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House Extension Costs UK 2026 — Prices by Type & Size

How much a house extension costs in the UK in 2026 — single storey, two storey, rear, side, and wrap-around extensions with prices, planning, and building regs.

An extension can transform your home and add significant value. Here’s what it costs in 2026.

Costs by Extension Type

Extension typeCost per m²Typical sizeTotal cost
Single-storey rear£1,400–£2,20015–30m²£25,000–£65,000
Two-storey rear£1,200–£1,80030–60m²£40,000–£100,000
Side return (terraced house)£1,500–£2,50010–20m²£25,000–£50,000
Wrap-around (rear + side)£1,400–£2,20025–40m²£40,000–£80,000
Over-garage£1,200–£1,80015–25m²£20,000–£40,000
Kitchen extension£1,500–£2,50015–30m²£30,000–£75,000 (incl. kitchen)
Conservatory£800–£1,50010–20m²£10,000–£30,000
Orangery£1,500–£2,50015–25m²£25,000–£60,000

Cost Breakdown — Typical 20m² Single-Storey Extension

ItemCost
Foundations£3,000–£6,000
Walls£4,000–£8,000
Roof£3,000–£6,000
Windows and doors (bi-fold/sliding)£3,000–£8,000
Flooring£1,000–£3,000
Plastering and decoration£1,500–£3,000
Electrics£1,500–£3,000
Plumbing (if kitchen/bathroom)£2,000–£5,000
Heating (radiators, underfloor)£1,000–£3,000
Building Regulations£400–£1,200
Structural engineer£400–£1,000
Architect/designer£2,000–£5,000 (8–12% of build cost)
Party wall surveyor (if applicable)£700–£1,500 per neighbour
Total (building only)£25,000–£50,000

Regional Price Variations

RegionCost per m² (single storey)Multiplier
London£2,000–£3,5001.3–1.5×
South East£1,600–£2,5001.1–1.3×
South West£1,400–£2,0001.0–1.1×
Midlands£1,300–£1,8001.0× (baseline)
North of England£1,200–£1,7000.9–1.0×
Scotland£1,200–£1,8000.9–1.0×
Wales£1,200–£1,7000.9–1.0×

Professional Fees

FeeTypical cost
Architect8–12% of build cost (or £2,000–£8,000 fixed)
Architectural technician£1,500–£4,000
Structural engineer£400–£1,500
Planning application (if needed)£258 (householder, England)
Building Control fees£400–£1,200
Party wall surveyor£700–£1,500 per adjoining property
Quantity surveyor (cost management)£500–£2,000

Planning Permission

Permitted Development (No Planning Needed)

RuleSingle storeyTwo storey
Max depth (detached)4m (or 8m with prior approval)3m
Max depth (semi/terrace)3m (or 6m with prior approval)3m
Max height4m (within 2m of boundary)Eaves no higher than existing
Max eaves height3m (within 2m of boundary)Must be same as existing house
Side extensionsHalf the width of the original houseNot permitted development if facing a highway
CoverageExtension + outbuildings must not cover more than 50% of the garden

When You NEED Planning Permission

SituationWhy
Exceeds permitted development size limitsToo large
Listed buildingNeed listed building consent
Conservation areaAdditional restrictions apply
Article 4 directionLocal council has removed PD rights
Flat or maisonettePD rights generally more limited
Two-storey side extension visible from roadUsually needs planning permission

Building Regulations

Almost all extensions need Building Regs approval for:
Structural safety (foundations, walls, roof)
Fire safety (escape routes, fire-resistant materials)
Energy efficiency (insulation, glazing)
Ventilation
Drainage
Electrical safety
Accessibility

Timeline

PhaseDuration
Design and drawings2–6 weeks
Planning permission (if needed)8 weeks (standard householder application)
Building Regulations submission2–5 weeks
Party wall notices (if applicable)1–3 months
Getting quotes and appointing a builder2–6 weeks
Building work — single storey8–14 weeks
Building work — two storey12–20 weeks
Total (design to completion)6–12 months

Value Added

Extension typeTypical value addedCost vs value
Extra bedroom (two storey)10–15% of property valueUsually profitable
Kitchen-diner extension5–10%Usually profitable
Two-storey rear10–20%Often profitable
Loft conversion10–20%Usually the best ROI
Conservatory3–5%Rarely recoups full cost
Garage conversion10–15%Good ROI

Budget-Saving Tips

TipPotential saving
Stay within permitted development (no planning fee)£258+
Use a building designer instead of an architect30–50% on design fees
Get at least 3 quotes from buildersCan save 10–20%
Avoid bespoke — use standard window sizes£1,000–£3,000
Project-manage yourself (if experienced)10–15% of build cost
Build in autumn/winter (quieter period for builders)Sometimes better pricing
Choose standard roof tiles to match existingSaves vs bespoke materials

Sources

  1. ONS — Consumer price inflation