Listed Building Extensions London: Consent, Costs & Rules 2025
Complete guide to extending listed buildings in London. Listed building consent requirements, Grade I/II rules, conservation officer guidance, costs, and approval timelines.
Listed Building Extensions: Quick Facts
- Cost premium: 25-40% more than standard extensions (heritage materials/techniques)
- Dual consent: Both listed building consent AND planning permission required
- Timeline: 8-16 weeks consent, 4-6 months for Grade I/II* buildings
- Specialist required: Conservation architect essential for approval success
- Get your listed building extension estimate (Free)
What is Listed Building Consent?
Listed building consent is separate from planning permission and is required for any alteration, extension, or demolition that affects the character or appearance of a listed building.
London has over 35,000 listed buildings across all boroughs. The listing system grades buildings based on special architectural or historic interest:
| Grade | % of Total | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Grade I | 2.5% | Exceptional interest - most difficult to alter |
| Grade II* | 5.8% | Particularly important - requires Historic England consultation |
| Grade II | 91.7% | Special interest - most common listing |
Check if your property is listed using the National Heritage List for England or our free checker tool.
What Requires Listed Building Consent?
Under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990, consent is required for:
- All extensions - rear, side, loft, basement (no matter how small)
- External alterations - windows, doors, roofing, rendering, painting
- Internal alterations - removing walls, new bathrooms/kitchens, flooring changes
- Outbuildings and curtilage - structures within the property boundary
Important: Dual Consent Required
For extensions, you need both listed building consent AND planning permission. These are separate applications to your local planning authority. Apply for both simultaneously to avoid delays. Consent fees: £206 for householder applications.
Check if your property is listed
Instantly see listed building status, conservation areas, and all planning constraints.
Check Planning Constraints →The Listed Building Consent Process
Pre-application consultation: 4-8 weeks
Meet conservation officer, discuss design approach, understand requirements
Design development: 6-12 weeks
Conservation architect prepares heritage statement, measured surveys, detailed drawings
Application submission
Submit both LBC and planning applications simultaneously with full documentation
Consultation: 8-16 weeks
Conservation officer review, Historic England consultation (Grade I/II*), public consultation
Decision
Approval with conditions, or refusal with reasons for amendment
Total typical timeline: 9-18 months from initial consultation to approval
Historic England consultation: Required for Grade I and some Grade II* buildings. Adds 21 days to the decision timeline but significantly improves approval chances with expert input.
Design Principles for Listed Building Extensions
Conservation officers assess applications against NPPF guidance on preserving heritage significance:
Key Principles
- Subordinate design: Extensions should be clearly secondary to the historic building
- Matching or complementary materials: Use heritage materials or high-quality contemporary alternatives
- Respect proportions: Window sizes, roof pitch, and scale should relate to the original building
- Minimal harm: Preserve significant features, avoid damage to historic fabric
- Reversibility: Where possible, alterations should be reversible in future
Contemporary vs Traditional Design
Contemporary extensions are acceptable if well-designed and clearly differentiated from the historic building. This "honest" approach is often preferred over pastiche.
However, the design must still respect scale, materials, and setting. Conservation officers look for quality architecture that complements rather than competes with the listed building.
Listed Building Extension Costs
| Extension Type | Cost per m² | Typical Total (20m²) |
|---|---|---|
| Single-storey rear (Grade II) | £2,500-3,200 | £50,000-64,000 |
| Single-storey rear (Grade I/II*) | £2,800-3,500 | £56,000-70,000 |
| Two-storey rear (Grade II) | £2,800-3,600 | £112,000-144,000 (40m²) |
| Two-storey rear (Grade I/II*) | £3,200-4,000 | £128,000-160,000 (40m²) |
Heritage premium: 25-40% more than standard extensions due to specialist materials, conservation techniques, and heritage craftspeople
Professional Fees for Listed Buildings
- Conservation architect: £8,000-20,000 (higher for Grade I/II*)
- Heritage statement: £1,500-4,000
- Structural engineer: £2,000-4,500
- Application fees: £206 × 2 (LBC + planning)
- Specialist surveys: £1,000-3,000 (archaeology, ecology if required)
Get Your Listed Building Extension Estimate
Instant cost breakdown including heritage materials premium and specialist consultant fees.
Free • Instant results • No email required
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need listed building consent for an extension?
Yes. Any alteration or extension to a listed building that affects its character requires listed building consent from your local planning authority. This applies to both external and internal works, and is required in addition to standard planning permission. Grade I, II*, and II buildings all require consent, regardless of the size of works.
How much does it cost to extend a listed building?
Listed building extensions cost 25-40% more than standard extensions due to specialist materials, heritage techniques, and conservation requirements. Expect £2,500-3,500/m² for single-storey, £2,800-4,000/m² for two-storey. Grade I buildings cost most due to stricter requirements. Budget £50k-80k for 20m² extensions, plus £5k-15k for specialist consultants and dual consents.
How long does listed building consent take?
Listed building consent takes 8-16 weeks for standard applications, but complex Grade I/II* buildings can take 4-6 months. Historic England consultation adds 21 days for Grade I and some Grade II* applications. Pre-application advice with conservation officers is essential and takes 4-8 weeks. Total timeline including design: 9-18 months from concept to approval.
What can I change in a listed building extension?
Extensions must respect the building's character. Sympathetic contemporary design is acceptable if clearly differentiated from historic fabric. Use matching or complementary materials, respect proportions and sightlines, preserve significant features, and ensure reversibility where possible. Conservation officers assess impact on architectural and historical significance before granting consent under NPPF guidance.