MapCheck Insights — NSW Property Reports & Biodiversity Data

NSW rural land terms explained | NVR, PCT, BSA credits & more | MapCheck

Written by MapCheck | Feb 22, 2026 6:08:49 AM

A rural land title in New South Wales sits under a stack of planning and environmental rules, each with its own jargon. Here is what the main terms actually mean, in plain English. Definitions are general and indicative only - a MapCheck report screens these against a specific lot from NSW Government data.

What is the Native Vegetation Regulatory (NVR) Map?

The NVR Map is the NSW Government map that shows which native vegetation on rural land is regulated for clearing under the Local Land Services Act 2013. It sorts land into Category 1 (exempt land, where clearing is generally allowed) and Category 2 (regulated land), with Category 2 further shown as Regulated, Vulnerable or Sensitive. The map is indicative only - ground-truthing is recommended before any clearing.

What are the NVR clearing categories?

Under section 60A of the Local Land Services Act 2013 there are two categories: Category 1 - Exempt (clearing generally permitted) and Category 2 - Regulated. Category 2 is displayed as Regulated, Vulnerable or Sensitive land. "Category 2" does not mean clearing is banned - it means clearing is regulated and you should check the approval pathway before acting.

What is a Plant Community Type (PCT)?

A Plant Community Type is the NSW standard classification for a native vegetation community - a named grouping of plants that typically occur together. PCTs are the building block for assessing a property's biodiversity value and its potential to generate biodiversity credits. A lot with no mapped PCT generally has no basis to generate credits.

What is an Endangered or Threatened Ecological Community (EEC / TEC)?

An Endangered Ecological Community (EEC) or Threatened Ecological Community (TEC) is a native vegetation community listed as threatened under the NSW Biodiversity Conservation Act 2016 and/or the Commonwealth EPBC Act 1999. Where an EEC is present it raises the conservation significance of the land and can affect what clearing or development is permitted.

What is a Biodiversity Stewardship Agreement (BSA)?

A Biodiversity Stewardship Agreement is a voluntary, in-perpetuity agreement under the NSW Biodiversity Conservation Act 2016 in which a landholder manages part of their land for conservation. In return the site can generate biodiversity credits that can be sold - turning native vegetation that cannot be cleared into a potential income stream rather than only a constraint.

What are biodiversity credits and the Biodiversity Offsets Scheme?

Biodiversity credits are units generated by a stewardship site under the NSW Biodiversity Offsets Scheme. Developers whose projects impact biodiversity must offset that impact, and they buy credits to do so. A property's indicative credit potential depends on its vegetation, patch size and the demand for its credit type - a full assessment requires an accredited method.

What is the Biodiversity Assessment Method (BAM)?

The Biodiversity Assessment Method is the accredited method used in NSW to measure a site's biodiversity value and calculate how many credits it can generate or a development must retire. A formal BAM assessment must be completed by an accredited assessor. MapCheck provides an indicative screening, not a BAM assessment.

What is the Biodiversity Values (BV) Map?

The Biodiversity Values Map identifies NSW land with high biodiversity value. If land is on the BV Map, clearing or development that exceeds set thresholds is drawn into the Biodiversity Offsets Scheme and triggers a biodiversity assessment.

What is bushfire-prone land?

Bushfire-prone land is land mapped by the NSW Rural Fire Service as being at risk of bushfire. Building on or developing bushfire-prone land triggers Planning for Bushfire Protection requirements, including asset protection zones and construction standards. Vegetation is mapped in categories that change the setbacks and controls that apply.

What are riparian land and watercourse buffers?

Riparian land is the land alongside a river, creek or watercourse. Controlled activities near a watercourse - such as clearing, earthworks or building - can require approval, and buffer widths apply under NSW water and planning rules. Watercourses are classified by Strahler stream order, which influences the buffer that applies.

What is native title?

Native title is the recognition under the Commonwealth Native Title Act 1993 of the rights and interests of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in land and waters. An active claim or determination over or near a parcel can affect dealings such as subdivision, development or leasing, so it is worth checking before you act.

What is Biophysical Strategic Agricultural Land (BSAL)?

Biophysical Strategic Agricultural Land is highly productive agricultural land mapped by the NSW Government. Where mining or coal seam gas is proposed on BSAL, the Gateway process applies. For most rural buyers it is a signal of land quality and a constraint on certain incompatible developments.

What do Lot and DP mean?

A Lot and Deposited Plan (DP) number are the legal identifiers of a land parcel in the NSW cadastre - the official map of property boundaries. A property may be one lot or several. MapCheck screens the datasets against the exact lot(s) that make up a holding.

What are land capability and carrying capacity?

Land capability describes what a parcel of land can sustainably be used for, given its soils, slope and other physical features. Carrying capacity is an indicative estimate of the livestock a property can support. Both are guides to productive potential, not guarantees.

What is a rural land use zone (RU1, RU2)?

Zoning sets the permitted uses for land under the local council's Local Environmental Plan (LEP). Common rural zones include RU1 Primary Production and RU2 Rural Landscape. The zone determines what you can build or do without further approval, and what triggers a development application.

Is MapCheck a valuation?

No. MapCheck delivers an indicative value assessment and constraint screening from NSW Government data - not a valuation by a registered valuer. It is designed to tell you what planning and environmental rules apply to a parcel before you buy, sell, develop or manage it.

These definitions are general and indicative only, and are not legal, planning or valuation advice. Always confirm with the relevant NSW Government source or a qualified professional before acting.