Planning Permission In City of London
Use this page when the search is really about planning permission in City of London and the local authority angle matters more than a generic national answer. It is built to get quickly to the project guides, local rule pages, restriction signals and next checks that actually change the route in City of London, Greater London.
Use This Council Page In The Order That Saves You Time
What Usually Applies In City of London, What Often Changes It, What To Do Next
What this page is for
Use it to get from a broad 'City of London planning' style search into the right local project guide, the local rule page that matters and the council checks most likely to change the route.
What often changes the answer
- Conservation areas: Additional planning restrictions may apply in conservation areas.
- Listed buildings: Listed building consent is required for works affecting listed buildings.
Best next step
- Open the project guide that matches the work you are actually planning.
- Sense-check whether local restrictions in City of London, Greater London make the general answer less reliable.
- Verify formally if the proposal is close to a limit or touches special controls.
The Fastest Routes From A City of London Planning Search
Open the most likely local project guide
Best when the build type is already clear and the question is how the local authority changes the route.
Open project guideOpen planning permission in City of London
Use the local topic page when the route question matters more than one exact build type.
Open local topic pageRead the route-level answer
Useful when the search intent is still broad and needs narrowing before you choose the wrong local page.
Read answerRun the quick planning tool
Use the tool when you want a faster first steer before opening multiple detailed local pages.
Open toolLocal Guides People Usually Need First
Driveway in City of London
Most householder development follows national permitted development rules unless local restrictions apply.
Check this guideHouse Extension in City of London
Most householder development follows national permitted development rules unless local restrictions apply.
Check this guideLoft Conversion in City of London
Most householder development follows national permitted development rules unless local restrictions apply.
Check this guideOutbuildings in City of London
Most householder development follows national permitted development rules unless local restrictions apply.
Check this guideProject Guides Worth Opening In City of London
Agricultural Building
Open the answer-first guide for agricultural building in City of London.
Open local guideAnnexe
Open the answer-first guide for annexe in City of London.
Open local guideBasement Conversion
Open the answer-first guide for basement conversion in City of London.
Open local guideChange of Use
Open the answer-first guide for change of use in City of London.
Open local guideDemolition
Open the answer-first guide for demolition in City of London.
Open local guideDormer Extension
Open the answer-first guide for dormer extension in City of London.
Open local guideDriveway
Open the answer-first guide for driveway in City of London.
Open local guideDropped Kerb
Open the answer-first guide for dropped kerb in City of London.
Open local guideFences and Walls
Open the answer-first guide for fences and walls in City of London.
Open local guideGarage Conversion
Open the answer-first guide for garage conversion in City of London.
Open local guideGarage
Open the answer-first guide for garage in City of London.
Open local guideGarden Room
Open the answer-first guide for garden room in City of London.
Open local guidePlanning Topics Worth Checking In City of London
Planning Permission
Use this when planning permission is the rule most likely to decide the answer in City of London.
Open local topic pagePermitted Development Rights
Use this when permitted development rights is the rule most likely to decide the answer in City of London.
Open local topic pageHeight Limits
Use this when height limits is the rule most likely to decide the answer in City of London.
Open local topic pageBoundary Distance Rules
Use this when boundary distance rules is the rule most likely to decide the answer in City of London.
Open local topic pageConservation Area Restrictions
Use this when conservation area restrictions is the rule most likely to decide the answer in City of London.
Open local topic pageHow To Use This Council Page Before You Build
- Open the project guide that matches the work you are actually planning.
- Check the local restriction signals affecting City of London, especially heritage designations and Article 4.
- If the proposal is close to a limit, get measured drawings ready and consider written confirmation before work starts.
How The Local Authority Layer Changes The Planning Question
The English planning system sets the baseline for many home projects, but local policy, conservation areas and Article 4 directions can still change what is allowed in City of London, Greater London.
That is why similar projects can follow different routes depending on the street, the property history and whether the site sits in a more restricted part of the authority.
What Usually Triggers A Closer Check In City of London
- Householder extensions where scale, height or neighbour impact start to look aggressive.
- Loft and roof proposals where roof alterations or visual impact matter more than expected.
- Outbuildings, driveways and boundary-facing work where siting and local restrictions change the answer quickly.
The Rule Pages Most Likely To Answer The Follow-Up Question
Local Authorities Worth Comparing
Project Hubs To Use If The Work Type Changes
Why This Local Authority Guide Is Useful Without Overclaiming
This page is designed to help you narrow the planning question before you spend time on drawings or an application. It works best when you use it with the local project guides and the rule-specific pages.
What it is based on
- English planning system guidance and the relevant householder route.
- City of London planning policy context.
- Greater London local authority guidance where relevant.
When to verify formally
- If the project is close to a hard limit.
- If the property may be listed or in a conservation area.
- If Article 4 or other local restrictions may apply.