External Staircase Planning Permission Checker
Check whether your proposed external staircase is likely to need planning permission in the UK. Designed for homeowners, landlords, managing agents, architects and contractors considering new or replacement external stairs.
This free checker gives a planning risk assessment for external staircases — including rear garden access stairs, balcony access stairs, basement flat access, fire escape staircases, replacement stairs and new external access to flats or maisonettes.
Planning rules depend on property type, location, visibility, conservation constraints and whether the staircase changes the use or access pattern of the building. This tool is guidance only — your Local Planning Authority makes the final decision. For design and pricing guidance, see our external staircase and fire escape stairs pages.
Planning Permission Risk Checker
Select the options that best describe your project. The result will show whether planning permission is unlikely, may be required, or is likely to be required before ordering your external staircase.
How the Planning Checker Works
Describe the Property
Select whether the project is on a house, flat, HMO, rental block or commercial building. Flats and HMOs usually carry more planning sensitivity than single dwellings.
Assess Visibility & Location
The tool considers whether the staircase is on the rear, side, front or roof area, and whether it is visible from the street or public highway.
Flag Planning Constraints
Listed buildings, conservation areas, Article 4 directions, new external access and separate entrances all increase the likelihood of needing planning permission or consent.
External Staircase Planning — Common Questions
Do external staircases need planning permission in the UK?
Sometimes. A rear replacement staircase on a single house may be lower risk, especially if it is not visible from the street and does not create a new separate entrance. Planning permission is more likely for flats, maisonettes, front elevations, visible side elevations, listed buildings, conservation areas, Article 4 areas, roof terrace access, new external access or staircases that affect privacy and overlooking.
Do I need planning permission to replace an existing external staircase?
A like-for-like replacement in the same location is usually lower risk than a completely new staircase, but planning may still be required if the property is a flat, listed building, in a conservation area, subject to Article 4, or if the new staircase is larger, more visible or materially different from the old one. See also our rusted external staircase replacement guide.
Do flats and maisonettes need planning permission for external stairs?
Often yes, or at least a planning check is strongly recommended. Flats and maisonettes do not usually have the same permitted development rights as houses. External staircases serving flats can affect the appearance of the building, privacy, escape routes and the use of the property.
Does a fire escape staircase still need planning permission?
It can. A fire escape staircase may be required for safety, but it is still an external alteration to the building. Planning risk depends on property type, location, visibility, height, design, constraints and neighbour impact. For cost guidance, see our fire escape staircase price calculator and fire escape staircase cost guide.
What if my property is listed or in a conservation area?
If the building is listed, Listed Building Consent is likely for external changes, and planning permission may also be required. In conservation areas, the local authority may look closely at the design, materials, visibility and impact on the character of the area. Do not order or fabricate the staircase before checking this with the local authority.
Is Building Control the same as planning permission?
No. Planning permission deals with whether the external change is acceptable in planning terms — appearance, impact, privacy, use and local policy. Building Control deals with safety and technical compliance — structure, stair geometry, guarding, handrails, fire escape, slip resistance and construction. You may need one, both, or neither depending on the project. Use our staircase compliance checker for Building Regulations guidance.
Can Continox help before planning permission is confirmed?
Yes. Continox can help with initial specification, indicative pricing, drawings and technical information for external staircases and fire escape stairs. However, final planning advice and approval should come from your Local Planning Authority, architect or planning consultant where required. For a project discussion, use our quote request form.
Need an External Staircase Designed Properly?
Send us photos, approximate dimensions and your planning status. Continox can advise on external staircase specification, cost, compliance and the information you may need before placing an order.