National statistics

Planning applications in England: October to December 2022

Published 30 March 2023

Applies to England

1. Main points

Between October to December 2022, district level planning authorities in England:

  • received 93,100 applications for planning permission, down 13% from the same quarter a year earlier;
  • decided 91,700 applications for planning permission, down 12% from the same quarter a year earlier;
  • granted 79,500 decisions, down 12% from the same quarter a year earlier; this is equivalent to 87% of decisions, unchanged from the same quarter a year earlier;
  • decided 87% of major applications within 13 weeks or the agreed time, up one percentage point from the same quarter a year earlier;
  • granted 8,800 residential applications, down 7% from the same quarter a year earlier;
  • granted 1,800 applications for commercial developments, down 7% from the same quarter a year earlier; and
  • decided 49,600 householder development applications, down 17% from the same quarter a year earlier. This accounted for 54% of all decisions, down from 58% a year earlier.

In the year ending December 2022, district level planning authorities:

  • granted 336,500 decisions, down 11% from the year ending December 2021; and
  • granted 35,600 residential applications, down 8% from the year ending December 2021.

2. Introduction

This statistical release presents National Statistics on authorities that undertake district and county level planning activities in England. It covers information on planning applications received and decided, including decisions on applications for residential developments (dwellings) and enforcement activities. Data are provided at national and local planning authority level and are based on information reported for the relevant quarters as at 10 February 2023 for the PS1/2 return (‘District matters’) and the CPS1/2 return (‘County matters’).

The separate Technical Notes document includes figures for response rates and a Definitions section which provides a link to a glossary containing details of the main terms used within this release and associated live tables.

The Department has produced an interactive dashboard comprising data from the PS1/2 and CPS1/2 returns and open data (.csv) files to complement the ongoing use of live tables in spreadsheets which are available from the planning applications statistics web page.

3. Authorities undertaking district level planning

A summary of the trends in applications, decisions and permissions granted is provided in Figure 1. The number of applications, decisions and permissions at district level in this publication is usually rounded to the nearest hundred[footnote 1]; unrounded figures are available in the accompanying Live Tables and Dashboard.

3.1 Planning applications received

During October to December 2022, authorities undertaking district level planning in England received 93,100 applications for planning permission, down 13% from the same quarter a year earlier. In the year ending December 2022, authorities received 409,500 planning applications, down 14% from the year ending December 2021 (Live Table P134, PS1 Dashboard).

3.2 Planning decisions

Authorities reported 91,700 decisions on planning applications in October to December 2022, down 12% from the same quarter a year earlier. In the year ending December 2022, authorities decided 385,800 planning applications, down 10% from the year ending December 2021 (Live Tables P120/P133/P134, PS1/PS2 Dashboard).

3.3 Applications granted

During October to December 2022, authorities granted 79,500 decisions, down 12% from the same quarter a year earlier. Authorities granted 87% of all decisions, unchanged from the same quarter a year earlier. In the year ending December 2022, authorities granted 336,500 decisions, down 11% from the year ending December 2021. Authorities granted 87% of all decisions, down one percentage point from the year ending December 2021 (Live Tables P120/P133, PS2 Dashboard).

3.4 Applications on hand

Authorities reported that they had 146,200 applications on hand as at 1 October 2022. This is 59% above the number of decisions made during the quarter. The corresponding figure for the same quarter a year earlier was 50%. (Live Table P133, PS1 dashboard).

3.5 Historical context

Figure 1 shows that, since about 2009-10, the numbers of applications received, decisions made and applications granted have each followed a similar pattern. As well as the usual within-year pattern of peaks in the Summer (July to September quarter) and troughs in the Autumn and Winter (October to December and January to March quarters), there was a clear downward trend during the 2008 economic downturn, followed by a period of stability leading to a large dip in 2020 following the start of the pandemic and a subsequent recovery in early 2021, including a particular peak in applications received.

Figure 1: Number of planning applications received, decided and granted (thousands)

England, quarter ending June 2005 to quarter ending December 2022

Historical figures for all district level decisions dating back to 2012-13 are set out in Live Table P120, with separate breakdowns for residential and commercial decisions being shown in Live Tables P120A and P120B respectively. These latter two tables are discussed below in the sections on residential and commercial decisions. Alternatively an extended time series is available within the Dashboard and the full time series is available within the PS1 and PS2 open data tables. Revisions are made to the figures submitted by local authorities but are generally very small[footnote 2].

3.6 Regional breakdowns

Table 1 shows how numbers of applications received, decisions made and decisions granted varied by region. It also shows how the percentage of decisions granted varies widely by region, from 81% in London to 91% in National Parks, and the North East (Live Table P133, PS1/PS2 Dashboard).

Table 1: Regional breakdown of changes in applications and decisions

Quarter ending December 2022:

Number of applications received Number of applications decided Number of applications granted Percentage of decisions granted
England 93,100 91,700 79,500 87
East Midlands 7,000 7,100 6,400 90
East of England 12,200 12,100 10,200 84
London 15,400 15,400 12,400 81
National Parks 1,600 1,600 1,500 91
North East 2,800 2,800 2,500 91
North West 8,900 9,000 8,100 90
South East 18,400 17,900 15,600 87
South West 11,700 11,200 10,000 90
West Midlands 7,900 7,300 6,400 88
Yorkshire and the Humber 7,200 7,400 6,400 87

Table 2 shows how numbers of applications received, and planning decisions made, varied by region. It also shows the percentage change in number of applications received and decided compared to the same quarter a year earlier. The percentage change in the number of applications received varies widely by region, from -16% in South West to -7% in North East (Live Table P133, PS1/PS2 Dashboard).

Table 2: Regional breakdown of applications received and decided

Quarter ending December 2022 compared to the quarter ending December 2021:

Number of applications received Percentage change from previous year Number of applications decided Percentage change from previous year
England 93,100 -13 91,700 -12
East Midlands 7,000 -14 7,100 -10
East of England 12,200 -15 12,100 -15
London 15,400 -10 15,400 -3
National Parks 1,600 -15 1,600 -9
North East 2,800 -7 2,800 -13
North West 8,900 -11 9,000 -9
South East 18,400 -13 17,900 -13
South West 11,700 -16 11,200 -15
West Midlands 7,900 -8 7,300 -15
Yorkshire and the Humber 7,200 -11 7,400 -12

4. Decisions granted

Figure 2 summarises the distribution of the percentage of decisions granted across authorities for major, minor and other developments using box and whisker plots. The ends of the box are the upper and lower quartiles, meaning that 50% of local authorities fall within this range, with the horizontal line in the centre of the box representing the median. The whiskers are the two lines above and below the box that are 1.5 times the size of the box (the interquartile range) with the dots representing outliers. Figure 2 shows that the range between the whiskers for the percentage of applications granted is widest between authorities for major developments (42% to 100%), followed by minor developments (53% to 100%) and other developments (72% to 100%) (Live Table P120, PS2 Dashboard).

Figure 2: Percentage of planning decisions granted, by type of development

Local planning authorities, quarter ending December 2022

4.1 Speed of decisions

In October to December 2022, 87% of major applications were decided within 13 weeks or within the agreed time, up one percentage point from the same quarter a year earlier.

In the same quarter, 83% of minor applications were decided within 8 weeks or within the agreed time, up three percentage points from the same quarter a year earlier.

Also in the same quarter, 87% of other applications were decided within 8 weeks or within the agreed time, up three percentage points from the same quarter a year earlier.

For more information on major, minor and other developments please see the PS1 and PS2 district planning matter guidance notes.

Figure 3 shows that range between the whiskers for the percentage of decisions made in time this quarter for major developments was (60% to 100%), for minor developments it was (55% to 100%) and for other developments it was (65% to 100%) (Live Table P120, PS2 Dashboard).

Figure 3: Percentage of planning decisions made in time, by type of development

Local planning authorities, quarter ending December 2022

4.2 Use of performance agreements

‘Performance agreement’ is an umbrella term used here to refer to Planning Performance Agreements, Extensions of Time and Environmental Impact Assessments. Between October to December 2022, 44% of all planning application decisions involved a performance agreement. Major developments were more likely to involve a performance agreement compared to minor and other developments with 75% of major decisions involving a planning agreement, compared with 53% of minor decisions and 39% of other decisions (Reference Table 2, PS2 Dashboard).

Figure 4 shows, from April 2010, the numbers of decisions on major, minor and other developments made involving a performance agreement, compared with numbers without a performance agreement. Notwithstanding definition changes, there has been a marked increase in the use of agreements since early 2013 (see Technical Notes for more information). This longer upward trend has been driven by both the additional scope for recording them and their additional use (Live Table P120, PS2 Dashboard).

Figure 4: Use of performance agreements with applications for major, minor and other developments

England, quarter ending June 2010 to quarter ending December 2022

Figure 5 shows that in the quarter to December 2022, 92% of major development decisions involving performance agreements were made on time. In comparison, 73% of major decisions not involving performance agreements were made within the statutory time limit of 13 weeks (see Reference Table 2, PS2 Dashboard).

Figure 5: Percentage of major, minor and other development decisions made in time

England, quarter ending June 2014 to quarter ending December 2022

4.3 Performance of individual district level local planning authorities

The existing approach to measuring the performance of authorities was introduced by the Growth and Infrastructure Act 2013 and is based on assessing local planning authorities’ performance on the speed and quality of their decisions on applications for major and non-major development. Where an authority is formally designated by the Secretary of State as underperforming, applicants have had the option of submitting their applications for major and non-major development (and connected applications) directly to the Planning Inspectorate (who act on behalf of the Secretary of State) for determination. See Improving planning performance: criteria for designation for more information.

Speed of decisions

The designation thresholds, below which a local planning authority is eligible for designation are:

  • For applications for major development: less than 60% of an authority’s decisions made within the statutory determination period or such extended period as has been agreed in writing with the applicant;

  • For applications for non-major development: less than 70% of an authority’s decisions made within the statutory determination period or such extended period as has been agreed in writing with the applicant.

See Live Tables P151/P153

Quality of decisions

The threshold for designation on applications for both major and non-major development, above which a local planning authority is at risk of designation, is 10% of an authority’s total number of decisions on applications made during the assessment period being overturned at appeal.

See Live Tables P152/P154

4.4 Residential decisions

In October to December 2022, 12,200 decisions were made on applications for residential developments[footnote 3], of which 8,800 (72%) were granted. The number of residential decisions made was down 5% from the same quarter a year earlier, with the number granted down 7% from the same quarter a year earlier. 1,200 major residential decisions were granted, down 2% from the same quarter a year earlier and 7,700 major residential decisions were granted, down 7% from the same quarter a year earlier (Live Table P120A, PS2 Dashboard).

In the year ending December 2022, 48,700 decisions were made on applications for residential developments, of which 35,600 (73%) were granted. The number of residential decisions made was down 6% from the previous year, with the number granted down 6% from the previous year. 4,400 major residential decisions were granted, down 8% from the previous year and 31,200 minor residential decisions were granted, down 8% from the previous year.

4.5 Residential units

The figures collected by the Department are the numbers of decisions on planning applications submitted to local planning authorities, rather than the number of units included in each application, such as the number of homes in the case of housing developments. The Department supplements this information by obtaining statistics on housing permissions from a contractor, Glenigan[footnote 4].

The latest provisional figures show that permission for 287,000 homes was given in the year to December 2022, down 9% from the 315,000 homes granted permission in the year to December 2021. On an ongoing basis, figures are revised to ensure that any duplicates are removed as far as possible, and also to include any projects that local planning authorities may not have processed: they are therefore subject to change, and the latest quarter’s provisional figures tend to be revised upwards. For the previous 8 quarters, the year to figures have been revised upwards by 2% on average. These figures are provided here to give contextual information to users and have not been designated as National Statistics.

Table 3: Number of housing units granted planning permission

England, up to the year ending December 2022

Rolling annual total to Number of units granted Percentage change from prior year
2008 Q4 209,000  
2009 Q4 144,000 -31
2010 Q4 164,000 14
2011 Q4 166,000 1
2012 Q4 181,000 9
2013 Q4 213,000 18
2014 Q4 228,000 7
2015 Q4 268,000 18
2016 Q4 316,000 18
2017 Q4 322,000 2
2018 Q4 316,000 -2
2019 Q4 328,000 4
2020 Q4 288,000 -12
2021 Q4 315,000 9
2022 Q4 287,000 -9

Source: Glenigan planning permission data: snapshot as at 1st March 2023.

The figures are rounded to the nearest thousand and the latest reported figures are often revised upwards in later quarters.

Figure 6: Number of housing units granted planning permission

England, year ending June 2009 to year ending December 2022

The number of units granted are often revised upwards for recent quarters.

Rolling annual totals for each quarter from 2007 are held as linked open data on Open Data Communities.

Table 4: Numbers of housing units granted permission in the year to December 2022: by size and number of projects

England, up to the year ending December 2022

Site size Number of units granted % of total number of units Number of projects % of total number of projects
1 Unit 4,900 2 5,000 39
2 Units 2,000 1 1,100 8
3-5 Units 9,400 3 2,600 20
6-9 Units 10,200 4 1,400 11
9 units or less 26,500 9 10,100 79
10 Units 1,300 0 100 1
11-49 Units 29,600 10 1,200 10
50-99 Units 36,100 13 500 4
100-149 Units 28,100 10 200 2
150-199 Units 26,400 9 200 1
200-499 Units 99,500 35 300 3
500+ Units 39,700 14 0 0
10 units or more 260,800 91 2,700 21
Grand Total 287,300 100 12,800 100

Table 5: Housing units granted permission in the year to December 2022: by region

England, up to the year ending December 2022

Region Units granted, (rounded to nearest 100) % of England total
England 287,300 100
East Midlands 32,100 11
East of England 35,800 12
London 63,700 22
National Parks 400 0
North East 7,700 3
North West 32,100 11
South East 44,400 15
South West 29,000 10
West Midlands 21,000 7
Yorkshire and the Humber 21,100 7

When considering the above figures in relation to the central government ambition of raising housing supply to 300,000 homes per year on average by the mid-2020s, it should be noted that many permissions do not result in a home being delivered in practice. This is due to a range of reasons, relating to the circumstances of landowners and developers, as well as the local and national economy. In addition, i) time lags in building can affect the number of homes built in a particular period; and ii) the methodology used cannot guarantee that all double counting of permissions is removed from the above figures.

In comparing the number of residential applications granted and the number of units granted, it should be noted that the two series measure different things and use data from different sources, and so may not track each other closely over the short term. More specifically, this difference is likely to be due to a combination of differences in the timing of recorded decisions and a difference in the average numbers of homes included within the relevant planning applications.

4.6 Commercial decisions

In October to December 2022, 2,000 decisions were made on applications for commercial developments[footnote 5], of which 1,800 (90%) were granted. The number of commercial decisions made down 8% from the same quarter a year earlier, with the number granted down 7% from the same quarter a year earlier. 400 major commercial decisions were granted, down 6% from the same quarter a year earlier and 1,400 minor commercial decisions were granted, down 8% from the same quarter a year earlier (Live Table P120B, PS2 Dashboard).

In the year ending December 2022, 8,200 decisions were made on applications for commercial developments, of which 7,400 (90%) were granted. The number of commercial decisions made were down 5% from the previous year, with the number granted down 5% from the year ending December 2021. 1,600 major commercial decisions were granted, unchanged from the previous year and 5,800 minor commercial decisions were granted, down 6% from the previous year.

Figure 7: Number of planning applications decided by district authorities, by type of development

England, quarter ending March 2000 to quarter ending December 2022

4.8 Householder developments

Householder developments are those developments to a residence which require planning permission such as extensions, loft conversions and conservatories (see Definitions section of the Technical Notes).

The number of decisions made on householder developments was 49,600 in the quarter ending December 2022, accounting for 54% of all decisions, down from 58% of all decisions made in the quarter ending December 2021. Authorities granted 89% of these applications and decided 88% within 8 weeks or the agreed time (Reference Table 2, PS2 Dashboard).

In the year ending December 2022, 217,800 decisions were made on applications for householder developments, accounting for 56% of all decisions, down from 60% of all decisions made in the year ending December 2021. Authorities granted 90% of these applications and decided 88% within 8 weeks or the agreed time.

4.9 Major public service infrastructure development decisions

Since August 2021, major public service infrastructure developments broadly defined as major developments for schools, hospitals and criminal justice accommodation have been subject to an accelerated decision-making timetable.

Separate figures on major public service infrastructure development decisions have been collected on the quarterly PS2 return with effect from October 2021. During October to December 2022 there were 13 decisions, of which all 13 were granted and 13 were decided in time (Live Table MJPSI, PS2 Dashboard).

Since April 2017, local planning authorities have had the ability to grant permission in principle (PiP) to sites which have been entered on their brownfield land registers. Where sites have a grant of permission in principle, applicants have been able to submit an application for Technical Details Consent (TDC) for development on these sites. In addition, since June 2018, it has also been possible to make an application for PiP for minor housing-led development as a separate application, independently of the brownfield register. Where a site has been granted PiP following an application, it is possible to apply for a TDC.

Figures on PiP/TDC decisions have been collected on the quarterly PS2 return from January 2020. During October to December 2022, local planning authorities reported 86 PiP (minor housing-led developments) decisions, 14 TDC (minor housing-led developments) decisions and zero TDC (major developments) decisions. The totals for the previous quarters have been similar (Live Table PiP/TDC1).

4.11 Permitted development rights

Planning permission for some types of development has been granted nationally through legislation, and the resulting rights are known as ‘permitted development rights’ (PDRs). In some cases, if the legislation is complied with, developments can go ahead without the requirement to notify the local planning authority and hence no way of capturing data exists. In other cases, the legislation requires an application to the local planning authority to determine whether prior approval is required (see the Definitions section of the Technical Notes).

Between October to December 2022, 5,800 applications were reported, of which prior approval was not required for 2,900, permission was granted for 1,400, and 1,500 were refused. This resulted in an overall acceptance rate[footnote 6] of 75%. Large householder extension accounted for 58% of all PDR applications reported, with 26% relating to All others, 26% relating to All others, and 4% relating to Commercial Business and service to residential (Live Tables PDR1/PDR2).

In the quarter to December 2022, 800 permitted development right applications were made for changes to residential use, of which 500 (61%) were given the go-ahead without having to go through the full planning process.

Overall during the 35 quarters ending December 2022, district planning authorities reported 300,400 applications for prior approvals for permitted developments. For 169,800 of them prior approval was not required, 69,300 were granted and 61,300 were refused (Live Table PDR2).

Figure 8: Permitted development rights decided by district planning authorities

England, quarter ending June 2014 to year ending December 2022

4.12 Other information

England totals for all the items of information collected on the PS1 and PS2 returns for October to December 2022 are given in Reference Tables 1 and 2 respectively. These include the following, for which definitions are given in the Definitions section of the Technical Notes:

Delegated decisions

Of the 91,700 decisions made during the quarter, 88,000 (96%) were delegated to officers. This percentage has been stable since 2014, having previously increased from around 75% in 2000 (Live Table P133).

Enforcement activity

During the quarter, authorities issued 831 enforcement notices and served 786 planning contravention notices, 132 breach of condition notices, 17 stop notices and 43 temporary stop notices, while 13 enforcement injunctions were granted by the High/County Court and 6 injunctive applications were refused. In recent years, this level of activity has remained broadly proportionate to the number of planning decisions made (Live Table P127).

Regulation 3 and 4 decisions

349 ‘Regulation 3’ and 43 ‘Regulation 4’ decisions were made. Relative to the number of planning decisions made in recent years, numbers of ‘Regulation 3’ decisions have dropped and those for ‘Regulation 4’ have remained stable (Live Table P128).

Traveller pitches

During the quarter, authorities decided 9 major applications for traveller pitches, granting 3 of them, and deciding 7 of them within 13 weeks or the agreed time.

They also decided 46 minor applications for traveller pitches, granting 23 of them and deciding 31 of them within 8 weeks or the agreed time.

For both major and minor applications for traveller pitches, the numbers of decisions, and percentages of applications granted and decided on time, have remained broadly stable since figures were first collected in 2008 (Live Table P137, PS2 Dashboard).

5. Authorities undertaking county level planning

Authorities that undertake county level planning activity include counties, unitary authorities, London boroughs, metropolitan districts, national parks and development corporations. ‘County matter’ applications include the winning and working of minerals and the deposit of waste. In the year to December 2022 county planning authorities received 766 applications, compared to the 409,500 applications received by district planning authorities.

Between October to December 2022, county level planning authorities in England:

  • received 206 applications for planning permission, down 9% from the same quarter a year earlier;
  • decided 160 applications for planning permission, down 4% from the same quarter a year earlier;
  • granted 150 decisions, unchanged from the same quarter a year earlier. This is equivalent to 94% of decisions, unchanged from the same quarter a year earlier; and
  • decided 89% of applications within 13 weeks or the agreed time, down two percentage points from the same quarter a year earlier.

5.1 Planning decisions

Waste developments accounted for 57% of the total decisions, mineral developments for 36% and other developments for 7% (CPS2 Dashboard).

5.2 Permitted development rights

Between October to December 2022, 12 applications were reported, of which prior approval was not required for 5, permission was granted for 7, and zero were refused. This resulted in an overall acceptance rate of 100% (Live Table PDR3, CPS1 Dashboard).

5.3 Other information

England totals for all the items of information collected on the CPS1 return for October to December 2022 are given in Reference Table 3. These include the following, for which definitions are given in the Definitions section of the Technical Notes:

Delegated decisions

Of the 160 decisions made during the quarter, 112 (70%) were delegated to officers. This percentage has been stable since 2014 in recent years (CPS1 Dashboard).

Enforcement activity

During the quarter, authorities issued 35 enforcement notices and served 36 planning contravention notices, 11 breach of condition notices, zero stop notices and 3 temporary stop notices, while zero enforcement injunctions were granted by the High/County Court and zero injunctive application were refused. In recent years, this level of activity has remained broadly proportionate to the number of planning decisions made (CPS1 Dashboard).

Regulation 3 and 4 decisions

80 ‘Regulation 3’ and zero ‘Regulation 4’ decisions were made. Relative to the number of planning decisions made in recent years, numbers of ‘Regulation 3’ decisions have dropped and those for ‘Regulation 4’ have remained stable (CPS1 Dashboard).

5.4 Performance of individual county level local planning authorities

Speed of decisions

The designation thresholds, below which a local planning authority is eligible for designation are:

  • For applications for major development: less than 60% of an authority’s decisions made within the statutory determination period or such extended period as has been agreed in writing with the applicant;

See Live Tables P151 (all developments) and P155 (oil/gas developments)

Quality of decisions

The threshold for designation on applications above which a local planning authority is eligible for designation, is 10% of an authority’s total number of decisions on applications made during the assessment period being overturned at appeal.

See Live Table P152

See Improving planning performance: criteria for designation for more information.

6. Accompanying tables and open data

Accompanying tables are available to download alongside this release. This quarter, the tables showing figures for individual LPAs (other than Live Tables P151 to P155) have been sorted into a single sequence by alphabetical order of the authority’s name, rather than being grouped by class of authority (e.g. shire districts) and then sorted alphabetically. This is a result of a change in the method of programming the tables. A decision on the ordering to be used for future quarters will be made in due course.

An interactive dashboard comprising data from the PS1/2 and CPS1/2 returns is also available on the planning application statistics landing page.

PS1/2 open data (.csv files)

  • Two files of PS1 data (.csv files) are available, with one holding data for the 4 most recent quarters only and the other holding data back to Q2 1996.
  • Similarly, two files of PS2 data (.csv files) are available, with one holding data for the 4 most recent quarters only and the other holding data back to Q2 1979.

Open data tables and supporting documents

CPS1/2 open data (.csv files)

  • Two files of CPS1 data (.csv files) are available, with one holding data for the 4 most recent quarters only and the other holding data back to Q2 1995.
  • In addition, two files of CPS2 data (.csv files) are available, with one holding data for the 4 most recent quarters only and the other holding data back to Q2 1989.

Open data tables and supporting documents

6.1 Data held on Open Data Communities

The following linked open data is held on Open Data Communities:

  • A selection of derived data on planning developments as included in planning live tables P124A and the ‘Comparison between local authorities’ table, at local planning authority level; and
  • Rolling annual England total figures for numbers of planning permissions granted, as provided by Glenigan.

The Open Data mobile app provides a range of statistics published by the department for the locality and is available for download free of charge from the Windows App Store. Any enquiries about the app should be sent to ODC@levellingup.gov.uk.

7. Technical notes

Please see the accompanying Technical Notes document for further details of definitions, related statistics and other technical details.

Please see the glossary of terms and definitions used in DLUHC housing statistical publications and English Housing Survey reports.

Information on the UK Statistical System is available via the UK Statistics Authority website.

Information about statistics at Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities is available via the Department’s website.

8. Enquiries

Date of next release: June 2023

Media enquiries: 0303 444 1209 newsdesk@levellingup.gov.uk

Public enquiries and responsible statistician: Andrew Presland

Email: planning.statistics@levellingup.gov.uk

  1. The 3 exceptions are the permissions totals provided by Glenigan Ltd (rounded to the nearest 1,000 due to the relative turbulence of the figures), numbers of projects by region provided by Glenigan Ltd (rounded to the nearest 10 because some numbers are very low) and the enforcement actions towards the end of the section (unrounded, because some numbers are very low). 

  2. The largest revisions made this quarter to an England total for July to September 2022, as published initially on 15 December 2022, amounted to an increase of 3,500 (2%) for the number of applications on hand at the start of the quarter. These were due almost wholly to PS1 returns being submitted for the quarter by 5 authorities that had not previously done so and the fact that figures are not imputed for this variable for non-responding authorities. 

  3. ‘Residential’ is used in this release to refer only to developments involving the construction or conversion of dwellings, rather than also including other developments involving people’s homes, such as householder developments and some changes of use. 

  4. Glenigan routinely collects data on planning applications submitted to all English local planning authorities and records the information by maintaining a ‘planning application’ for every project. The data have been updated over time as subsequent applications are submitted and decisions made, with all new applications being matched against the existing database at entry stage. This has involved an automated process supplemented by manual checking to identify any further matching projects. More details are given in the Definitions section of the Technical Notes. 

  5. Commercial developments are defined in this release as: ‘Offices, research and development, light industry’, ’General industry, storage, warehousing’ and ‘Retail and service’. 

  6. The acceptance rate is defined as the number of applications for which prior approval was not required, or for which permission was granted, as a percentage of the total number of applications.