Home improvements are one of the most significant financial decisions homeowners make — combining large upfront costs, uncertain returns, legal complexity, and the potential to add or destroy value. Whether you are adding a loft conversion to create a bedroom, replacing a boiler, or navigating planning permission for a rear extension, the financial case and the rules governing each project are different.
This hub covers the UK home improvement landscape in 2026: typical project costs, the planning and building regulations framework, available government grants, how improvements affect property value, and what to check before starting work.
What Home Improvements Cost in 2026
Costs vary considerably by project type, specification, and region. These ranges reflect mid-specification work using a qualified contractor:
| Project | Typical cost range (2026) | Value added |
|---|---|---|
| Loft conversion (dormer) | £40,000–£65,000 | High — adds bedroom |
| Rear extension (single storey) | £20,000–£40,000 | Medium–high |
| Kitchen renovation | £10,000–£25,000 | Medium |
| Bathroom renovation | £5,000–£15,000 | Low–medium |
| New boiler (gas) | £2,500–£4,500 | Maintenance; EPC improvement |
| New roof | £5,000–£12,000 | Maintenance; prevents deterioration |
| Loft insulation (top-up) | £300–£600 | EPC improvement; energy saving |
| Cavity wall insulation | £700–£1,500 | EPC improvement; energy saving |
| Full rewire | £3,000–£8,000 | Safety; required for sale |
London and the South East typically costs 20–30% more than the national average for the same work. Scotland and the North of England often cost 10–20% less.
Planning Permission and Permitted Development
Most home improvements do not require a full planning application — they fall within permitted development rights, which allow a defined set of works without advance permission.
What permitted development allows (England)
| Project | Permitted development limit |
|---|---|
| Single-storey rear extension | 8m (detached) / 6m (semi/terraced) depth from rear wall — prior approval required above 4m/3m |
| Side extension | Up to half the width of the original house; single storey only |
| Loft conversion | Up to 40m³ (terraced) / 50m³ (detached/semi) increase in volume |
| Outbuilding (shed, garden room) | Up to 50% of garden area; max 2.5m eaves height |
| Reroofing | Like-for-like in same materials — no permission needed |
Permitted development rights are removed for:
- Properties in conservation areas, AONBs, or national parks
- Listed buildings (all works require listed building consent)
- Flats and maisonettes (permitted development does not apply)
- Properties where PD rights have been removed by condition on a previous planning consent
Always check with your local planning authority via the Planning Portal or direct call before starting work — mistakes are expensive to correct.
When you need full planning permission
Full planning applications are required for:
- Extensions that exceed permitted development limits
- Changes to the front elevation visible from the highway
- Change of use (e.g. converting a property into flats)
- Works to listed buildings
Planning decisions take 8–13 weeks for householder applications. The application fee in England from April 2025 is £258 for a standard householder application, plus architect and agent fees.
Building Regulations — What Needs Approval
Even when planning permission is not required, building regulations approval is almost always required for structural work, energy-affecting work, or work affecting drainage and fire safety.
| Work type | Building regs required? |
|---|---|
| Extension (any size) | Yes |
| Loft conversion | Yes |
| New bathroom | Yes (if structural changes) |
| New boiler or heating system | Yes (must be installed by Gas Safe engineer) |
| Rewiring | Yes (or self-certification by Part P-competent electrician) |
| Reroofing | Usually yes if more than minor repair |
| New windows and doors | Yes (or FENSA/CERTASS certificate) |
A completion certificate issued by your local building control team is required for selling — buyers’ solicitors request it, and its absence can delay or complicate sale.
Worked Example: Rear Extension
Scenario: Sophie owns a semi-detached house valued at £350,000 in the Midlands. She wants to build a 5-metre single-storey rear extension to create an open-plan kitchen-diner.
- Planning permission needed? 5m extension on a semi-detached — within the 6m PD limit. Prior approval application required (cost: £96). ✓
- Building regulations: Required — apply to local council (£800–£1,200 fee). ✓
- Construction cost: £25,000–£30,000 for a mid-spec build in the Midlands.
- Party wall notice required? If the extension is within 3–6m of the boundary, a party wall notice must be served on adjoining neighbours.
- Value added: Open-plan kitchen-diners are the most in-demand format for family homes in most areas. Estimated value increase: £15,000–£25,000.
- Net position: Cost of project: ~£27,000. Value increase: ~£20,000. Net cost after value uplift: ~£7,000 in exchange for significantly improved living space.
If Sophie plans to stay 5+ years, the quality-of-life gain and moderate value uplift make it worthwhile. If selling within 2 years, the return is uncertain.
Government Grants for Home Improvements 2026
Several government and energy company-funded schemes can subsidise or fully cover specific home improvements:
| Scheme | What it covers | Eligibility |
|---|---|---|
| ECO4 | Insulation, heat pumps, boilers, heating controls | On qualifying benefits, or referred by energy supplier/local authority |
| Great British Insulation Scheme | Cavity wall and loft insulation | EPC rating D–G; income-based for Group 2 |
| Boiler Upgrade Scheme | £7,500 towards air source heat pump | No income test — open to all homeowners |
| Disabled Facilities Grant | Accessibility adaptations (up to £30,000) | Disabled occupant in the property; means-tested |
| Warm Home Discount | £150 annual rebate on energy bills | Pension Credit recipients or low income |
The ECO4 and GBIS schemes are delivered via energy suppliers — contact your supplier to check eligibility. Disabled Facilities Grants are administered by local councils.
Issues That Can Affect Your Property
Several specific conditions require attention before major works or when buying a property:
- Japanese knotweed — present at or near the boundary can affect mortgage lendability and must be disclosed. Removal costs £5,000–£20,000+. See the Japanese Knotweed guide.
- Subsidence — movement in the foundations caused by soil shrinkage, tree roots, or drainage failure. Requires specialist structural investigation. Insurance claims are common but coverage varies. See the Subsidence guide.
What This Cluster Covers
| Your question | Best starting point |
|---|---|
| Can I build without planning permission? | Permitted Development Rights |
| Do I need planning permission? | Planning Permission Guide |
| What are the building rules? | Building Regulations Guide |
| Do I need a party wall agreement? | Party Wall Agreement Guide |
| How much does a loft conversion cost? | Loft Conversion Costs |
| How much does an extension cost? | Kitchen Extension Costs / Extension Cost Guide |
| How much does a new kitchen cost? | New Kitchen Costs |
| How much does a new bathroom cost? | Bathroom Renovation Costs |
| How much does a new boiler cost? | New Boiler Costs |
| How much does a new roof cost? | New Roof Costs |
| Can I build my own home? | Self-Build House Guide / Cost to Build a House |
| Can I renovate a property? | Renovating Your Home Guide |
| Are there grants available? | Government Grants for Home Improvements |
| How do I increase my home’s value? | How to Increase Home Value |
| What is Japanese knotweed? | Japanese Knotweed Guide |
| What is subsidence? | Subsidence Guide |
Related Hubs
- Buying and Selling Property hub — transaction costs, surveys, and conveyancing
- Property Ownership hub — leasehold consent for alterations
- Mortgages hub — financing home improvements via remortgage or further advance