With respect to England, Schedule 2 Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, and 16 were amended on 30 May 2013 by SI 2013 No. 1101, Part 16 was amended on 21 August 2013 by SI 2013 No. 1868, Part 11 was amended on 1 October 2013 by SI 2013 No. 2147 and by SI 2013 No. 2435, Parts 1, 2, 3, 6, and 7 were amended on 6 April 2014 by SI 2014 No. 564, Parts 3, 4, and 11 were amended on 6 April 2015 by SI 2015 No. 659, all Parts were amended on 15 April 2015 by SI 2015 No. 596, Parts 1, 3, 4, and 17 were amended on 6 April 2016 by SI 2016 No. 332, Part 16 was amended on 24 November 2016 by SI 2016 No. 1040, Parts 1, 4, 7, 14, and 15 were amended on 6 April 2017 by SI 2017 No. 391, Parts 3, 4, and 11 were amended on 23 May 2017 by SI 2017 No. 619, Parts 3, 6, 9, and 16 were amended on 6 April 2018 by SI 2018 No. 343, Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, and 16 were amended on 25 May 2019 by SI 2019 No. 907, Part 4 was amended on 24 March 2020 by SI 2020 No. 330, Part 12A was introduced on 9 April 2020 by SI 2020 No. 412, and Parts 3, 4, 12 were amended and Part 20 was introduced on 25 June 2020 and 1 August 2020 by SI 2020 No. 632. For the above changes, public consultations were undertaken from 8 April 2011 to 30 June 2011, from 3 July 2012 to 11 September 2012, from 12 November 2012 to 24 December 2012, from 3 May 2013 to 14 June 2013, from 6 August 2013 to 15 October 2013, from 31 July 2014 to 26 September 2014, from 13 August 2015 to 24 September 2015, and from 18 February 2016 to 15 April 2016, and from 29 October 2018 to 14 January 2019. On 25 May 2019 Housing Minister
Kit Malthouse MP announced that temporary changes to Permitted Development Rights, in place since 2012 and due to expire on 30 May 2019, would become permanent. In effect the new legislation means home owners can build up to 8 metres projection from the rear wall if building on a detached property (rather than the previous 4 metres) and 6 metres if attached (rather than the previous 3 metres) as Permitted Development. The height restrictions remain at 3 metres height to eaves and 4 metres overall height.
Part 3 Class O excluded areas Some
local planning authorities resisted the office-to-residential rights and brought in Article 4 Directions so these rights do not apply to certain areas within: • Greater London:
Camden,
City of London,
Hackney,
Islington,
Kensington and Chelsea,
Lambeth,
Newham,
Southwark,
Tower Hamlets,
Wandsworth,
Westminster • Outside Greater London:
Ashford,
East Hampshire,
Manchester,
Sevenoaks,
Stevenage,
Vale of White Horse In August 2021, the Government replaced Class O Permitted Development Rights with Class MA Permitted Development Rights (see below). The Government announced that
local planning authorities that have an existing Article 4 Direction which restricts the change of use from office space to residential space (under the old O class) would remain valid until 31 July 2022. After this date,
local planning authorities would need to reinstate an Article 4 Direction to resist the conversion of commercial properties to residential use. Many such as St Albans City and District Council have not reinstated these directions.
Class MA Permitted Development Rights In August 2021, the Government introduced a powerful new Permitted Development Right which allows the change of use of commercial properties within Use Class E to residential uses, without the need for full planning permission, subject to complying with some limitations and criteria. The intention of this Permitted Development Right is twofold; to provide some much needed housing on brownfield sites: and to revive England's high streets by bringing vacant units back into use. The changes have been met with some resistance by Councils and academics, with some concerned that the quality of housing produced is short of standards which would otherwise be allowed. In March 2024, the Government made changes to further encourage uptake of Class MA Permitted Development Rights. Since the 5th March 2024, buildings no longer need to have been vacant (whereas before they needed to have been vacant for at least 3 months), and there is no limit on the size of properties that can be converted (whereas before the space to be converted needed to be 1,500 sq meters or less).
COVID-19 In response to the
COVID-19 pandemic, restaurants, cafes and pubs are allowed to provide takeaway food without specific planning permission.
"Clarkson's clause" "Clarkson's clause" was an amendment by the Government in 2024 to expand the rights of farmers to change buildings from agricultural use to "flexible commercial" or residential use without planning permission. It was named after
Jeremy Clarkson who had high-profile planning disputes with
West Oxfordshire District Council on his ''
Clarkson's Farm'' documentary series. == Legal and environmental considerations ==