Simple, well-documented Traffic Management Plans (TMPs) in Victoria are often reviewed within a short window, while complex, multi-stage or night works can take longer especially where detours, tram/bus interfaces, or event closures are involved.
A clear TMP saves time: it shows the strategy and risk controls for your works, while the Traffic Guidance Scheme (TGS) provides the on-street layout. When both are tidy and consistent, approvals move faster.
Think in ranges rather than fixed dates; review cycles, clarity, and the season matter as much as the calendar. These examples help set expectations:
Those last two scenarios benefit from dedicated guidance Crane & Lift Traffic Planning and Utility Works Traffic Planning cover the details reviewers look for.
Factors that help
Factors that slow things down
If your works affect footpaths or bike lanes, see our Pedestrian Management guide for ramps, barriers and wayfinding tips.
Permit sequencing that affects the clock
A practical order that avoids idle time:
Bundle interdependent items in the same cover letter so reviewers see the whole picture.
Use this to keep your first lodgement tight:
Yes. The TMP is the strategy and risk picture; the TGS is the on-street layout. They work together.
As early as practical. Even simple works benefit from buffer time in case of a revision loop.
Sometimes. Clean, scaled submissions with clear staging and PT/bike treatments are the best “fast-track.”
Pause, make the site safe, adjust under your change protocol, and update the as-built record.
Only when conditions match (speed, lanes, sight lines, land use). Otherwise, adapt the plan.
Our unparalleled expertise and support in managing traffic for your projects and events make us the glove-like fit for every one of your traffic needs.
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