Loft conversion in Broadland: Planning Permission Guide

Everything you need to know about loft conversions in Broadland — permitted development rules, costs, and which professionals you'll need.

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Loft conversions in Broadland at a glance

94%

approved

£548

application fee

8

weeks typical

Based on 36 decided applications in Broadland over 12 months (34 granted, 2 refused).

Broadland borders or partially overlaps the Norfolk Broads (which carries National Park-equivalent planning protection) and the Norfolk Coast AONB — properties near those boundaries are on Article 1(5) land where permitted-development rights are restricted. Broadland has 31 conservation areas — extensive heritage coverage restricting external alterations across many streets. 28 Article 4 directions affect specific streets. 1,022 listed buildings recorded.

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Approval probability, 5 nearest comparables, refusal reasons — for your specific address.

Recent loft conversion decisions in Broadland

The 5 most recent decided applications. Addresses redacted to postcode area.

Granted

Loft Conversion with dormer window.

NR52026-05-14
Granted

Front extension and extension of rear dormer

NR132026-05-07
Granted

Variation of condition 2 to amend the design of the dormer of planning permission 2025/1772 (which consented to Dormer window to the side…

NR32026-04-28
Granted

1. Gable lift (hip to gable conversion) 2. Rear dormer 3. side elevation wall to rear side of property

NR62026-04-23
Granted

Rear two storey cat slide roof extension and detached open sided cart shed

NR82026-04-22

These are borough-wide. See the 5 nearest to your address.

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Permitted Development Rules

Class BPart 1

Additions etc to the roof of a dwellinghouse

GPDO 2015, Schedule 2, Part 1, Class B

Loft conversions fall under Part 1, Class B of the GPDO. You can add volume to your roof space without planning permission, as long as you stay within the cubic metre limits for your property type.

Key dimension limits

Up to 50m³ additional volumeMust not exceed existing roof heightNo dormer on front roof slope

These are the maximum GPDO limits for a detached house with no constraints. Your actual limits depend on your property type, location, and any planning restrictions.

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Typical Costs in East of England

Loft conversion costs vary significantly depending on the type — a simple Velux conversion is much cheaper than a dormer or mansard.

Loft conversionEast of England

Cost per m²

£1,900£3,250

construction rate

Typical total

£30,000£55,000

Based on 15–25

Typically includes

Dormer structureStaircaseInsulationElectricsPlumbingBasic finishes

Typically excludes

Bathroom fittingPlanning application feeBuilding regs feeParty wall surveyorArchitect fees

Dormer loft conversions are at the higher end. Velux/rooflight conversions are cheaper. Mansard conversions can exceed these ranges.

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Which Professionals Do You Need?

Loft conversions involve structural alterations to your roof and floor, so professional input is important for safety and Building Regulations compliance.

You'll need a structural engineer and a party wall surveyor for this project.

Architect / designerRecommended

Loft conversions involve structural alterations and Building Regulations requirements that benefit from professional design.

Typical fee: £2,000£5,000 (Plans + Building Regs)

Structural engineerEssential

Loft conversions require structural calculations for floor strengthening, roof alterations, and any steelwork.

Typical fee: £800£2,500

Party wall surveyorEssential

Your semi-detached house shares a boundary with neighbours. Extensions and loft work within 3 metres of a shared wall trigger the Party Wall Act.

Typical fee: £700£1,500 (per neighbour)

Planning consultantNot needed

This guidance is based on a typical semi-detached house with no special constraints. Listed buildings, conservation areas, and attached properties may require additional professional input.

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Conservation Areas & Listed Buildings

In conservation areas, dormers on any roof slope facing a highway are not permitted development. Velux or rooflight conversions may still be possible.

Conservation areas

Properties in conservation areas often have reduced permitted development rights. Some project types (like side extensions) lose PD rights entirely. An Article 4 Direction can remove additional PD rights.

Listed buildings

Listed buildings (Grade I, II*, or II) have no permitted development rights at all. Any external alteration requires Listed Building Consent in addition to any planning permission. An architect experienced in heritage work is essential.

Check if your property is in a conservation area or has other planning constraints.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Just want a quick yes/no for your loft conversion?

Run our free 2-minute check to see whether your project likely qualifies as permitted development in Broadland. For personalised approval odds and nearby comparables, get the full report above.

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