What is listed building consent?
Permission from the council for work that affects a listed building's character as a building of special interest.
Listed building consent is separate permission required for work that affects the character of a listed building — a property of special architectural or historic interest. Most external and many internal alterations need it, and permitted development rights are greatly reduced.
Try it on my housePermission from the council for work that affects a listed building's character as a building of special interest.
No — it is a separate consent. You may need both for the same project.
Very limited. Most work to listed buildings needs listed building consent.
Yes — listed building consent is required in Scotland too.
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 planning permission explained. For conservation areas, conservation areas explained. Project guides: extension planning permission guide, loft conversion planning permission, solar panel planning permission.
A listed building is on the statutory list of buildings of special architectural or historic interest. Listing protects the whole building, not just attractive features — inside and out.
Listing grades (I, II* and II in England; categories A, B and C in Scotland) indicate significance but all listed buildings need consent for work affecting character.
Listed building consent is approval for alterations, extensions or demolition affecting a listed building's character. It is a criminal offence to carry out such work without consent.
Planning permission may also be needed for the same project — the two applications are separate but considered together.
These examples illustrate common situations. They are not formal determinations and do not guarantee an outcome.
Listed building consent and planning permission would typically both be required. Design must respect the building's heritage.
Even like-for-like replacement may need listed building consent if it affects character.
Usually need listed building consent. Visibility and impact on special interest are key. See solar panel planning permission.
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.
Search the National Heritage List for England or Historic Environment Scotland's portal.
Sometimes — with listed building consent and often planning permission. Design quality and heritage impact are central.
If it affects special interest features — often yes.
Enforcement action and potential criminal prosecution.
Listed status significantly affects what is possible. Planning Digital helps identify heritage constraints on your property.
Try it on my house