What is an LDC?
A certificate confirming that development is lawful — for proposed or existing work.
A lawful development certificate (LDC) is formal written confirmation from the council that a proposed or existing development is lawful — either because it has planning permission, qualifies as permitted development, or has become immune from enforcement through time.
Try it on my houseA certificate confirming that development is lawful — for proposed or existing work.
To get formal confirmation before building, or to prove existing work is lawful when selling.
No. An LDC confirms lawfulness; planning permission is approval for development that needs it.
Yes — Scotland has a similar lawful development certificate process.
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.
See permitted development explained and planning permission explained. Overview: read our guide to planning permission vs permitted development.
A lawful development certificate is a formal decision by the local planning authority that development is lawful. There are two types:
An LDC is not planning permission. It does not approve development that needs permission — it confirms that permission is not required, or that existing development cannot be enforced against.
Common reasons include:
For projects like rear extension planning permission, garden room planning permission or loft conversion planning permission, an LDC can confirm permitted development applies before you build.
You submit an application to the council with plans and evidence supporting lawfulness. The council assesses whether the development is lawful on the facts presented — it does not judge design quality as a planning application would.
Fees apply. Decision timescales are similar to planning applications. If refused, you may need to adjust the proposal or apply for planning permission.
These examples illustrate common situations. They are not formal determinations and do not guarantee an outcome.
A homeowner wants certainty that a single-storey rear extension is permitted development before committing £50,000+ to building. See rear extension planning permission and extension costs guide.
A seller needs to prove a garden room built years ago is lawful — either because it was permitted development or because the enforcement time limit has passed.
If the council decides the proposal is not permitted development, you would need planning permission instead.
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.
Council fees are set nationally and are typically lower than full planning application fees for equivalent development.
A certificate for proposed development confirms lawfulness of that proposal. For existing development, it confirms the current lawful status.
Yes — there is an appeal route to the planning inspectorate if the council refuses.
Not legally — but many homeowners want the certainty before building.
Planning Digital helps you understand whether permitted development may apply — a useful first step before an LDC application.
Try it on my house