DIY Builds
Photo: Vincent Rivaud
If you build without planning permission, you may not be breaking any rules. However, if there is a planning breach, you may have to submit a retrospective application or even appeal against an enforcement notice.
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Learn More »There will often be issues relating to how different the actual end result is from the permitted scheme, as well as deciding what to do about it. Some local planning authorities will bring enforcement action (whether by an enforcement notice or a breach of condition notice) and others will be more open to discussions. One common solution is to apply for retrospective planning permission to legitimise the “as built” development. We can help you prepare such an application. You can also appeal against an enforcement notice on the basis that planning permission ought to be granted for what you have actually constructed. There are many reasons that your build might require retrospective planning permission. You may not have realised that you needed planning permission at the time, or the logistics of the build might have meant building later would be impossible (scheduling conflicts for the builders, or building equipment arriving earlier than planned), or the build might have been a more substantial undertaking than you realised at first. If you are not sure if you need retrospective planning permission, check our permitted development section for more details or ask us a free question using the form on the right. Your local planning authority will be most concerned with whether the planning breach will negatively affect the public or the way the land around your build is already being used.
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A planning breach is not a criminal offence on its own, but unless you successfully appeal against an enforcement notice you have received, it is illegal to fail to comply with such a notice. It is important to either apply for retrospective planning permission or appeal against any received enforcement notice sooner rather than later. You can only obtain planning permission in one way after you have built without planning permission. You can either make a retrospective planning application under section 73A of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, or appeal against an enforcement notice as a ground (a) appeal. If you have already received an enforcement notice it can seriously affect your planning permission situation.
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