Planning a new kitchen extension, knocking through two rooms or converting the loft often starts with the same question: do I need building regulations? It is a fair concern, because many homeowners have heard of planning permission but are less clear on building control. The two are not the same, and getting that wrong can cause delays, added cost and problems when you come to sell.
Building regulations are the standards that make sure building work is safe, energy efficient and structurally sound. They cover far more than major extensions. In many cases, work inside the home can still fall under building regulations even when nothing changes on the outside.
Do I need building regulations or planning permission?
This is where confusion usually starts. Planning permission is about how a development affects the wider area – things like size, appearance, position and impact on neighbours. Building regulations are about how the work is built.
You can need one, both or neither depending on the job. A rear extension may need building regulations approval even if it falls under permitted development and does not need planning permission. On the other hand, some smaller external changes may not need building regulations at all.
For most substantial home improvements, it is safer to assume building regulations will be relevant unless a professional tells you otherwise.
What work usually needs building regulations?
As a rule, if the work affects structure, fire safety, drainage, insulation, ventilation or key services, building regulations are likely to apply. That includes many of the projects homeowners across Hampshire, Surrey and Berkshire commonly take on.
Extensions and loft conversions
Nearly all extensions need building regulations approval. The same applies to loft conversions, where issues such as floor strength, staircase design, fire escape routes, insulation and head height all come into play. Even a straightforward single-storey extension must meet standards for foundations, walls, roof construction, glazing and thermal performance.
Structural alterations
Removing a load-bearing wall, creating an open-plan kitchen diner, widening an opening or installing structural steel almost always requires building regulations. The work must be properly designed and checked so the altered structure can safely carry loads.
This is one of the most important areas to get right. A wall may look non-structural to a homeowner, but appearances can be misleading.
Garage conversions
Converting a garage into a living room, office or bedroom usually needs approval because you are changing the use of the space. The new room must meet standards for insulation, ventilation, damp protection, fire safety and means of escape.
Kitchens and bathrooms
A simple like-for-like kitchen refit may not need building regulations approval in full, but certain elements often do. Electrical work in specific locations, drainage changes, new windows and altered ventilation can all fall within the regulations. Bathrooms are similar, particularly where new plumbing layouts, electrics or structural changes are involved.
New windows, doors and roofing work
Replacing windows and external doors is often controlled because of energy efficiency and safety glazing requirements. Re-roofing can also trigger building regulations, especially where a significant proportion of the roof covering is being replaced or insulation is upgraded.
Electrical and plumbing works
Some electrical work must comply with Part P of the building regulations, particularly in kitchens, bathrooms and outdoor areas. Plumbing projects can also be covered where they affect drainage, hot water safety or sanitation.
What work might be exempt?
Not every job needs approval. Minor repairs and maintenance are often exempt if they are truly like-for-like and do not affect the performance of the building. Replacing a few broken tiles, replastering a room or fitting new kitchen units without altering services may not require building regulations.
Small detached buildings can also be exempt in some cases, such as certain sheds or garden rooms, but only if they stay within specific size and construction limits. The details matter. Add sleeping accommodation, install certain electrical works or build too close to a boundary with combustible materials, and the position can change quickly.
That is why broad online advice can be risky. The phrase “it should be fine” is not much help when your project is already under way.
How building regulations approval works
There are two common routes. One is a Full Plans application, where drawings and details are submitted before work starts. The other is a Building Notice, which is typically used for smaller, more straightforward jobs.
For larger or more complex residential projects, Full Plans is usually the better route because key details are checked earlier. That can reduce surprises on site and help everyone work from the same information.
Inspections are then carried out at stages during the build. These might include foundations, drainage, structural elements, insulation and final completion. Once the work is signed off, you should receive a completion certificate. Keep this safe, because solicitors often ask for it when a property is sold.
Why getting it wrong can be expensive
The biggest misconception is that building regulations are just paperwork. They are not. If work should have been approved and was not, the local authority can ask for parts of the job to be opened up, altered or even removed.
There are practical consequences too. Unapproved work can hold up a house sale, affect insurance, raise mortgage concerns and leave you paying twice – once for the original job and again to put it right. If structural or fire safety issues are involved, the risk is obviously even more serious.
For homeowners investing significant money into a renovation or extension, that uncertainty is the last thing you want.
Do I need building regulations if I use a builder?
Yes – if the work requires them, the obligation does not disappear because a contractor is involved. A good builder should advise you, help identify what approvals are needed and coordinate the process properly, but as the property owner you still need to make sure the right steps are taken.
This is where working with an experienced, full-service contractor makes a real difference. When design, structural work, trades and project management are being handled in a joined-up way, there is less chance of details slipping through the cracks.
Common situations where homeowners are unsure
Some projects sit in the grey area, or at least seem to.
If you are removing part of a wall to create more open space, assume it needs checking. If you are turning an attached garage into a habitable room, expect building regulations to apply. If you are replacing windows, altering drainage, fitting underfloor heating or upgrading a roof, there is a good chance approval or compliance certification will be needed.
Even work that starts as cosmetic can move into regulated territory once walls are opened, layouts change or services are relocated.
The value of sorting it out early
The best time to ask “do I need building regulations” is before you request final quotes and certainly before work begins. Early clarity helps shape the design, budget and programme properly.
It can also improve the finished result. Building regulations are not there simply to create admin. They help ensure the new space is comfortable, safe and fit for daily life. Better insulation, proper ventilation, suitable drainage and well-designed structure all matter long after the builders have left site.
At Primary Construction, this is exactly why clear advice at the start of a project matters. Homeowners are not just buying labour. They are investing in peace of mind, a better standard of work and fewer unwelcome surprises midway through a build.
A practical way to think about it
If your project creates new space, changes the structure, alters services or turns part of the home into habitable accommodation, building regulations are very likely to be involved. If it is minor decorative work or a genuine repair, they may not be.
The challenge is that many jobs sit between those two ends of the scale. That is where professional guidance is worth having. A quick conversation early on can save weeks of disruption later.
When you are improving your home, the aim is not simply to get the work done. It is to get it done properly, with the right checks in place, so the finished space looks right, works well and stands up to scrutiny for years to come.
