Press release

Government backs SME builders to get Britain building

Smaller housebuilders to benefit simpler rules with new reforms across land, regulation and finance.

  • Smaller housebuilders to benefit from simpler rules and faster decisions as full plans to modernise planning committees unveiled 
  • New reforms across land, regulation and finance backed by cash-boost to help SME housebuilders build the houses we need  
  • Supports the government’s Plan for Change milestone of delivering 1.5 million homes, creating new jobs and driving economic growth in every region

Thousands of homes will be built faster on smaller sites across the country as complex planning rules are streamlined, onerous regulatory burdens eased, and financial firepower is provided to SME builders. 

The current system makes it far too difficult for smaller builders to get spades in the ground – with a small site of 10 homes jumping through the same planning hurdles as one with 100 or more.  

Smaller firms, which provide local jobs and train eight out of 10 construction apprentices, have seen their market share shrink since the 1980s, when SME builders delivered 40% of the country’s homes.  

Today’s changes will help turn this around, driving up competition across the sector and helping deliver the Plan for Change milestone of 1.5 million homes, so more working families and young people can achieve the dream of homeownership.

Today’s proposals include: 

  • Faster decisions for small sites: Minor developments of up to nine homes will benefit from streamlined planning and eased Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) requirements, with faster decisions being taken by expert planning officers, not planning committees; 

  • A new ‘medium site’ category: Sites between ten to 49 homes will face simpler rules and fewer costs – including a proposed exemption from the Building Safety Levy and simplified BNG rules, making it easier to deliver biodiverse habitats on these sites, delivering a win-win for nature and development; 

  • More land and financing options for SMEs: Homes England will release more of its land exclusively to SMEs, and a new National Housing Delivery Fund to be confirmed at the spending review will support long-term finance options, such as revolving credit facilities and lending alliances.  

  • A new pilot to unlock small sites for SMEs: the Small Sites Aggregator will bring together small brownfield sites that would otherwise not have been developed, and attract private investment to build new social rent homes and address temporary accommodation challenges. Building on a model developed by Lloyds Banking Group’s Social Housing Initiative, the Small Sites Aggregator will be trialled this year with input from Bristol, Sheffield and the London Borough of Lewisham and with the support of their regional authorities. This will help tackle the housing shortage, address unviable small plots of land, and create local jobs supporting the government’s Plan for Change.

Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary, Angela Rayner said:

“Smaller housebuilders must be the bedrock of our Plan for Change to build 1.5 million homes and fix the housing crisis we’ve inherited – and get working people on the housing ladder.   

“For decades the status quo has failed them and it’s time to level the playing field. 

“Today we’re taking urgent action to make the system simpler, fairer and more cost effective, so smaller housebuilders can play a crucial role in our journey to get Britain building.”

Full details are being set out today for the modernising of planning committees – ensuring elected councillors focus on the most significant proposals and larger developments rather than small-scale projects or niche technical details, while more faster decisions are made by expert trained planners.  

Under these plans, once a development has been agreed in principle technical details won’t keep going back and forth to committees - accelerating housebuilding and saving council planning departments time and money. 

Further support announced today for local builders includes:

  • £100 million in SME Accelerator Loans to help smaller firms to grow and invest using part of the £700 million extension to the Home Building Fund announced in December. 
  • £10 million for councils to fund more specialists to speed up environmental assessments, getting spades in the ground faster. 
  • A £1.2 million PropTech Innovation Fund to support innovation in small site delivery, for example through use of new data tools.

It comes as the government unveiled its plans to train up to 120,000 new apprentices, including within construction – ensuring the industry has what it needs to get building.

The wide-ranging package for SMEs today builds on the government’s planning overhaul so far, with the new National Planning Policy Framework alone expected to drive housebuilding to its highest level in over 40 years and add £6.8 billion to the economy by 2030.

CEO of Lloyds Banking Group, Charlie Nunn said:

“We strongly welcome the government’s announcement today that it will pilot the Small Sites Aggregator in Bristol, Sheffield and Lewisham. 

“Through the Social Housing Initiative, we’re proud to have helped ignite this innovation in housing development and finance – unlocking the small, brownfield sites in our communities which are lying empty yet have immense potential to provide good quality homes in our towns and cities. 

“This exciting partnership between the public and private sectors will increase investment at pace into the new, genuinely affordable homes that are needed across the UK.”

Head of External Affairs at the Federation of Master Builders, Jeremy Gray said:

“This is a big change for the planning system and one that acknowledges the hardships faced by SME house builders over the last few decades, which have resulted in their decline. The UK’s small house builders stand ready to deliver the homes Britain needs, but the planning system has stifled their growth.

“The FMB has long called for reform to the planning system to support SMEs, and so the decision to streamline requirements on sites of up to nine homes, alongside faster decision making is a positive step. The medium site designation will also be welcomed by members as it reduces planning hurdles, enabling them to scale up their businesses.”

CEO of Pocket Living, Paul Rickard said:

“For the first time in many years, we’re seeing clear signals that an administration recognises the critical role SME housebuilders play in tackling the housing crisis. We’re delighted to see several of the recommendations we’ve worked with the Government on reflected in today’s announcements.

“SMEs can be disproportionately affected by policy and support targeted specifically at SMEs will help to reverse the decline of our sector, help level the playing field, and once again make SMEs the backbone for high quality local housing delivery across the nation.”

Chief Executive of Greencore Homes, Jon Di Stefano said:

“Simplifying the planning process and introducing more targeted land and funding opportunities for SME housebuilders should have a transformative effect for housing delivery, not just in terms of volume but quality and sustainability too.  

“As someone that has made the jump from a larger housebuilder to an SME, I have seen firsthand how attracting diversity of scale to the housebuilding industry creates more innovation and a broader mix of tenures. Like many smaller developers, Greencore wants to build more and we are passionate about increasing delivery of our low energy, low carbon homes which are quicker to build, healthier for people to live in and designed with nature and wildlife in mind.  

“Unfortunately, delays in the planning process have slowed down how quickly we can deliver these homes to date. We fully support these measures that will unlock smaller sites and help SME housebuilders to flourish and play their part in increasing housing delivery to meet the government’s targets.”

Chief Executive of the National Federation of Builders, Richard Beresford said:

“In 2018, NFB helped write the NPPF policies on small and medium sized sites and since that time, lobbied for a ‘Medium’ sized definition of between ten and 50 homes. We are incredibly grateful to the government for considering our recommendation because SMEs don’t just deliver organic growth on infill, brownfield and within communities, but are the competition, workforce capacity and innovation that keeps housebuilding and construction industry healthy. 

“Governments have always spoken strongly about helping SME builders but action has been thin on the ground. By acknowledging that many SMEs build on sites of between ten and 50, the ‘Medium’ sized site definition creates an opportunity to help them directly. This is the strategic step that SMEs desperately needed, and we thank the government for working with and listening to industry.”

Managing Director of Kingswood House, Paul Jones said:

“As an SME house builder who started in 2009 by delivering four homes a year, we have managed to grow to deliver nearly 150 homes a year in 2025-6. Our growth has been supported by Homes England and the Home Building Fund which has been instrumental in helping us to achieve this. 

“We are really pleased to see this Government realising the importance of SME housebuilders in the industry. The barriers to entry for SME house builders are incredibly challenging and often impossible to overcome. 

These much needed changes will really help us and other SME house builders to deliver to our full potential, which in turn will help the government to achieve their target of 1.5m new homes in the next four years.”

Further information:

The government has published a new working paper on planning thresholds for small and medium housing sites.  

The government has also launched a consultation reviewing Biodiversity Net Gain for minor, medium and brownfield development. This will be open for 8 weeks.  

As part of the Planning and Infrastructure Bill, the government is also launching a new consultation on reforming planning committees and their role in the planning process. This consultation includes detailed proposals for a national scheme of delegation which would direct the majority of minor and technical applications to planning officers, freeing up committees to consider the most complex and controversial by categorising applications into Tier A or B. Tier A applications will go to officers, while Tier B applications have the ability to be considered by committees if necessary. It will be open for 8 weeks.  

The Home Building Fund is administered by Homes England and is designed for SME housebuilders in England that are struggling to access loans from traditional lenders. Last year the government announced a £700 million extension to the Fund.

The new National Housing Delivery Fund will provide a range of funding tools to support SMEs, including support for revolving credit facilities. Further details will be announced at the Spending Review.

This government has also launched a £1.2m PropTech Innovation fund to inject innovation into small site delivery. Examples of potential solutions include the use of data and tools to provide certainty on future infrastructure capacity for SME housebuilders, meaning they can make the case for investment easier. 

The government is making available a further £10m this financial year to help local planning authorities implement BNG, on top of £35m provided in previous years. 

The government is also announcing today that it will consult on how we apply BNG for Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects (NSIP) to provide consistent regulations for developers - many of them who are already delivering biodiversity gains at scale.  Measures will be in place from May 2026.

Updates to this page

Published 28 May 2025