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Retrospective Planning Application for a Home Extension

When an extension breaches permitted development limits, the structured route back into compliance.

📒 Knowledge Hub article
✅ By a Chartered Town Planner (MRTPI)

You need a retrospective planning application for a home extension if the extension exceeded the permitted development limits set by the GPDO 2015, deviated from previously approved drawings, or was built on a property where permitted development rights had been removed by a planning condition or Article 4 direction. Most home extension cases are approvable on planning merits provided the extension does not cause real harm to neighbours or character — and the local plan policies on residential alterations and amenity are the correct framing.

Why you might need retrospective consent for an extension

The most common scenarios we see:

  • Exceeded permitted development. The owner thought their extension fell within PDR but it overran one or more of the dimensional limits (depth, height, eaves, roof pitch, materials).
  • Builder over-build. The original consent was correct but the builder added a little more on site than the approved drawings showed.
  • PD rights removed by condition. Many newer detached houses, properties on subdivision sites, and homes in sensitive areas have conditions removing PDRs for extensions and outbuildings.
  • Article 4 direction. Conservation areas and other sensitive areas often have Article 4 directions removing the usual PDR allowances.
  • Corner plot rules. The half-width and principal elevation rules catch out almost every corner-plot side extension.
  • Two adjoining structures combined. Cumulative volume rules can be tripped where successive owners have each added a little.

How councils assess retrospective extension applications

The substantive tests are exactly the same as for a prospective application. The case officer will look at:

The amenity and character tests

  • Scale and proportion — is the extension subordinate to the host dwelling?
  • Daylight to neighbours — the 25- and 45-degree light tests, plus more detailed assessment for boundary cases.
  • Privacy and overlooking — window positions, sightlines, screening.
  • Character and street scene — how the extension reads from the public realm.
  • Materials — do they match or sympathetically complement the existing dwelling?
  • Parking and access — is there adequate provision retained?

The retrospective process for an extension

  1. Honest pre-application assessment. Read the planning policies, identify any constraints, and decide if the case is realistically approvable.
  2. Prepare the validation pack. Drawings to council standard, a planning statement engaging the right policies, supporting documents.
  3. Submit through the Planning Portal. Application validated within 5 to 10 working days.
  4. Negotiate with the case officer. Where small modifications would make the case acceptable, agree them in dialogue rather than waiting for a refusal.
  5. Receive the decision. Most household extensions are determined within 8 weeks under delegated powers.

What if you cannot get approval?

If the application is refused and an appeal is not viable, the alternatives are: revert the works to bring them within the original approval (or within PDR), accept a Section 73 negotiation to modify the development, or wait out the section 171B time limit if the breach is old enough. We discuss every alternative honestly before recommending one.

The honest summary

Home extension retrospective cases are some of the most common retrospective applications and one of the highest-success-rate categories. With a properly drafted planning statement engaging the right Local Plan policies, the typical home extension case is approvable on its merits.

Frequently asked questions

Can I get retrospective planning permission for an extension that exceeded permitted development?

Yes — this is one of the most common types of retrospective application and most are approved. The fact that the extension breached PDR is not a reason for refusal in itself; the case is assessed on planning merits.

Will I be made to demolish my extension?

Demolition is rare and is the council's last resort. The vast majority of home extension cases end either in retrospective approval or in a small modification negotiated with the case officer.

Does it matter how long the extension has been there?

Yes. If the extension was substantially completed before 25 April 2024, it becomes immune from enforcement after 4 years. If after that date, the period is 10 years. Once immune, you can apply for a Lawful Development Certificate.

How much does the application cost?

The council fee for a householder application is set nationally and currently around £258 (paid directly by you to the council). Our fixed agent fee for household retrospective cases is £450 + VAT all-in.

Need an honest read on your case? A Chartered Town Planner will give you a written assessment before you spend a penny. Get a free assessment →

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