Construction Leads in Maroubra, NSW

11 development applications lodged in Maroubra in the last 30 days. Each one is a homeowner planning a project who hasn't chosen a builder yet.

11

DAs last 30 days

11

Total applications

Other

Most common project

Project types being planned in Maroubra

4

Other

3

New Dwelling

2

Extension

1

Duplex

Based on DA data from Australian government planning portals. Full lead details are available to Roweo subscribers only.

Residential construction in Maroubra

Look, Maroubra’s been my patch for the better part of fifteen years now, and the residential building scene here is a slow burn, not a boom. We’re seeing about six development applications lodged at any one time, which tells you this isn’t a suburb getting ripped apart by high-rises. It’s a steady churn of family homes getting a second life. The most active projects are new home construction, home extensions, and first-floor additions. That’s the bread and butter. You don’t come here to flip a quick dollar; you come here because your kids go to Maroubra Bay Public, and you want a proper rumpus room without moving to the Central Coast.

The housing stock is a real mixed bag. You’ve got your classic 1950s and 60s Californian bungalows and fibro cottages sitting on decent-sized blocks, especially around the northern end near the golf course. Then you’ve got the newer infill stuff from the 2000s, and a few pockets of townhouses that went up when the old bowling club site got redeveloped. The knock-down-rebuild crowd are usually the ones who’ve bought a dud from the 70s with a cracked slab and a dodgy roof. They’re not investors. They’re families—upsizers who sold a two-bedder in Coogee and want four bedrooms, a double garage, and a pool that doesn’t overlook the neighbours’ laundry. The renovators are the ones who bought in 2015 and are now realising a first-floor addition is cheaper than moving to Randwick. They want a master suite with an ensuite and a walk-in, not a whole new house.

Local council is a mixed bag too, and you need to know how they tick. For a straightforward single-storey extension on a flat block, you can get a DA through in about three to four months if your plans are clean and your stormwater plan is solid. But they’re picky about setbacks and overshadowing, especially on those narrow lanes off Fitzgerald Avenue. The planners hate anything that looks like a bulkhead from the street. Common conditions you’ll see are landscape plans for the front yard, a condition for a 1.8-metre high lapped and capped fence on the side boundary, and a requirement to upgrade the driveway crossover to council specs. If you’re doing a first-floor addition, expect a condition about privacy screens on the west-facing windows. It’s not hard, but it’s tedious. Don’t bother lodging over Christmas—they shut down for six weeks and you’ll lose your spot in the queue.

The clients themselves are a specific breed. They’re not developers with a portfolio. They’re locals who’ve been in the area for a decade or more. The typical knockdown-rebuilder is a couple in their late 30s with two kids and a dog, who bought a 600-square-metre block in the streets behind the beach. They want a Hamptons-style facade with a bit of weatherboard, but they’ll settle for rendered brick if the budget blows out. The renovators are older—empty nesters who want to open up the back of their 1960s triple-fronted brick house and put in bifold doors to the backyard. They don’t want to move because they’ve got mates at the Maroubra RSL and their grandkids are at the local school. Investors are rare here. The yields are too skinny for that. You’re looking at a 2.5 per cent gross yield on a two-bedroom unit near the shops, so it’s mostly owner-occupiers driving the work.

What you notice on the ground is the site constraints. Maroubra’s got a lot of sloping blocks, especially as you get closer to the headland. You’ll be digging into sandstone on half the jobs. That means retaining walls, drainage pits, and extra costs for rock removal. The trades who work here know the drill—you don’t bring a mini-excavator to a job on a 15-degree slope. And the neighbours are nosy but fair. They’ll have a chat over the fence about the noise, but they won’t call council unless you’re stacking materials on the footpath

Get matched to Maroubra construction leads

Set Maroubra as your service area and every new DA that comes in gets a letter posted to the homeowner in your name. Setup takes 20 minutes. First letter goes out within 2 business days.

Start from $149/month

No contracts. Cancel any time.

Construction leads in Maroubra — common questions

How many construction leads are available in Maroubra?

There are 11 development applications on record in Maroubra, with 11 lodged in the last 30 days. This includes extensions, renovations, new dwellings, granny flats, and other residential projects.

What types of projects are being lodged in Maroubra?

The most common project types in Maroubra are Other, New Dwelling, Extension, Duplex. Roweo lets you filter by project type so you only see the work you want.

How does Roweo get construction leads in Maroubra?

Roweo ingests development application data from government planning portals across Australia. When a homeowner in Maroubra lodges a DA, we classify the project type, match it to your suburb and trade preferences, and post a letter to their property within 2 business days of you approving it.

Do I need a builder's licence to use Roweo?

Yes. Every letter includes your builder's licence number as required under Australian Consumer Law. You enter your licence number during the 20-minute setup — no letter goes out without it.

What is a development application (DA)?

A DA is a formal application submitted to local council for permission to build, extend, or renovate a property. Once lodged, the application is publicly available on the relevant state planning portal. Most homeowners who lodge a DA are actively looking for a builder within 3–6 months.

Nearby suburbs