Do I need planning permission for a garden room/Structure. An easy guide !
- Dave Negus

- 33 minutes ago
- 3 min read

Do I need planning permission for a garden room?
A simple UK guide (without the headache)
This post came about this morning.
I arrived on a new project in Suffolk to meet the client, the architect, and the estate agent.
Between us, there were decades of experience. Different specialisms Different perspectives.
And yet — within the first few minutes — we all paused.
Not because the idea was wrong.But because the rules around garden rooms aren’t always clear.
If experienced professionals can momentarily stop and double-check, it’s easy to see why homeowners feel confused.
So this guide is here to remove the noise and explain things simply.

Garden rooms are one of the most common questions I’m asked.
Not about design. Not about planting.
But this 👇“Do I need planning permission?”
The good news? Most people don’t.
The better news? It’s simpler than it sounds.
Let’s strip it back.
Planning permission — often not required
In many cases, a garden room falls under permitted development.
That means you can build it without submitting a planning application, as long as a few clear rules are followed.
Most garden rooms are fine if they are:
Single storey
Built in the rear or side garden (not the front)
Not taking up more than half of your garden
Within set height limits
On a property that still has permitted development rights
If your home is listed, in a conservation area, or has restrictions removed, the rules change slightly.
That’s always worth checking early.
Height and boundary rules (the bit most people trip up on)
This is where things usually get confusing — so here it is plainly.
Within 2 metres of a boundary?
Maximum height: 2.5 metres
More than 2 metres from all boundaries?
Up to 3 metres with a flat roof
Up to 4 metres with a pitched roof

Simple.
Designing around these limits early avoids expensive redesigns later.
What about Building Regulations?
Planning permission and Building Regulations are not the same thing.
Planning looks at where and how big. Building Regs look at how it’s built.
You’ll usually need Building Regulations if:
The garden room is over 30m²
It’s used for sleeping
It’s very close to a boundary and over 15m²
You’re adding full plumbing or complex services
Smaller, detached garden rooms used as studios, offices or quiet retreats often don’t need them — but it depends on layout and use.
This is why asking early matters.
A quick way to sense-check your idea
Ask yourself:
Is it modest in size?
Is it clearly ancillary to the house, not a separate home?
Is it designed to sit comfortably within the garden, not dominate it?
If the answer is yes, you’re usually on safe ground.
Why clarity upfront saves money
This isn’t about paperwork for the sake of it.
Getting the rules right early:
Avoids delays once builders are on site
Prevents awkward conversations with neighbours
Protects resale value later
Keeps the design honest and proportionate
Good garden rooms feel settled. They don’t push boundaries — literally or figuratively.
How I help at Studio Stour
When I design a garden room, I don’t treat it as an isolated object.
I look at:
The house
The garden
Neighbour relationships
Long-term use
And how it will age over time
That way, the design works with the rules — not against them.
And you get a space that feels like it’s always belonged there.
If you’re considering a garden room and want to sense-check an idea before committing, feel free to get in touch.
A short conversation early can save a lot of stress later.
Design shaped by people, place, and purpose.










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