Tamworth Regional Council tree removal rules
Everything you need to know before removing or pruning a tree in the Tamworth Regional Council area — which trees are protected, the main exemptions, and how to apply for approval. This is the authoritative summary we keep for this council; always confirm against the official source linked below.
Legal basis: State Environmental Planning Policy (Biodiversity and Conservation) 2021, Ch. 2 (Vegetation in Non-Rural Areas) + each council's Development Control Plan (DCP).
We're still confirming this council's exact rules — any figures shown are a general guide only. Confirm with the council.
Which trees are protected in Tamworth Regional Council?
Tamworth Regional Council generally does not require council approval to remove trees on private property — its tree controls don't apply to private land. Other laws (native vegetation, heritage, threatened species) may still apply, so confirm with the council.
Tamworth Regional Council DCP (Amendment 17, 123 pages) contains tree retention requirements only within development and subdivision contexts, and specific precincts (Hills Plain R2 zone, Burkes Gully corridor, Arcadia Estate). No numeric size thresholds for general tree removal found. Council maintains Significant Tree Register (~120 trees in former Tamworth City area only) but appears advisory. No Tree Preservation Orders identified for private land. Tree control is development-based, not general private-land removal regulation.
When you may not need approval
- Dead, dying or dangerous trees that are an imminent risk to people or property (most councils require a qualified arborist's report — keep photos and the report).
- Minor pruning within Australian Standard AS 4373-2007 (often up to ~10% of the canopy in a year) — council-dependent.
- Certain listed weed or exempt species, and trees under the council's size threshold.
- Trees within a set distance of an approved dwelling — but the distance varies by council and many councils have no such exemption.
Other rules that can override the above
- RFS 10/50 Vegetation Clearing scheme — in a designated bush-fire area you may be able to clear trees within 10m of your home (and underlying vegetation within 50m) without council approval. Check eligibility with the NSW RFS online tool; it does not override threatened-species or federal law.
- Heritage items and heritage conservation areas — trees are usually protected regardless of size and most exemptions fall away.
- Threatened species, endangered ecological communities and Aboriginal places — exemptions generally do not apply.
- Federal EPBC Act — separate Commonwealth approval can be required if removal would significantly impact a nationally listed species or community.
Do I need a permit in Tamworth Regional Council?
Fill in the tree details and we'll estimate whether you likely need council approval.
Suburbs in Tamworth Regional Council
- Appleby
- Attunga
- Banoon
- Barraba
- Barry
- Bective
- Bendemeer
- Bithramere
- Borah Creek
- Bowling Alley Point
- Bundarra
- Calala
- Crawney
- Currabubula
- Daruka
- Duncans Creek
- Dungowan
- Duri
- East Tamworth
- Garoo
- Garthowen
- Gidley
- Goonoo Goonoo
- Gowrie
- Gulf Creek
- Halls Creek
- Hallsville
- Hanging Rock
- Hillvue
- Ironbark
- Kentucky
- Kingswood
- Klori
- Kootingal
- Limbri
- Lindesay
- Longarm
- Loomberah
- Manilla
- Mayvale
- Moonbi
- Moore Creek
- Mulla Creek
- Namoi River
- Nemingha
- New Mexico
- Niangala
- North Tamworth
- Nundle
- Ogunbil
- Oxley Vale
- Piallamore
- Piallaway
- Quipolly
- Red Hill
- Retreat
- Rushes Creek
- Somerton
- South Tamworth
- Taminda
- Tamworth
- Thirldene
- Timbumburi
- Tintinhull
- Upper Horton
- Upper Manilla
- Wallamore
- Warrabah
- Warral
- Watsons Creek
- Weabonga
- West Tamworth
- Westdale
- Wimborne
- Winton
- Wongo Creek
- Woodsreef
- Woolbrook
- Woolomin