Fence, wall or gate in Leeds: Planning Permission Guide

Your guide to fences, walls, and gates in Leeds — height limits, permitted development rules, and costs.

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Fence, wall or gates in Leeds at a glance

74%

approved

£258

application fee

8

weeks typical

Based on 200 decided applications in Leeds over 12 months (148 granted, 52 refused).

Leeds has numerous conservation areas including Headingley, Roundhay, Chapel Allerton, Armley Mills, and around the city centre. Listed buildings are concentrated in the Victorian warehouse and retail heritage of the city centre and around Kirkstall Abbey. The Yorkshire Dales National Park fringe affects some northern parishes, triggering Article 2(3) designated land rules. Flood zones along the Aire are extensive, affecting many city-centre and riverside properties. Article 4 Directions cover parts of Headingley.

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

Recent fence, wall or gate decisions in Leeds

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

Granted

Hybrid planning application for partial redevelopment of the existing stadium and surroundings, comprising: (i) Full planning application…

LS112026-04-09
Refused

Formation of vehicular access and works to front garden to form parking area and retaining walls

LS122026-04-07
Refused

Partial demolition of existing front boundary wall, erection of new pillars and gate to front.

LS222026-03-30
Refused

Installation of dropped kerb to front; extension of existing driveway to front; creation of new vehicle access point; alterations to exis…

LS172026-03-27
Granted

Erection of new dwelling to rear of existing dwelling with associated access, boundary treatement and hard and soft landscaping works

LS82026-03-25

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

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Permitted Development Rules

Class A (Part 2)Part 2

Gates, fences, walls or other means of enclosure

GPDO 2015, Schedule 2, Part 2, Class A

Fences, walls, and gates are covered by Part 2, Class A of the GPDO. The main consideration is height: up to 1 metre next to a highway, up to 2 metres elsewhere.

Key dimension limits

Max 1m adjacent to highwayMax 2m elsewhere

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 London

Boundary treatment costs depend on the length, material, and type — timber fencing is cheapest, brick walls are the most expensive.

Fence, wall or gateLondon

Typical total

£1,000£5,000

Typically includes

MaterialsInstallationFoundations (for walls)

Typically excludes

Planning application fee

Timber fencing is cheapest. Brick walls and metal railings cost significantly more per metre.

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Which Professionals Do You Need?

Boundary treatments rarely need professional services beyond a competent builder or fencing contractor.

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, the same height rules apply, but you should consider materials that are sympathetic to the area character. Some Article 4 Directions restrict boundary treatments.

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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