Do all garden offices need planning permission?
No. Modest garden offices may fall within permitted development limits for outbuildings on some houses.
Garden offices are popular for remote working — but in planning terms they are usually treated as outbuildings in your garden. Size, height, position and existing outbuildings all affect whether planning permission is needed.
Try it on my houseNo. Modest garden offices may fall within permitted development limits for outbuildings on some houses.
Footprint, height, distance from boundaries, total garden coverage and existing sheds or outbuildings.
Usually the building is assessed as an outbuilding; use can matter in some contexts but size and position are primary.
Yes. Outbuilding limits differ between countries.
This does not automatically mean permitted development applies. Every property and proposal is different and still needs to be checked.
Many projects require planning permission, but the answer depends on the individual circumstances.
Part of our garden room planning permission overview. Compare garden room vs annexe if you are unsure about an annexe. Costs: garden room costs. Overview: planning permission vs permitted development.
A garden office is typically an outbuilding within the curtilage (garden and grounds) of your house. Permitted development (national rules that may allow certain works without a full planning application) sets limits on outbuilding size, height and position.
See garden gym planning permission for similar outbuilding projects. For costs, garden room costs guide.
Outbuilding permitted development limits differ between England and Scotland. Boundary distance rules and height limits near boundaries are particularly important to check.
See planning permission in England and planning permission in Scotland.
These examples illustrate common situations. They are not formal determinations and do not guarantee an outcome.
A small insulated building for desk work may fall within permitted development on a typical house if height, footprint and boundary distance limits are met.
Larger buildings covering more garden area are more likely to need planning permission. Facilities suggesting independent living may change how the building is assessed.
Height limits are often reduced near boundaries. A building that would be acceptable in the centre of the garden may need planning permission at the boundary.
Before relying on general guidance, check the property and proposal together.
Planning Digital helps bring these checks together so you can understand the likely planning route before going further.
Usually yes — both are assessed as outbuildings. See garden room planning permission.
Planning permission and building standards are separate. A building warrant or building regulations approval may be needed for installations.
You may not need planning permission for the building if it is permitted development — but business use of your home can have other considerations beyond planning.
Use Planning Digital's Project Planner. Review garden room vs annexe if the building might be an annexe.
Size, position and existing outbuildings affect the answer. Planning Digital helps you check before you buy or build.
Try it on my house