We Handle All The Planning
Planning permission can feel like a daunting process, but with us, it doesn’t have to be. Our expert team takes care of everything – from initial applications to final approvals – ensuring a smooth, stress-free experience for you.
Do I need planning permission for an annexe?
The simple answer is yes
At iHus, we work with our planning partner to simplify the planning approval process by using the Caravan Act wherever possible. This act allows you to legally install an annexe quickly and easily under a Certificate of Lawfulness (CoL), which negates the need for full planning permission and the associated risks and delays created by external consultations and various other statutory requirements.
We’re so confident in gaining CoL approval that we offer a full money back guarantee to give you complete peace of mind.
We work within the constraints of the act to ensure our design satisfies all criteria and can therefore be deemed legal under a Certificate of Lawfulness.
iHus are the only provider whose annexes meet both the requirements of the Caravan Act and building control standards to ensure your annexe is built to the highest standard, recognised and certified by building control.
Working with our partners and planning experts, we submit the plans to your Local Planning Authority (LPA) and liaise with them during the determination phase to ensure any questions are addressed and further information supplied as and when required. The ultimate aim after the eight week phase is to obtain the CoL, enabling your build to commence as soon as possible.
In the event that you request full planning, our team are equally equipped to process your application through the Householder Application route and ‘delegated authority’, where the case officer and the LPA management team will make the decision. Occasionally, a full planning committee may also be involved in the decision-making process, which can add time, complexity, risk, and cost to your project.
Under full planning, your LPA are required to work within national guidelines for determination, but they also adopt their own local policies, meaning that no two applications are the same.
In some circumstances, one or more specialist surveys may be required to support full planning, including: Arboricultural (tree), Ecological (wildlife), Topographical (ground levels), BNG (Biodiversity Net Gain), SUD’s (sustainable drainage), Flood risk assessments, Archaeological surveys, or a Heritage report if you live in a listed building. Each of these involve separate fees payable to the specialist company undertaking the survey and associated time to complete, document, and review by the LPA.
If your main property is in a conservation area, national park, Green Belt, site of special scientific interest, or area of outstanding natural beauty, the LPA conservation officer will be involved and can influence what can be built and how it looks.
No additional surveys or assessments are required under a Certificate of Lawfulness, hence no delays or project cost growth.
A full planning notice is issued when an application is successful and may have conditions attached that must be adhered to. The notice may also be issued with ‘pre-commencement’ conditions which must be discharged before work can start, which may incur delays and additional/small fees.
Our planning experts will work closely with your case officer during the planning process to give your application the best chance of being approved. However, if your application is refused, we will review the reasons for refusal and advise on the next steps, usually amending and re-submitting the application or appealing the decision.
For our Classic range, our primary method of obtaining planning permission is a Householder Application. However, we submit the same plans under the Caravan Act so that should any objections be raised, we have a ‘safety net’. This dual approach ensures that the planning stage is as short as possible and that building works can start as soon as approval is granted. Alternatively, our 3632 range is covered by the Caravan Act alone.
Your Peace of Mind Assured
With a 94% success rate and over 250 local planning authorities worked with, we’re so confident we can secure your planning, we offer a full money-back guarantee. That means, in the unlikely event that planning consent is not given, we’ll refund every penny you’ve spent with us up to this point.
250 number of local planning authorities worked with
FAQs
Each project is inspected by VANTAGE Building Control, an industry-approved body, to guarantee that it meets or exceeds building standards. VANTAGE are registered by The Building Safety Regulator (BSR) and are a registered Building Control Approver (RBCA). Please note for models in the 3632 range, building control is not always necessary.
For the Caravan Act or Householder Application, we will work with you to agree/confirm basic design and prepare and submit the application/s to your LPA. Once validated (which can take up to four weeks), the planning application process typically takes a further eight weeks.
No public consultation is required for a Certificate of Lawfulness (CoL). Unlike a traditional householder application, a CoL is based entirely on facts and law, not planning opinion. Because of this, there is no statutory public consultation period. Your neighbours, the Parish Council, and other bodies are not invited to submit objections regarding the design, scale, or impact of your annexe.
Weeks 1–8:
Legal assessment: Instead of weighing public opinion, an LPA case officer will look after your application and assess the evidence we provide. Their only job is to confirm that your proposed annexe meets the four legal tests of the Caravan Act.
Site visit: Sometimes during the eight week window, the officer may conduct a brief site visit to verify the physical layout of your garden and property.
The decision: The LPA has a statutory limit of eight weeks to issue your Certificate of Lawfulness. However, because the officer does not have to wait for a mandatory 21-day public consultation period to close, a Certificate of Lawfulness is frequently decided and issued much earlier than a standard householder planning application. Once issued, this is your legal green light, confirming your annexe is lawful and installation can begin.
Our sales team will be happy to provide you with further information on the planning process during initial discussions.
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