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11 June 2025

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Study reveals London planning authority bias against small builders

1 hour Planning applications for large housing developments are more likely to be approved than small ones, new analysis shows.

A report from planning data supplier Searchland and boutique developer City Sanctuary reveals a structural bias in London鈥檚 planning system.

Large residential developments of 50+ units are more likely to gain planning approval than smaller schemes.

Using Searchland鈥檚 internal planning data records, City Sanctuary crunched planning stats from every London borough between 2019-2024 and found that large residential schemes are heavily preferred among planning authorities.

Between 2019 and 2024, 81% of London planning submissions for schemes of 50+ units were approved by local planning authorities.

By contrast, only 69% of schemes of between 20 and 49 units gained consent and, as schemes get smaller, the chance of planning success also gets smaller.

Submissions for schemes of between 10-19 units were approved at a rate of 62%, and the smallest schemes of just 5-9 units had the worst success rate with just 54% of submissions gaining consent.

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聽And it鈥檚 not just permissions that appear to favour large developments, because they also benefit from a faster application processing time.

Schemes of 50+ units were processed at an average rate of six days per unit, while schemes of 20-49 units were processed at a rate of 10 days per unit.

And while it took an average of 19 days to process submissions for 10-19 units, the smallest schemes (5-9 units) took 31 days per unit.

Searchland co-founder Hugh Gibbs commented: 鈥淲e believe passionately in the power of data. Not only can it provide invaluable insight on all aspects of planning and property, but it can also reveal answers to the most important questions, such as, what needs to be done in order to facilitate the increased rate of housebuilding so desperately required in this country?

鈥淎nd while the answer to that is, of course, complex and wide-ranging, this piece of analysis reveals that one answer is surely to look more favourably on SME developers rather than focussing purely on the efforts of a handful of huge housebuilders?

鈥淵es, the larger housebuilders can deliver homes at a much faster rate, but they鈥檙e also uninterested in utilising the tens of thousands of smaller plots of land that also need to be utilised if the government is going to get anywhere close to achieving its ambitious housebuilding targets. We are, therefore, encouraged by the government鈥檚 recent announcement that SMEs will benefit from 鈥榮impler rules and faster decisions鈥 from planning committees, but it remains to be seen if this is delivered.鈥

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