Satellite dish in Doncaster: Planning Permission Guide

What you need to know about installing a satellite dish in Doncaster — permitted development rules and restrictions.

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Satellite dishs in Doncaster at a glance

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weeks typical

Doncaster is a large mixed urban–rural borough. Extensive Green Belt (over 400 km²) covers the rural fringe and former pit-village surroundings, tightening permitted development for outbuildings and larger extensions in those areas. Conservation areas include the Doncaster town centre (High Street, South Parade), the historic market towns of Bawtry and Tickhill, and rural villages such as Sprotbrough, Cusworth, Hooton Pagnell, and Fishlake; there are very extensive Tree Preservation Order zones (1,300+) across the borough. Article 4 Directions are limited and site-specific (e.g. demolition control on the former Balby Board School), so most householder permitted development rights remain intact outside conservation areas and the Green Belt.

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Permitted Development Rules

Covered under Part 1, Class H. Usually permitted with size limits.

Satellite dishes are covered under Part 1, Class H of the GPDO. There are size limits and restrictions on the number of dishes per property.

Which Professionals Do You Need?

Satellite dish installation is handled by specialist installers from your satellite TV provider. No additional professionals are typically needed.

This project is unlikely to need specialist professional services beyond a competent builder.

Architect / designerNot needed

This type of project does not typically require architectural services.

Structural engineerNot needed
Party wall surveyorNot needed
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, satellite dishes should not be installed on a wall or roof slope facing a highway. Rear-facing installations are preferred.

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.

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Frequently Asked Questions

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