Property

Home Renovation Guide UK — Costs, Planning Permission & Adding Value

Planning a home renovation in the UK? Understand costs, planning permission, building regulations, which improvements add most value, and how to budget your project.

Home renovations can transform your living space and add significant value to your property — but they can also be stressful and expensive if not planned properly. This guide covers costs, permissions, regulations, and strategies for getting the best return on your investment.

Renovation Costs

By Project Type

Project Typical Cost Range Potential Value Added
New kitchen £8,000–£25,000+ 3–7%
New bathroom £4,000–£12,000 3–5%
Loft conversion £25,000–£60,000 10–20%
Single-storey extension £25,000–£60,000 5–10%
Two-storey extension £40,000–£100,000 10–15%
Garage conversion £8,000–£20,000 5–10%
Full redecoration £2,000–£8,000 2–5%
New windows £4,000–£10,000 1–3%
Central heating upgrade £3,000–£6,000 2–3%
Garden landscaping £2,000–£15,000 1–5%

Cost Per Square Metre

Build Type Cost (£/m²)
Basic renovation £800–£1,200
Standard extension £1,500–£2,500
High-spec extension £2,500–£4,000
Basement conversion £2,000–£4,000
Loft conversion £1,200–£2,000

Location factor: London and South East +20–40%, South West and Midlands +5–10%, North -5–15%.

Planning Permission

Permitted Development (No Permission Needed)

Most of these do not require planning permission for houses (flats are different):

Work Permitted Development Limits
Rear extension (single storey) 3m (semi/terrace) or 4m (detached) from rear wall
Side extension Single storey, max 4m height, no more than half width
Loft conversion Up to 40m³ (terrace/semi) or 50m³ (detached)
Outbuildings Within limits (max 50% of garden, max height rules)
Internal alterations Generally free (unless listed building)
Replacing windows Like-for-like (must use FENSA installer)
Solar panels Generally permitted (not above ridge line)

When You DO Need Permission

  • Exceeding permitted development limits
  • Listed buildings (listed building consent needed even for internal work)
  • Conservation areas (additional restrictions)
  • Flats and maisonettes (most external changes)
  • New dwellings (including converting a building into a dwelling)
  • Changing use (residential to commercial)

Building Regulations

Even when planning permission is not needed, most significant work requires building regulations approval:

Work Building Regs Required?
Extensions Yes
Loft conversions Yes
Structural alterations (removing walls) Yes
Electrical work (kitchens/bathrooms) Yes (or use Part P registered electrician)
New bathroom/kitchen plumbing Sometimes
Re-roofing Sometimes
Replacing windows Yes (use FENSA installer for self-certification)

Planning Your Renovation

Step-by-Step

Step Action Timeline
1 Set budget (add 15–20% contingency) Month 1
2 Check planning/building regs requirements Month 1
3 Get architects/designers involved (if needed) Months 1–2
4 Apply for planning permission (if needed) Months 2–4 (8-week process)
5 Get at least 3 quotes from builders Months 3–4
6 Check builder credentials (references, insurance, qualifications) Month 4
7 Agree contract and payment terms Month 4–5
8 Building work begins Month 5+
9 Building control inspections (at key stages) During build
10 Completion and sign-off End

Budgeting Tips

  • Always have 15–20% contingency — unexpected issues are common (especially in older properties)
  • Get detailed, itemised quotes (not estimates)
  • Fix the price where possible — avoid day rates for large projects
  • Stage payments — never pay everything upfront (10–20% deposit is reasonable, then payments at key milestones)
  • Keep a record of all spending for future CGT calculations if the property is not your main residence

Choosing a Builder

What to Check

Check Why
References and portfolio Proof of quality work
Insurance (public liability, employers') Protection if something goes wrong
Trade body membership Federation of Master Builders, TrustMark
Written contract Clear terms for both parties
Fixed price vs estimate Manage your budget
Realistic timeline Over-promising is a red flag

Red Flags

  • Asking for full payment upfront
  • No written contract or quote
  • No evidence of previous work
  • Cannot provide insurance details
  • Significantly cheaper than other quotes (may cut corners)
  • Pressure to start immediately

Tax Considerations

Main Residence

Improvements to your main home have no immediate tax impact. However:

Rental Property

For landlords:

  • Repairs and maintenance are deductible against rental income
  • Capital improvements (extension, new kitchen) are not deductible but reduce CGT when you sell
  • The distinction: repairs restore existing condition; improvements enhance or change it

Financing Renovations

Option Typical Rate Best For
Savings 0% (no borrowing cost) Any affordable project
Remortgage/further advance 4–6% Large projects (£20,000+)
Personal loan 5–10% Medium projects (£5,000–£25,000)
0% credit card 0% (for promotional period) Small projects (under £5,000)
Specialist renovation mortgage Varies Major structural work

For more on property costs and planning, see our conveyancing guide and mortgage calculator.