Swimming Pool Permitted Development: Planning Rules (2025)
An in-ground swimming pool is usually permitted development — no planning permission needed. Here’s when rules apply, what pool enclosures must comply with, and costs.
Quick Answer
A swimming pool in the garden is usually permitted development — but pool enclosures have stricter rules
An outdoor swimming pool or hot tub sunk into the garden is usually permitted development under Part 1, Class E of the GPDO 2015 — it is treated as an ‘enclosure’ in the curtilage. The key limits are the same as for other outbuildings: it must not cover more than 50% of the curtilage (combined with other outbuildings and extensions); it must not be forward of the principal elevation; and in designated areas (conservation areas etc.), a pool to the side of the house needs planning permission. A pool enclosure (a building over the pool) must comply with outbuilding height limits. An above-ground pool or hot tub typically needs no permission at all — it is treated like garden furniture.
Different Types of Pool: What Rules Apply
| Pool Type | Planning Position |
|---|---|
| In-ground swimming pool (no enclosure) | Permitted development under Part 1, Class E — treated as an enclosure or other structure in the curtilage. Must not exceed 50% curtilage coverage. |
| Above-ground pool | Generally treated as garden furniture — no planning permission or building regulations required. Can be removed. |
| Hot tub (on surface) | No planning permission required — treated as garden equipment. Electrical installation requires Part P certificate. |
| Pool enclosure / pool house | Must comply with outbuilding height limits (2.5m eaves, 4m ridge for pitched). Treated as an outbuilding. |
| Pool in front garden | Needs planning permission — as with all outbuildings, structures forward of the principal elevation are not PD. |
| Pool in conservation area (side of house) | Needs planning permission — the side restriction in designated areas applies to enclosures and pools. |
PD Rules for Swimming Pools
| Condition | Detail |
|---|---|
| Coverage limit | The pool area counts toward the 50% curtilage coverage limit (combined with outbuildings and extensions) |
| Position | Must not be forward of the principal elevation |
| Designated areas — side of house | Not permitted development for pools to the side of the house in conservation areas, national parks, AONBs |
| Height | An in-ground pool has no height to measure. A pool enclosure (building) must comply with outbuilding height limits. |
| Listed buildings | Planning permission and listed building consent required for any pool within the curtilage |
| Building regulations | Do not apply to the pool itself. Apply to any pool enclosure of 30m²+. The electrical installation (pump, lighting) requires Part P compliance. |
Building Regulations for Swimming Pools
Building regulations don’t apply to the pool itself — but they do apply to:
- Pool enclosures over 30m²: Full building regulations required for the enclosure building
- Electrical installation: Pool electrical systems (pump, lighting, heating) are notifiable under Part P. Must be installed by a Part P registered electrician.
- Gas heating: Gas pool heating systems require a Gas Safe registered installer and relevant certification
- Drainage: If the pool is connected to the main sewer or soakaway, building regulations drainage requirements apply
Typical Swimming Pool Costs
| Item | Approximate Cost |
|---|---|
| Small fibreglass pool (6m x 3m) | £25,000–40,000 installed |
| Medium concrete pool (8m x 4m) | £40,000–70,000 installed |
| Large bespoke pool (10m x 5m) | £60,000–120,000+ |
| Above-ground pool (basic) | £500–5,000 — no construction costs |
| Hot tub | £5,000–20,000 supply and installation |
| Annual running costs (heating, chemicals, maintenance) | £2,000–5,000 per year depending on size and use |
| Planning permission (if required) | £258 householder application fee plus architect fees |
Frequently Asked Questions
More on Permitted Development Rights
Extensions, loft conversions, outbuildings, solar panels — our complete guide covers everything you can build without planning permission.
