When a change of use needs consent, and how to regularise it after the fact.
You need a retrospective change-of-use application when a property has been used for a purpose that differs from its lawful planning use class — for example, a single dwelling let as a HMO, an annex used for short-let guesthouse accommodation, an agricultural barn used commercially, or a shop trading as a takeaway. Under section 73A of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 these can be regularised after the fact, and most are approvable when the application clearly evidences the use, the duration, and its compliance with the relevant Local Plan policies.
A material change of use is one that has planning significance — in other words, that changes the character of the use enough to be assessed as a different planning activity. Whether a change is "material" is a matter of fact and degree decided by the local planning authority. The Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order 1987 (as amended) sorts most uses into formal classes:
Switching between classes — or starting a sui generis use without consent — is almost always a material change of use that needs planning permission.
Under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, unauthorised changes of use constitute a breach of planning control. They are not criminal offences in themselves — only the failure to comply with an Enforcement Notice is. However, if you do not respond to a council letter inviting a retrospective application, the council is entitled and likely to pursue formal enforcement action. This is serious and you need to deal with it swiftly.
Change-of-use cases live or die on the policy hooks the application engages and the strength of the evidence of use. With the right framing and the right supporting documents, most are approvable — even where the council's first letter sounds final.
Yes — it is a change from Class C3 to Class C4. In most areas this is permitted development under the GPDO 2015 and no application is needed. However, many councils have made Article 4 directions removing this right, in which case full planning permission is required.
Acceptable evidence includes business rates records, council tax records, lease and tenancy documents, dated photographs, utility bills, statements from neighbours, and aerial imagery from Google Earth or aerial surveys.
Yes — section 171B of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 sets time limits after which the council can no longer take enforcement action. For changes of use other than to a single dwellinghouse, the limit is 10 years. Once that limit is reached, you can apply for a Lawful Development Certificate confirming the use is lawful.
You have 28 days to lodge an appeal with the Planning Inspectorate. We can usually act within hours of the notice being received. The earlier you engage, the more grounds of appeal are available.
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