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Survey finding

Conservation area: what restrictions apply

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Conservation areas affect future works. This page covers the practical implications.

Last updated: 6 May 2026. Editorially reviewed: 20 May 2026.

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Finding

Conservation area restrictions

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What this usually means

Conservation area designation restricts permitted development rights. Article 4 directions extend the restrictions further. Windows, doors, roof materials, and front-elevation alterations typically need full planning permission.

Why it matters

Future works budgets and timeframes are affected.

Ask your surveyor

  • Check:Is the property in a conservation area?
  • Check:Is there an Article 4 direction?

Ask the seller

  • Check:Records of all consents?
  • Check:Any enforcement?

Next steps

  • Get two written quotes from local trades before negotiating with the seller.
  • Speak to your mortgage broker before exchanging if the finding affects mortgageability.

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What you need to know

Severity

2/ 5

Maintenance item. Worth quoting and including in negotiation.

Typical cost to fix

Planning applications £200-£500 each. Specialist windows £1,500-£3,000 each vs UPVC £700-£1,500.

Mortgage impact

Standard.

Insurance impact

Standard.

When to pull out

Not on its own.

When to renegotiate, and by how much

Discount only if material works needed.

Thinking of pulling out or renegotiating? What to do after a bad survey

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Editorial review

Editorial owner: BiteRight Ltd, operator of MyPropertyScan. We review buyer guides against UK public property datasets, RICS survey wording, lender requirements, and common buyer questions.

Pages are updated when source coverage, property-risk guidance, survey cost assumptions, or product checks materially change. Methodology and dataset limitations are explained on the MyPropertyScan methodology page.

Sources used

We use UK public and specialist sources where they are available. Public datasets can be incomplete, delayed, or missing for some addresses. Treat them as a starting point, not as a replacement for professional advice.

Source standard: preference goes to official government datasets, statutory bodies, professional standards, and primary dataset publishers. We cite the source family on the page and explain coverage limits rather than filling gaps with unsupported estimates.

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