Planning Permission Laws
Prestige Projects have years of experience of dealing with local authority planning departments and we understand the unique ways in which they all work. However, as a rule the following applies.Most new buildings or major changes to existing buildings or to the local environment need consent – known as planning permission. Obtaining planning permission approval is a separate matter from building regulations approval. Similarly, receiving any planning permission which your work may require is not the same as taking action to ensure that it complies with the building regulations. You can learn more about the difference between planning permission and building regulations here.
Do you need planning permission?
The following are common examples of when you will need to apply for planning permission:
You want to make additions or extensions to a flat or maisonette (including those converted from houses). (But you do not need planning permission to carry out internal alterations or work which does not affect the external appearance of the building.)
- You want to divide off part of your house for use as a separate home (for example, a self-contained flat or bed-sit) or use a caravan in your garden as a home for someone else. (But you do not need planning permission to let one or two of your rooms to lodgers.)
- You want to divide off part of your home for business or commercial use (for example, a workshop) or you want to build a parking place for a commercial vehicle at your home.
- You want to build something which goes against the terms of the original planning permission for your house – for example, your house may have been built with a restriction to stop people putting up fences in front gardens because it is on an “open plan” estate. Your council has a record of all planning permissions in its area.
- The work you want to do might obstruct the view of road users.
- You do not always need planning permission. It is not required, generally speaking, for changes to the inside of buildings, or for small alterations to the outside such as the installation of telephone connections and alarm boxes.
The work would involve a new or wider access to a trunk or classified road.
Other small changes, for example putting up walls and fences below a certain height, have a general planning permission for which a specific application is not required.