Is a garden room the same as an annexe?
Not always. A garden room is usually an outbuilding; an annexe often provides independent living space.
Garden rooms and annexes can look similar, but planning authorities may treat them differently — especially if an annexe provides self-contained living accommodation. The distinction affects whether permitted development applies and what approvals you may need.
Try it on my houseNot always. A garden room is usually an outbuilding; an annexe often provides independent living space.
Self-contained accommodation with sleeping and cooking facilities may need planning permission even when a simple garden room would not.
Sometimes for modest outbuildings, but annexes with residential facilities are more likely to need planning permission.
Yes. Rules for ancillary accommodation and outbuildings 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. Costs: garden room costs. Overview: planning permission vs permitted development.
A garden room is typically an outbuilding in the garden used for work, hobbies, storage or occasional relaxation. It is ancillary to the main dwelling — people live in the house, not independently in the garden room.
Garden rooms are usually assessed under outbuilding permitted development rules. See garden office planning permission and garden gym planning permission for common examples.
An annexe (sometimes called a granny annexe) is self-contained living accommodation — typically with sleeping, cooking and washing facilities — that is related to but separate from the main house. Planning authorities may treat this as a change of use or new residential accommodation rather than a simple outbuilding.
Annexes are more likely to need planning permission because they create independent living space on the property.
The key planning question is often whether the building is genuinely ancillary or provides independent residential accommodation.
For building standards on habitable space, see building regulations vs planning permission or building warrant vs planning permission.
These examples illustrate common situations. They are not formal determinations and do not guarantee an outcome.
Used for working from home with no sleeping or cooking facilities. Usually assessed as an outbuilding — permitted development may apply if size limits are met.
A self-contained unit with bedroom, kitchenette and shower. More likely to need planning permission as ancillary residential accommodation.
Suppliers may call a building a 'garden room' but if it includes full living facilities, the council may assess it as an annexe. Check before purchasing.
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.
Use as a separate dwelling may need planning permission and could have council tax and licensing implications beyond this guide.
Facilities alone do not always define the use, but sleeping, cooking and washing together suggest self-contained accommodation.
If it provides independent living accommodation, it may be assessed as an annexe rather than a simple outbuilding.
Use Planning Digital's Project Planner and describe the intended use and facilities. See also garden room planning permission.
Facilities and intended use affect the planning route. Planning Digital helps you understand what may apply before you commit.
Try it on my house