Mortgages & Property
How Much Does a Kitchen Extension Cost in the UK?
Kitchen extension costs by type and size, planning permission rules, build time, and how to finance it. Complete UK price guide for 2026.
A kitchen extension is one of the most popular home improvements in the UK. Here is what it actually costs, what affects the price, and how to pay for it.
Kitchen Extension Costs by Size
| Extension size |
Floor area |
Typical cost (exc. kitchen fitting) |
Cost inc. new kitchen |
| Small (3m x 3m) |
9 m² |
£20,000–£35,000 |
£28,000–£48,000 |
| Medium (4m x 5m) |
20 m² |
£35,000–£55,000 |
£45,000–£70,000 |
| Large (5m x 6m) |
30 m² |
£50,000–£75,000 |
£60,000–£95,000 |
| Very large (6m x 8m+) |
48+ m² |
£70,000–£100,000+ |
£85,000–£120,000+ |
These are national averages. London and the South East add 20–40% to these figures.
Cost Per Square Metre
| Location |
Cost per m² (build only) |
| North of England |
£1,500–£2,200 |
| Midlands |
£1,700–£2,400 |
| South of England |
£2,000–£2,800 |
| London |
£2,500–£3,500+ |
| Scotland |
£1,500–£2,200 |
| Wales |
£1,500–£2,200 |
Cost Breakdown
| Element |
Typical cost |
% of total |
| Foundations and groundwork |
£3,000–£8,000 |
10–15% |
| Walls and structure |
£5,000–£15,000 |
20–25% |
| Roof (flat or pitched) |
£3,000–£8,000 |
10–15% |
| Windows and doors (bi-fold, sliding, etc.) |
£3,000–£12,000 |
10–15% |
| Electrics |
£2,000–£5,000 |
5–10% |
| Plumbing and heating |
£2,000–£6,000 |
5–10% |
| Plastering and decorating |
£2,000–£5,000 |
5–8% |
| Flooring |
£1,000–£4,000 |
3–5% |
| New kitchen (units, worktops, appliances) |
£5,000–£25,000+ |
15–25% |
What Adds to the Cost
| Factor |
Additional cost |
| Bi-fold or sliding doors |
£3,000–£8,000 more than standard patio doors |
| Roof lantern or skylight |
£1,500–£5,000 each |
| Underfloor heating |
£1,500–£4,000 |
| Removing a load-bearing wall |
£1,500–£4,000 (steelwork and making good) |
| Poor ground conditions (deeper foundations) |
£2,000–£5,000+ |
| Party wall agreement (terraced/semi) |
£1,000–£3,000 per neighbour |
| Architect or designer fees |
£2,000–£6,000 (or 7–15% of build cost) |
| Building Regulations application |
£300–£900 |
| Planning permission (if needed) |
£260 (householder application, England) |
Planning Permission
| Situation |
Permission needed? |
| Single-storey rear, within permitted development limits |
No (but check with your council) |
| Extends more than 6m from rear wall (semi/terrace) |
Yes — or apply via Prior Approval |
| Extends more than 8m from rear wall (detached) |
Yes |
| Side extension |
May need permission — stricter rules on width |
| Two-storey extension |
Yes |
| Listed building |
Yes, plus Listed Building Consent |
| Conservation area |
Additional restrictions — check with council |
| Flat or maisonette |
Usually need permission |
Permitted Development Limits (Single-Storey Rear)
| Rule |
Limit |
| Maximum depth (detached) |
8m from original rear wall |
| Maximum depth (semi/terrace) |
6m from original rear wall |
| Maximum height |
4m (3m if within 2m of a boundary) |
| Maximum eaves height |
3m |
| Cannot cover more than |
50% of garden area |
| Must not extend beyond |
Side wall facing a highway |
You will still need Building Regulations approval even if planning permission is not required.
Build Timeline
| Phase |
Duration |
| Design and architecture |
2–6 weeks |
| Planning permission (if needed) |
8–13 weeks |
| Building Regulations application |
2–5 weeks |
| Finding and appointing builder |
2–8 weeks |
| Groundwork and foundations |
1–2 weeks |
| Structure, walls, roof |
3–6 weeks |
| First fix (electrics, plumbing) |
1–2 weeks |
| Plastering, flooring, second fix |
2–4 weeks |
| Kitchen fitting |
1–2 weeks |
| Snagging and completion |
1 week |
| Total (design to completion) |
5–9 months |
How to Finance a Kitchen Extension
| Method |
Typical rate |
Pros |
Cons |
| Remortgage |
4–6% |
Lowest rate, long term |
Secured against home, fees apply |
| Further advance from lender |
4–6% |
Simple if staying with same lender |
May not match best market rate |
| Home improvement loan (unsecured) |
6–10% |
No home security, fixed repayments |
Higher rate, usually max £25,000 |
| 0% credit card |
0% for 12–24 months |
Interest-free period |
Low limit, must repay within 0% period |
| Savings |
N/A |
No interest cost |
Depletes emergency fund |
See our remortgage guide and home improvement loan options.
Does a Kitchen Extension Add Value?
| Property value |
Extension cost |
Likely value added |
Return on investment |
| £200,000 |
£40,000 |
£15,000–£30,000 |
35–75% |
| £300,000 |
£50,000 |
£20,000–£45,000 |
40–90% |
| £500,000 |
£70,000 |
£35,000–£75,000 |
50–105% |
Extensions tend to add more value in higher-value areas and when they create desirable open-plan living space.
Tips for Keeping Costs Down
| Tip |
Potential saving |
| Simple rectangular footprint |
£2,000–£5,000 vs complex shapes |
| Standard-size windows and doors |
£1,000–£3,000 vs bespoke |
| Flat roof instead of pitched |
£2,000–£5,000 |
| Do decorating yourself |
£1,000–£3,000 |
| Compare at least 3 builder quotes |
10–20% |
| Phase the work (build now, fit kitchen later) |
Spread cost over time |
| Off-the-shelf kitchen |
£3,000–£10,000 vs bespoke |
Related guides:
Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. PocketWise provides information and guidance — we do not offer financial advice. Seek independent mortgage advice before making decisions about borrowing.