Building Regulations Regularisation Certificates
Regularisation is not a shortcut for live work. It is a way to deal with some past work where approval evidence is missing, and it may still involve investigation, remedial work and cost.
Planning First, Building Control Next, Evidence Always
Use this page to separate the project permission question from the technical compliance question. That split is what keeps the guidance useful instead of turning every home project into one blurry approval answer.
Direct answer
Regularisation is not a shortcut for live work. It is a way to deal with some past work where approval evidence is missing, and it may still involve investigation, remedial work and cost.
- Work date
- Local authority route
- Evidence available
Before you apply
Gather drawings, invoices, photos, installer certificates and any old correspondence before asking building control what it will need to inspect or verify.
- Photos and invoices
- Installer records
- Possible opening-up work
England-first scope
This pilot does not try to flatten England, Wales and Scotland into one answer. Use the linked official sources before relying on a close route.
- England baseline
- Official source links
- Planning route handoff
Use This Sequence Before The Job Becomes Expensive To Reverse
A good building-regulations answer should leave you with a next action, not just a definition. For this home project, the useful route is to pin down the planning risk, choose the right building-control conversation, then keep evidence as the work moves on.
1. Separate the approvals
It is a retrospective route for some work already carried out without building regulations approval, handled through a local authority building control body. Planning permission decides whether the development is acceptable in planning terms; building regulations decide whether the work is technically compliant.
2. Pick the route to discuss
Ask whether the next step is regularisation, full plans, building notice, competent person certification, regularisation, or a planning-first pause.
3. Keep the proof trail
Save drawings, specifications, inspection records, installer certificates and completion evidence together so the route can be understood later.
Not Sure Which Building Control Route To Ask About?
Use the route checker when the project is stuck between full plans, building notice, competent person certification, regularisation or a planning-first pause. It is a quick triage step, not a substitute for building control advice.
Small Assumptions That Create Bigger Problems Later
Using one approval to answer another
Planning permission, permitted development, building regulations and installer certification answer different questions. Do not let one reassuring phrase carry the whole project.
Choosing the route too late
If the likely route is regularisation, settle that before work is hidden, dates are fixed or the contractor has already moved past the inspection point.
Keeping proof as an afterthought
Certificates, inspection notes, photos and specifications are much easier to collect while the project is live than years later during a sale or remortgage.
What To Ask Before You Commit
Approval route
Ask whether this home project should use a building notice, full plans route, regularisation route, competent person scheme or another building control path.
Information needed
Ask what drawings, structural notes, specifications, declarations or site details should be ready before work starts or before an application is made.
Inspection and sign-off
Ask when inspections are expected, who books them, what should not be covered up too early and what completion evidence should be issued at the end.
What Proof To Keep Before Selling Or Remortgaging
Keep the building-control record with the planning record. The useful paperwork is not just for the build itself; it can matter years later when a buyer, lender, insurer or adviser asks how the work was approved.
Before work
Save the quote, drawings, specifications, approval route and any written advice from the building control body.
During work
Save inspection dates, photos before work is covered up, design changes and any contractor or competent person records.
After completion
Save the completion certificate, compliance certificates, planning decision or lawful development certificate, and final drawings.
Use the quick actions below to keep a shareable copy for yourself, a designer, or anyone helping you sense-check the planning route.
Bookmark the page if you want to come back later. For borderline schemes, keep the printout with your measurements, site photos and the local checks you still need to verify.
Official Sources Worth Checking
Building regulations can change by project type, building-control route and jurisdiction. This pilot is England-first, so use these official sources before relying on a close or expensive route.
Building Regulations By Project Type
Use these pages when the planning question is no longer the only thing to settle.
Extensions
Check extension building regulations in England, including structure, insulation, drainage, fire safety and planning route links.
Open routeLoft Conversions
Check loft conversion building regulations in England, including structure, stairs, fire safety, insulation and planning links.
Open routeGarage Conversions
Check garage conversion building regulations in England, including insulation, damp, fire safety, structure and planning checks.
Open routePorches
Check porch building regulations in England, including glazing, electrics, thermal separation and planning permission links.
Open routeTemporary Buildings
Check temporary building regulations in England, including structure, use, services, safety and planning permission links.
Open routeOutbuildings
Check outbuilding building regulations in England, including size, sleeping use, services, fire safety and planning links.
Open routeDriveways
Check driveway building regulations in England, including drainage, access, hard surfaces, dropped kerbs and planning links.
Open routeUseful Building Regulations Follow-Up Guides
Open these when the project question has moved from “do I need approval?” into drawings, inspections, certification, drainage, structure or proof.
Building Regulations Before You Start Checklist
Use a practical England building regulations checklist before home project work starts, including route, drawings and evidence.
Open guideBuilding Notice Vs Full Plans
Compare building notice and full plans routes in England before choosing building control for home project work.
Open guideBuilding Control Inspections
Check what building control inspections are for and what evidence to keep during home work in England.
Open guideBuilding Regulations Drawings And Specifications
Check what drawings and specifications may be needed for a building control application in England.
Open guideStructural Calculations And Building Regulations
Check when structural calculations may be needed for building regulations approval in England.
Open guideDrainage And Waste Building Regulations
Check drainage and waste building regulations issues for extensions, bathrooms, driveways and home work in England.
Open guideCompetent Person Schemes And Building Regulations
Check when competent person schemes can self-certify building regulations compliance for home work in England.
Open guideBuilding Regulations Completion Certificates
Check why building regulations completion evidence matters for home projects, sale, remortgage and future proof in England.
Open guideWindows And Doors Building Regulations
Check building regulations, competent person certification and planning links for replacing windows and doors in England.
Open guideQuestions People Usually Ask Next
Use these as short route checks before you rely on a contractor answer, order drawings or submit through building control.
What is regularisation?
It is a retrospective route for some work already carried out without building regulations approval, handled through a local authority building control body.
Is it guaranteed?
No. Building control may need evidence, opening-up works or alterations before it can decide whether the work complies.
When does it usually come up?
It often appears during sale, remortgage, insurance, enforcement or when owners realise older work has no completion evidence.