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Orangery Planning Permission: Rules and Costs (2025)

Orangery Planning Permission: Rules and Costs (2025)

Planning Rules

Orangery Planning Permission: Rules and Costs (2025)

An orangery follows the same planning rules as a single-storey rear extension — usually permitted development. Here are the size limits, building regulations requirements, and costs.

Does an Orangery Need Planning Permission?

Quick Answer

No — an orangery is treated in planning terms as a single-storey rear extension and is usually permitted development, subject to the same size and location limits that apply to conservatories and extensions.

An orangery is a premium garden room with a mostly solid roof (typically a lantern light in the centre), solid dwarf walls to window height, and full thermal insulation. Despite costing considerably more than a standard conservatory, its planning position is the same: it is a single-storey rear extension under Part 1 Class A of the GPDO 2015.

This means that, within the permitted development limits, you can build an orangery without applying for planning permission, just as you would with a standard extension or conservatory.

Orangery vs Conservatory: Planning Differences

In planning law, there is no distinction between an orangery and a conservatory — both are single-storey extensions. The difference is in construction and building regulations:

Feature Conservatory Orangery
Roof Mostly glazed (polycarbonate or glass) Solid insulated roof with central lantern
Walls Mostly glazed to floor Solid dwarf walls to sill height, glazed above
Insulation Limited (or exempt from building regs) Fully insulated to extension standard
Building regulations May be exempt Always required
Planning position Same as Class A extension Same as Class A extension
Year-round use Limited without extra heating Designed for year-round use

Because an orangery has a solid roof and is fully insulated, the building regulations conservatory exemption never applies. An orangery is always treated as a full extension for building regulations purposes.

Permitted Development Rules for Orangeries

Under Part 1 Class A GPDO 2015, an orangery is permitted development as a single-storey rear extension if:

Rule Limit
Rear projection (detached house) Maximum 4m from original rear wall
Rear projection (semi/terraced) Maximum 3m from original rear wall
Height Maximum 4m; maximum 3m eaves height within 2m of boundary
Curtilage Cannot cover more than 50% of original curtilage
Position Not forward of principal elevation; not beyond side walls
✅ Neighbour Consultation Scheme: If you need a larger orangery (up to 8m for detached, 6m for semi/terraced), you can apply under the Neighbour Consultation Scheme. This involves notifying the council and neighbours, with a 42-day consultation period.

The same restrictions apply in conservation areas: a rear orangery within PD limits is permitted; a side orangery in a conservation area needs planning permission.

Building Regulations for Orangeries

Unlike conservatories, orangeries always require building regulations approval. Because an orangery has a solid insulated roof and fully insulated walls, it cannot meet the conservatory exemption criteria. Building regulations cover:

  • Structural: Foundations, structural walls, roof structure
  • Thermal performance (Part L): Walls, roof and floor must meet current U-value standards
  • Ventilation (Part F): Adequate fresh air provision
  • Electrics (Part P): Any electrical work must comply
  • Drainage: If the floor level is below existing ground level, drainage may be required

A completion certificate is issued by building control on sign-off — important for future property sales and insurance purposes.

Orangery Costs

Type Typical Cost
uPVC/aluminium frame orangery (mid-spec) £20,000 – £40,000
Hardwood/bespoke orangery £40,000 – £80,000
Premium architect-designed orangery £60,000 – £120,000+
Building regulations application £300 – £600
Planning permission (if required) £258 (householder)

Orangeries cost significantly more than conservatories of similar size because of the heavier construction, solid roof structure, and higher insulation specification. However, they add more usable space and typically add more value to the property.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does an orangery need planning permission?
An orangery is treated as a single-storey rear extension and is usually permitted development under Part 1 Class A. The standard limits are 3m rear projection for a semi/terraced house and 4m for a detached house. Planning permission is needed if you exceed the limits, are in a conservation area with a side orangery, or have a listed building.
Do orangeries need building regulations?
Yes — orangeries always require building regulations approval because they have a solid insulated roof and cannot qualify for the conservatory exemption. Full building regulations apply covering structure, thermal performance, ventilation and electrics.
What is the difference between an orangery and a conservatory for planning?
In planning law they are identical — both are treated as single-storey rear extensions under the same PD rules. The difference is in construction (orangeries have solid roofs and are always subject to building regulations) and cost (orangeries are significantly more expensive).

More on Permitted Development Rights

Extensions, loft conversions, outbuildings, solar panels — our complete guide covers everything you can build without planning permission.

Read the Complete PD Guide →

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