The 10 Planning Checks Every Developer Should Run Before Buying Land
The due-diligence process that separates profitable projects from expensive planning mistakes.
Property development often looks deceptively simple from the outside. A promising plot appears on the market, a rough development concept takes shape, and calculations begin around potential unit numbers and resale value. Yet many projects fail before they even reach the planning application stage—not because the design is poor, but because critical planning constraints were never identified early enough.
In the United Kingdom, the planning system operates through a complex hierarchy of national policy, local development plans, environmental designations, and site-specific constraints. Even experienced developers occasionally overlook factors that can render a seemingly viable site unworkable.
The UK’s national planning framework, set out in the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF), places strong emphasis on sustainable development, environmental protection, and evidence-based decision making. Local authorities must apply these policies through their Local Plans, supplementary guidance, and consultation processes.
The result is that the real question for any developer is rarely “Can this land be built on?” but rather “What does planning policy actually allow here?”
Understanding that distinction early can prevent costly mistakes. The most successful developers carry out structured planning due diligence before committing to a purchase. Below are ten critical checks that should always be completed first.
1 Identify the Local Planning Authority
Every site in the UK falls under a specific Local Planning Authority (LPA), which determines planning applications and applies local planning policies. While national guidance sets the framework, each authority produces its own Local Plan and supplementary planning documents that interpret those policies locally.
Local planning policies can vary significantly between neighbouring districts, particularly in relation to housing allocations, landscape protection, and design expectations. One authority may actively encourage small windfall housing sites within settlement boundaries, while its neighbour resists identical proposals due to landscape constraints or infrastructure capacity.
2 Review the Local Plan and Settlement Strategy
Local Plans define where development is expected to occur and where it is likely to be resisted. They typically establish settlement boundaries, housing allocations, employment zones, countryside protection policies, and landscape and heritage designations.
Sites located inside settlement boundaries or within designated housing allocations often have a clearer pathway to approval. Conversely, land in open countryside may face significantly higher policy barriers unless exceptional circumstances can be demonstrated.
Understanding how the Local Plan treats the land in question is fundamental to assessing its true development potential—and ultimately its value.
3 Examine Planning History
Past planning applications can reveal a great deal about a site’s prospects. Planning history often highlights previous development proposals, officer concerns, reasons for refusal, and planning inspector decisions at appeal.
If a site has previously been refused permission, the reasons behind that refusal may still apply today. Equally, if neighbouring sites have secured permission for similar development, that precedent can support a new application.
Planning history provides invaluable insight into how the LPA interprets its policies in practice—treat it as a window into the decision-making culture of the authority.
4 Check Flood Risk Designations
Flood risk is one of the most significant constraints affecting development across the UK. The Environment Agency maps flood risk zones that directly influence planning decisions, categorised as Flood Zone 1 (low probability), Flood Zone 2 (medium probability), and Flood Zone 3 (high probability).
Within higher-risk areas, the planning system applies a “sequential test” to direct development toward lower-risk locations wherever possible. Certain development types may be considered inappropriate in high-risk zones, particularly in areas categorised as functional floodplain.
5 Identify Heritage Constraints
Historic environments are strongly protected within the UK planning system. Sites may fall within conservation areas, within the setting of listed buildings, near scheduled monuments, or within historic parks and gardens.
These designations trigger additional policy considerations under heritage protection legislation and guidance from organisations such as Historic England. Development affecting heritage assets must demonstrate that any harm to their significance is justified and outweighed by public benefits.
In practical terms, this often means additional design constraints, heritage impact assessments, and consultation with conservation officers—all of which add time and cost to a project.
6 Assess Environmental and Ecological Constraints
Environmental considerations increasingly influence planning decisions. Protected sites such as Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), Special Areas of Conservation (SAC), Ramsar wetlands, and ancient woodland can significantly restrict development potential or require mitigation measures.
Many planning applications now trigger ecological surveys to identify protected species such as bats, great crested newts, or badgers. These assessments can add both cost and time to development projects, making early identification essential.
7 Consider Biodiversity Net Gain Requirements
The Environment Act 2021 introduced mandatory biodiversity obligations that now apply to most developments. Under the Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) framework, developers must demonstrate a measurable increase in biodiversity compared with the site’s existing ecological value.
Achieving the required uplift typically involves on-site habitat creation, off-site biodiversity credits, or a combination of both. Understanding these obligations early allows developers to incorporate biodiversity measures into project design and—crucially—into land valuation.
8 Evaluate Highway Access
Highway access is a frequent cause of planning refusal that catches developers off guard. Local highway authorities must be satisfied that a proposed development will not create unsafe or unsuitable access arrangements.
Key considerations include visibility splays, road capacity, pedestrian access, and parking provision. Even where land itself appears suitable for development, inadequate highway access can prevent permission from being granted. Consulting early with highway specialists can reveal whether access constraints are likely to arise.
9 Check Infrastructure and Utilities Capacity
Development feasibility is also influenced by infrastructure capacity. Water supply, sewerage systems, electricity networks, and transport infrastructure must all be capable of supporting new development.
In some locations—particularly rural areas—limited infrastructure capacity can restrict development until upgrades are provided. Local planning authorities may require financial contributions toward improvements through planning obligations or conditions, and these costs can significantly affect project viability.
10 Analyse Local Planning Precedents
Perhaps the most overlooked planning check involves studying comparable developments in the surrounding area. Planning officers and inspectors rely heavily on precedent when assessing new proposals. If similar schemes have been approved nearby, this can meaningfully strengthen the case for development.
Conversely, repeated refusals for similar proposals may indicate that a site faces significant policy barriers that are unlikely to be overcome without a materially different approach.
Examining recent decisions in the locality provides valuable insight into how planning policies are being interpreted on the ground—and is often more revealing than the policy wording alone.
Why These Checks Matter
Planning permission is rarely determined by a single factor. Decisions are shaped by a combination of policy, environmental constraints, design considerations, and local circumstances. Developers who conduct thorough planning due diligence before purchasing land place themselves in a far stronger position: they can negotiate land prices based on realistic prospects, design proposals that align with policy expectations, and avoid investing time and resources into projects unlikely to succeed.
Those who skip the feasibility stage often discover planning constraints only after committing to a site—when options for adjustment are limited and the financial exposure is already significant.
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