section 16 Planning Application

Pre‑application consultation

Before committing resources to a formal submission, applicants should arrange a pre‑application consultation (PAC) with the relevant DPO under the Planning Department. A PAC is not a statutory requirement, but it is strongly recommended, and, following the TPB’s January 2026 guidance update, applicants are increasingly expected to demonstrate that they have engaged with the DPO on key planning issues before filing. A PAC meeting typically covers zoning constraints, potential concerns from government departments, required technical assessments, and the Board’s likely expectations. The outcome should be recorded in writing, as this record may later be submitted as part of the application package.

Due diligence checklist

Before proceeding with a Section 16 planning application, the applicant’s team should confirm the following:

  • OZP zoning. Verify the site’s zoning on the relevant OZP and confirm that the proposed use falls within Column 2 of the Notes.
  • Land title and lease covenants. Obtain an up‑to‑date land search from the Land Registry and review Government lease conditions using the BRAVO (Building Records Access and Viewing On‑line) system. Restrictive covenants or user clauses may limit the scope of permissible development independently of planning permission.
  • Existing approvals. Check whether there are any existing planning permissions, modification of tenancy conditions, or Buildings Department consents that may affect the site.
  • Building control interface. Determine early whether the proposed development triggers a need for general building plan submission to the BD, as this will influence the project timeline.

How to Submit a Section 16 Application: Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The core of the planning permission process in Hong Kong is the formal Section 16 submission and its subsequent consideration by the TPB. The procedure follows six principal stages.

Step 1: Prepare the application package

Appoint a planning consultant, architect, and, where required, specialist consultants (transport, environmental, landscape, heritage). Gather all necessary surveys, site plans, layout plans, elevations, and a planning statement setting out the justification and planning merits of the proposal. Cross‑reference the OZP Notes, relevant planning guidelines, and any planning briefs or development permission area plans. Ensure that the registered owner has provided written consent for the application to be made (or that the applicant holds appropriate authority under a power of attorney).

Step 2: Conduct pre‑application consultation

Where the proposal involves a material departure from established uses, a change of use in a sensitive area, or a development of significant scale, arrange a formal PAC with the DPO. Present the preliminary scheme, address the DPO’s queries, and record the meeting outcomes. The 2026 TPB Application Guide places increased emphasis on documented PAC outcomes, so retain minutes and any correspondence.

Step 3: Submit the Section 16 application to the TPB

Complete the prescribed Section 16 Application Form (available via the TPB’s eService portal or in hard copy from the Planning Department). Attach all supporting plans, technical reports, and the planning statement. Pay the statutory TPB application fee, electronic payment is the preferred method under the current TPB guidance. Submission may be made online through the TPB eService or delivered physically to the relevant DPO. The TPB Guidance Notes specify the precise format, scale and number of copies required for plans and drawings.

Step 4: Public notification and consultation

Upon receipt of a valid application, the TPB and Planning Department will place the application on public display for a minimum period (typically not less than three weeks, though in practice a 30‑day display period is common). During this period, any person may submit comments or objections. The applicant should prepare for the possibility of adverse representations and be ready to respond with supplementary information or revised plans.

Step 5: TPB consideration and decision

The Board is required under Section 16 of Cap. 131 to consider the application within two months of its receipt. In practice, the actual scheduling of the Board meeting may vary depending on the agenda and complexity of the case. Government departments consulted during the public display period submit their comments to the Board, and the applicant may be invited to attend the Board meeting to address queries. The Board may approve the application outright, approve it subject to conditions, or refuse it.

Step 6: Decision outcome and next steps

If the Board approves with conditions, the applicant must comply with every condition within the stipulated timeframe, failure to do so can result in revocation of the permission. Common conditions include submission of revised master layout plans, traffic mitigation measures, environmental monitoring programmes, or landscape plans. If the Board refuses the application, the applicant may apply for a review under Section 17 of Cap. 131, whereby the Board reconsiders the application, potentially with fresh or additional information. Beyond the Section 17 review, the applicant may pursue judicial review in the Court of First Instance, although this is a remedy of last resort and involves significant cost and delay.

Timeline and step summary

Step Who does it Typical duration
Pre‑application checks and appoint consultants Applicant / planning consultant / lawyer 2–6 weeks
Prepare application package (plans, EIA/LVIA if needed, technical reports) Applicant + consultants 4–12 weeks (complex projects longer)
Formal submission to TPB (Section 16) Applicant or authorised agent 1 day (online) to 1 week (physical)
TPB initial processing and public display TPB / Planning Department 30–60 days (public display usually minimum 30 days)
TPB consideration at meeting Town Planning Board Within 2 months of receipt (Cap. 131, s. 16), scheduling may vary
Post‑decision statutory notices and conditions compliance Applicant / Planning Department / Buildings Department Varies, 4–16+ weeks depending on conditions
Section 17 review (if refused) or judicial review Applicant / lawyer Review: per TPB scheduling; judicial review: consult counsel

Required Documents and Information for a Section 16 Planning Application

The following documents are typically required when filing a Section 16 planning application. Exact requirements may vary depending on the nature of the proposed development; the TPB Guidance Notes should be consulted for the most current specifications on format, scale and content.

Document Notes (issuer / format / validity)
Section 16 Application Form Prescribed TPB form, signed by applicant or authorised agent. Available via TPB eService (eForm) or as a downloadable PDF.
Location plan (scale 1:1,000 or as required) Prepared by licensed land surveyor or planning consultant; must include Ordnance Survey grid reference.
Site layout and floor plans To scale; showing existing and proposed uses. Prepared by registered architect.
Elevations and sections Architect or building surveyor; indicate heights and relationship to adjacent development.
Planning Statement Prepared by planning consultant; sets out justification and planning merits with reference to the OZP and relevant policies.
Traffic Impact Assessment (if applicable) Prepared by transport consultant; must indicate trip generation and mitigation measures.
Environmental Impact Assessment / Preliminary Environmental Review (if required) Prepared under the EIA Ordinance where relevant; coordinate with Planning Department requirements.
Heritage Impact Assessment (if in conservation area) Prepared by qualified conservation consultant.
Landscape and Visual Impact Assessment (if in visually sensitive area) Landscape architect; include before‑and‑after photomontages.
Land title / lease extract From the Land Registry; confirms ownership and lease terms. Disclose any restrictive covenants.
Owner’s consent or power of attorney Written consent from all registered owner(s). If agent, include executed POA with identification documents.
Proof of payment of TPB fee TPB receipt or bank transfer confirmation. Electronic payment preferred under current guidance.
Relevant statutory approvals (e.g., BD submissions) If building works are involved, attach evidence of any submitted or approved BD applications.

Applications that omit mandatory documents will not be accepted as validly made, potentially resetting the statutory consideration clock. The documents needed should be confirmed against the TPB Guidance Notes before submission.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Section 16 Planning Permission

Understanding the realistic timeline is critical for project scheduling. Under Section 16 of Cap. 131, the Board is required to consider an application within two months of receipt. However, the total elapsed time from initial preparation to a final, actionable decision is considerably longer when preparation, public consultation and post‑decision compliance are included.

Phase Statutory / practical timing Recommended applicant buffer
Preparation (surveys, reports, plans) 4–12 weeks; complex projects: 3–6 months +2–4 weeks for quality control
Submission to TPB Immediate (eService) to 1 week (physical) n/a
Public display / public consultation Typically 30 days (TPB / Planning Department) +2 weeks for circulation and response preparation
TPB formal consideration Within 2 months of receipt (Cap. 131, s. 16) +1–2 months for potential queries or deferral
Post‑decision compliance Variable, 1–6 months for BD consents and conditions +2 months for contractor mobilisation
Total (simple application) ~3–6 months Complex projects: 6–18 months

If the TPB requests further information during the consideration period, the applicant must respond within the deadline specified; failure to do so can result in the Board proceeding to decide on the basis of available information, or effectively treating the application as withdrawn. Where a Section 17 review is required after refusal, applicants should add several additional months to the programme. A judicial review, if pursued, will extend the timeline by a year or more.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

The total cost of a Section 16 planning application depends on project scale, the complexity of supporting studies, and whether an appeal is necessary. The table below consolidates the principal cost categories. Statutory TPB application fees should be confirmed against the current TPB fee schedule before filing, as the Board periodically revises its charges.

Item Amount (typical) Notes
TPB application fee (Section 16) Per current TPB fee schedule Confirm exact amount on the TPB website; fee varies by application type.
Planning consultant fee HK$40,000 – HK$300,000+ Depends on project scale and complexity of the planning statement.
Architect / engineer fees HK$50,000 – HK$500,000+ Depends on the number of drawings and technical reports required.
Specialist reports (EIA, TIA, HIA, LVIA) HK$50,000 – HK$1,000,000+ Major environmental or traffic studies at the upper end of the range.
Public consultation / display costs HK$10,000 – HK$100,000 Printing, exhibition materials, advertising and venue hire.
Appeal / legal fees (if refused) HK$50,000 – HK$500,000+ Covers legal representation and expert witness costs for Section 17 review or judicial review.
Miscellaneous (land registry extracts, surveys) HK$1,000 – HK$50,000 Land records, cadastral surveys, printing and courier.

Professional fees incurred in connection with a development project are generally deductible business expenses for profits tax purposes, but applicants should confirm the position with a local tax adviser given the specific circumstances of the project.

What Changed in 2026: TPB Application Guide Dated 8 January 2026

The Town Planning Board updated its Application Guide on 8 January 2026, introducing several practical changes that applicants must now address. The likely practical effect of these updates is threefold. First, the Board has clarified its expectations for pre‑application consultation: applicants are now expected to provide documented evidence of PAC engagement, including records of meetings with the DPO, responses to preliminary concerns, and confirmation of how the scheme has been adjusted in light of departmental feedback. Second, the submission format requirements have been standardised, with stronger encouragement to use the TPB eService for digital filing and a clearer specification for the format and scale of plans and drawings.

Third, the updated guidance places greater emphasis on the quality and completeness of supporting technical studies at the time of submission, reducing the Board’s willingness to accept incomplete packages for processing.

Applicants preparing a Section 16 planning application in 2026 should take three immediate actions:

  • Update submission templates. Ensure that all plans, forms and statements conform to the revised format and scale specifications published by the TPB on 8 January 2026.
  • Document PAC outcomes. Before filing, prepare a summary of all pre‑application consultation meetings, including minutes, correspondence and an explanation of how the scheme responds to issues raised.
  • Confirm eService compliance. Verify that the application package can be submitted through the TPB eService portal and that electronic payment is arranged for the statutory fee.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

Planning permission can be refused by the TPB on grounds including incompatibility with planning intention, adverse environmental or traffic impact, insufficient justification, or unresolved public objections. The following pitfalls account for most avoidable delays and refusals.

  • Incomplete supporting studies. Submitting an application without all required technical assessments (traffic, environmental, landscape) is one of the most common reasons for delay. Mitigation: confirm which specialist reports are required during the PAC and commission them early.
  • Insufficient owner’s consent. The TPB will not process an application without valid written consent from all registered owners. Mitigation: verify title and secure consent or an executed power of attorney before preparing the package.
  • Failure to reconcile lease covenants. Planning permission does not override Government lease restrictions. If the lease prohibits the intended use, the applicant must separately apply to the Lands Department for a lease modification or waiver. Mitigation: review the lease during due diligence and initiate modification discussions in parallel.
  • Inadequate public consultation response. Ignoring or dismissing public objections weakens the applicant’s position before the Board. Mitigation: prepare reasoned responses to each objection and, where practical, adjust the scheme to address legitimate concerns.
  • Late engagement with the Buildings Department. Projects requiring BD approval for building works can stall if BD submissions are not coordinated with the planning application timeline. Mitigation: engage BD advisers during the preparation stage and consider parallel submissions.
  • Missing the further‑information deadline. If the TPB requests additional information and the applicant fails to respond within the stipulated period, the Board may proceed to decide on available materials, typically to the applicant’s disadvantage. Mitigation: diarise all deadlines immediately upon receipt and allocate dedicated resources to respond.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Simon Reid-Kay at Simon Reid-Kay & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Town Planning Board, Application Guide
  2. TPB Guidance Notes, Section 16
  3. Town Planning Ordinance (Cap. 131), Section 16 (eLegislation)
  4. Planning Department (Hong Kong)
  5. Buildings Department, New Building Works
  6. HKSAR Government, BRAVO Land Records
  7. Legislative Council of Hong Kong

FAQs

What is the process for obtaining permission for development or carrying on a new designated use?
The applicant prepares a package of plans, technical studies and a planning statement, submits the Section 16 application to the TPB (via the eService or in hard copy), and pays the prescribed fee. The application is then placed on public display, departmental comments are collected, and the Board considers the proposal at a scheduled meeting. The Board may approve, approve with conditions, or refuse. The full procedure is governed by Section 16 of the Town Planning Ordinance (Cap. 131).
Complete the prescribed TPB Application Form, attach all required plans, technical reports and the planning statement, and file through the TPB eService portal or at the relevant District Planning Office. Payment of the statutory fee must accompany the submission. Applicants are strongly advised to conduct a pre‑application consultation with the DPO before filing, particularly where the proposal involves a material departure from surrounding uses.
At minimum: the completed application form, location plan, site layout and floor plans, elevations and sections, a planning statement, land title and lease extracts, written owner’s consent, proof of fee payment, and, where applicable, specialist assessments covering traffic, environment, landscape, visual impact or heritage. The full list with format and issuer details is set out in the required documents table above.
The statutory requirement is for the TPB to consider the application within two months of receipt, per Section 16 of Cap. 131. Including preparation time, public display and post‑decision compliance, a straightforward application typically takes three to six months from start to a usable decision. Complex projects involving major technical studies or controversial uses should allow six to eighteen months.
Yes. There is no nationality or residency restriction on who may apply. A foreign company or non‑resident owner may file directly or through an authorised agent in Hong Kong. The agent must hold written consent from the registered owner. Where the owner is a company, a board resolution or power of attorney confirming the agent’s authority is advisable.
The Board may proceed to determine the application on the basis of available information, which substantially increases the risk of refusal. If a deadline is at risk of being missed, the applicant should contact the Planning Department immediately to explain the circumstances and, where possible, request an extension. Early and proactive liaison is critical.
Legal counsel should ideally be engaged during the pre‑application stage, particularly for title and lease due diligence, review of the planning statement, and assessment of the application’s vulnerability to objections. If objections are received or refusal appears likely, legal representation becomes essential for the Board meeting and any subsequent Section 17 review or judicial review proceedings.
The applicant may apply for a Section 17 review, in which the Board reconsiders the application, potentially on the basis of additional or revised information. If the review is also unsuccessful, the applicant may pursue a judicial review in the Court of First Instance. Judicial review is limited to questions of law, procedural fairness and rationality; it does not involve a fresh assessment of planning merits. Applicants should consult experienced planning counsel to assess the merits and timing of either route, as there are time‑limits for bringing each. To find a real estate planning lawyer in Hong Kong, use the Global Law Experts directory.
By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 3 hours ago

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How to Apply for Planning Permission in Hong Kong (section 16), Step‑by‑step

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