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    Home/News/Adding value with a garden room: 5 considerations

    Adding value with a garden room: 5 considerations

    Garden rooms are a property asset that gained popularity during the pandemic but recent analysis of Google data by Legal & General revealed that searches for outbuildings are still incredibly high.

    Sales
    Published about 1 year ago
    Adding value with a garden room: 5 considerations

    Garden rooms are a property asset that gained popularity during the pandemic but recent analysis of Google data by Legal & General revealed that searches for outbuildings are still incredibly high.

    In fact, between August 1st 2023 and July 31st 2024, Google searches for ‘garden rooms’ topped just over 1 million, while the phrase ‘summer house’ was searched for 726,000 and 'garden offices’ 397,200.

    Property professionals have also noted that garden rooms can have a positive effect on property values. Homes with an outdoor room can fetch between 5% and 15% more than similar properties without, returning a profit as long as the budget to construct the outbuilding doesn’t exceed the value added.

    A garden room can provide a great space away from the distractions of the main house, with many used as home offices, gyms, games zones, mancaves and hobby rooms.

    Planning permission: usually not required

    Most garden rooms can be added without the need for planning permission. This is because the owner will have permitted development rights and a garden room is classed as an outbuilding.

    Permitted development rights explained

    Permitted development rights allow homeowners to improve, add to or alter their home without the need for planning permission. This right usually covers garden rooms, as long as...

    • The garden room is not at the front of the property
    • All extensions, sheds and outbuildings do not cover more than 50 percent of the total area of land around the property
    • The garden room is more than 2 metres from the boundary, single storey and less than 3 metres high (4 metres with a dual-pitched roof)
    • The garden room is within 2 metres of your boundary but is no more than 2.5 metres high
    • The eaves do not exceed 2.5 metres above ground level
    • The garden room does not have a balcony, veranda or raised platformThe garden room isn’t to be used as self-contained living accommodation

    There are exceptions, however. You may not have permitted development rights and may need to apply for planning permission if you.

    • Live in a flat
    • Live in a maisonette
    • Live in a protected area, such as a National Landscape, a National Park, a conservation area or a World Heritage Site

    Building regulations

    If the garden room isn’t attached to your main home, has a floor area of less than 15 sq m and doesn’t include sleeping accommodation, building regulations won’t apply. Any electrics in your garden room will, however, need to comply with part P of the building regulations. You’ll also need a certificate showing that the installation meets the relevant regulations when you sell your property.

    Heating a garden room

    One of the biggest garden room mistakes is not planning a way to heat the space. As a small, stand-alone structure, a garden room won’t draw heat from other rooms and depending on its orientation, may not benefit from the sun coming in. A good source of heating is essential if the room is to function as a home office.

    Heating by mains gas won’t be feasible in most cases but there are alternatives. Electric radiators, convection heaters and electric underfloor heating are popular options for rooms that are used on a regular basis – especially if they can be operated using an app or timer. Fan heaters, infrared heaters and oil fired radiators are other considerations, as are log burners if the space is big enough and there is adequate ventilation.

    Insulation is key

    There’s no point spending money on heating a garden room if the warmth quickly escapes, so don’t skip insulation. Opt for an additional, heat-retaining material, such as rockwool, in the walls, floor and ceiling. All doors and windows should be double glazed, with trickle vents and openings. Keeping an even temperature in a garden room will also prevent condensation and mould, which isn’t ideal in a home office or where there are soft furnishings.

    Adding a garden room is a great way to increase your home’s value, increase the usable square footage and provide potential buyers of the future with a unique bonus room. If you’d like to discuss the value you could add to your home ahead of a sale, please get in touch.

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    How Long Does It Take to Sell a Home in Harrow? 2025 Guide for Sellers
    Published 9 days ago

    How Long Does It Take to Sell a Home in Harrow? 2025 Guide for Sellers

    People often expect a straightforward answer when asking how long it takes to sell a home in Harrow, but the truth is that the pace varies more than most assume for a combination of factors, a large proportion of which are not in our control. Some properties attract interest almost as soon as they’re listed, while others move more slowly, sometimes for reasons that are not immediately obvious. Instead of relying on a single figure, it helps to look at what has actually been happening around the borough over the past several months.

    At the start of 2025, most homes in Harrow have been receiving offers within six to ten weeks, although a few go under offer sooner if they’re priced sensibly and presented well. After an offer is accepted, the legal side usually stretches the whole process to roughly three or four months, occasionally longer when paperwork or solicitor workloads cause delays. That part is fairly normal and doesn’t reflect poorly on the property itself.

     

    People often expect a straightforward answer when asking how long it takes to sell a home in Harrow, but the truth is that the pace varies more than most assume for a combination of factors, a large proportion of which are not in our control. Some properties attract interest almost as soon as they’re listed, while others move more slowly, sometimes for reasons that are not immediately obvious. Instead of relying on a single figure, it helps to look at what has actually been happening around the borough over the past several months.

    At the start of 2025, most homes in Harrow have been receiving offers within six to ten weeks, although a few go under offer sooner if they’re priced sensibly and presented well. After an offer is accepted, the legal side usually stretches the whole process to roughly three or four months, occasionally longer when paperwork or solicitor workloads cause delays. That part is fairly normal and doesn’t reflect poorly on the property itself.

     

    Selling a home in Harrow isn’t always a quick process, and the timing can shift depending on the property and the market mood at the moment. In this guide, we take a clear look at how long the selling journey usually takes in 2025, what tends to speed things up, and why some homes attract buyers sooner than others.

    Read More
    Budget special: a ‘light touch’ when it comes to property
    Published 12 days ago

    Budget special: a ‘light touch’ when it comes to property

    It was somehow fitting that, on the morning of 26th November 2025 when most of the UK woke up to sub-zero temperatures – this year’s Budget headline was a strategic freeze. We’ll gloss over the Office for Budget Responsibility’s mishap that left the Chancellor reeling just minutes before her delivery, choosing to concentrate on what matters to you, the general public.

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