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Borough guide · 2026

Planning Permission in Wandsworth

Wandsworth is a large south London borough spanning from Battersea — the focus of major regeneration — to Tooting and the borders of Surrey. It has a pragmatic planning department and a substantial number of Victorian and Edwardian terraces where permitted development rights often apply in full. Conservation areas are concentrated in specific localities including Balham, Tooting Bec, and Clapham Junction area, rather than being borough-wide.

What you can usually build

Common projects that may be straightforward when they fit within PD limits and local constraints.

Single-storey and two-storey rear extensions on Edwardian and Victorian terraces
Rear dormer loft conversions
Outbuildings, home offices, and garden studios
Conversion of larger houses to self-contained flats (requires planning permission)

Common restrictions to watch

These are the usual reasons planning permission becomes more likely in Wandsworth.

Battersea Power Station and Nine Elms regeneration zone has site-specific planning frameworks — not relevant for typical domestic extensions.
Conservation areas in the borough are mapped on the council website; check before assuming PD applies.
The council's residential design guidance SPD sets expectations for extension design including the 45-degree rule.
Wandsworth is generally considered more approachable than inner-London boroughs for standard extensions — processing times tend to be reasonable.
Flat roof extensions are generally resisted where sloped alternatives are feasible and the street character is predominantly pitched roof.
Approval likelihood

Borough rules are only half the story

The biggest drivers of approval are the exact proposal (dimensions and design) and the exact site constraints (designation, conditions, neighbour impacts). Use borough context as a starting point, then validate it with address-level checks and nearby precedents.

Keep it within the PD envelope

Projects that stay modest in size, match materials, and avoid obvious neighbour impacts are more likely to be straightforward — even before you consider borough-specific policies.

Check constraints early

Conservation areas, listed buildings, Article 4 directions, flood risk and TPOs can flip the answer. Address-level checks stop you wasting money on the wrong scheme.

Use nearby precedent

The fastest signal is what the council has approved or refused on comparable streets nearby. Precedent does not guarantee success, but it helps you shape a lower-risk design.

Recent trends

What tends to matter in real decisions

Councils rarely refuse the "idea" of an extension or loft conversion — refusals are usually about scale, design, neighbour impacts, and policy/designation conflicts. When you run a check, CanUBuild shows nearby approvals and refusals so you can see what has worked locally.

Depth/height/storeys relative to neighbours (overshadowing and outlook).
Front-facing changes in sensitive streetscapes or conservation areas.
Boundary relationships, privacy impacts, and overlooking windows/terraces.
Trees, flood risk, and other constraints that trigger extra evidence.
Whether similar schemes nearby were approved or refused (and why).
Validation checklist

What Wandsworth Council typically requires

An invalid application cannot be registered. Use this checklist to ensure your submission is complete before you pay the fee.

Typical validation requirements
  • Completed application form and ownership certificate
  • Location plan (1:1250) and site plan (1:500)
  • Existing and proposed drawings (floor plans, all elevations)
  • Design and Access Statement for conservation area applications
  • Arboricultural report if trees are present on or adjacent to the site
  • Correct planning fee

Requirements can change — always verify the current validation checklist on the Wandsworth Council website before submitting.

Next step

Check your exact property in Wandsworth

Search the address, choose your project type, and get an answer based on permitted development rules, local constraints, and nearby precedent decisions.

FAQ

Questions people ask in Wandsworth

Is Wandsworth a strict planning borough?

By London standards, Wandsworth is relatively pragmatic for standard residential extensions. Permitted development rights apply in full across many streets, and the council's approach to extensions is guided by its SPD rather than highly restrictive borough-specific policies.

Do I need planning permission for a rear extension in Wandsworth?

Not necessarily. Many Wandsworth properties are outside conservation areas and benefit from full permitted development rights. A single-storey rear extension within the PD size limits on a house not subject to other constraints will often not need a formal planning application — though a Lawful Development Certificate is recommended.

Are there conservation areas near Clapham Junction in Wandsworth?

Yes — there are conservation areas in and around the Clapham Junction neighbourhood. Check the Wandsworth interactive planning map or the CanUBuild checker for your specific address to confirm whether your property is within a designated area.

What is the typical decision time for a planning application in Wandsworth?

Householder applications are typically determined within 8 weeks of a valid application being registered. Pre-application discussions are encouraged for more complex proposals to identify issues before submission.

Last reviewed: 2026-03 · This guide is for general information only. Always verify with Wandsworth Council or a qualified planning consultant before making decisions.