Oil Tank Siting Rules: Fire Safety Distances, Flood Risk, Ground Conditions and Planning Considerations

Quick Answer: Oil storage tanks must comply with Building Regulations Approved Document J and the Oil Firing Technical Association (OFTEC) technical guidance OFS T100. Key rules include minimum 760mm clearance from non-fire-rated buildings, 600mm from boundaries, and tanks in flood zones require raised platforms. Most domestic tanks under 3,500 litres do not need planning permission under permitted development.

Summary

Siting an oil storage tank correctly is one of the most important steps in any oil heating installation. Get it wrong and you risk fire spread, environmental pollution, planning enforcement, and insurance voidance. Approved Document J of the Building Regulations covers combustion appliances and fuel storage, while OFTEC technical standard OFS T100 provides the detailed guidance that competent oil heating engineers follow.

The three primary concerns when siting a tank are: fire safety (separation distances from ignition sources and combustible structures), environmental protection (containment for pollution prevention), and flood risk (many rural properties with oil heating sit in areas prone to flooding). Each of these has specific requirements that must all be satisfied simultaneously.

Planning permission is a separate question from building regulations compliance. Most domestic above-ground oil tanks are permitted development, but there are exceptions — listed buildings, conservation areas, and tanks over certain volumes may need planning consent. Always confirm with the local planning authority if in doubt.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Separation Requirement Minimum Distance
Non-fire-rated building (any combustible structure) 760mm
Fire-rated (30-min) building 0mm (can be adjacent)
Site boundary / fence / hedge 600mm
Any opening (door, window) in non-fire-rated building 760mm
Oil-fired appliance flue terminal 1,800mm
Any drain or inspection chamber 10m (or bund if closer)
Inland watercourse, ditch 10m (or bund if closer)
Spring, well, or borehole 50m
LPG cylinders/tanks 1,000mm
Road or highway No specific minimum, but tanker access must be practicable
Softwood tree (fire risk, roots) Practical clearance — consult OFTEC OFS T100

Detailed Guidance

Separation Distances Explained

The 760mm minimum from non-fire-rated buildings is the most commonly referenced rule, but it is often misunderstood. The distance applies to the tank shell, not the fill point or vent pipe. The 760mm creates a safe zone in which the heat from a tank fire is unlikely to ignite adjacent combustible materials within the time needed for emergency services to respond.

Where a wall between the tank and a building achieves a 30-minute fire rating (typically a solid brick or block wall with no openings on the tank side), the separation requirement is removed entirely. This allows tanks to be positioned closer to outbuildings, garages, or extensions, provided the fire-rated wall is properly constructed and has no penetrations.

The 760mm rule also applies to combustible fencing (timber, composite). Non-combustible fencing (brick, metal) at the boundary effectively acts as fire separation, so the 600mm boundary rule becomes the governing constraint in that case.

Secondary Containment (Bunding)

Bunding is a containment structure built around the primary tank to capture spillages and prevent oil from entering the ground or watercourses. Under the Water Resources Act 1991 and the Control of Pollution (Oil Storage) (England) Regulations 2001, secondary containment is mandatory for tanks over 200 litres if:

The bund must hold 110% of the largest tank volume within it. It must be impermeable to water and oil, and have no drain valve (or only a lockable one). Bund walls are typically minimum 300mm high for concrete construction, or manufactured as an integral double-skin tank.

Integral bunded tanks are now the most common solution for new domestic installs. They incorporate a built-in outer shell that provides the 110% containment. They cost more upfront but eliminate the need for a separate concrete bund.

Flood Risk Considerations

Properties in Flood Zone 2 (medium probability of flooding) and Flood Zone 3 (high probability) need particular attention for oil tank siting. An oil tank that floats off its base during a flood event can rupture delivery pipes, causing significant environmental damage and triggering expensive remediation costs — which may fall on the property owner.

OFTEC and the Environment Agency both recommend that in flood risk areas:

Raising a tank on a platform (typically steel RSJ legs or a raised concrete plinth) maintains all the normal separation distances from the ground level, not from the platform base.

Ground Preparation

The tank base must be:

Pea shingle, gravel, or timber are not acceptable bases. Where ground conditions are poor (soft clay, filled ground, made ground), the concrete pad may need to be thickened or a beam-and-block solution used — seek structural advice for large tanks.

Planning Considerations

Most domestic oil tanks are permitted development under Schedule 2, Part 2, Class A of the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (England) Order 2015. The key conditions are:

In Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, the permitted development rules differ slightly. Always check local planning authority guidance, particularly in sensitive areas.

For commercial properties or larger tanks, planning permission is likely to be required regardless of the regulations cited above.

Delivery Access

The fuel delivery tanker needs unobstructed access to within approximately 30 metres of the fill point. Most delivery hoses are 35–40m in length. When positioning a tank, always consider:

If delivery cannot reach within 30m, the installer should flag this to the customer before commissioning, as the fuel supplier may decline to deliver or charge a premium for specialist delivery.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need planning permission for an oil tank?

For most domestic properties in England, no — oil tanks are permitted development provided the tank is under 3,500 litres and not in the curtilage of a listed building. However, conservation areas, World Heritage Sites, and Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty may have additional restrictions. Always check with the local planning authority if there is any doubt. Scotland and Wales have separate permitted development regulations.

My neighbour's fence is only 400mm away — can I still site the tank there?

No. The minimum separation from any site boundary (including fences and hedges) is 600mm. You would need to reposition the tank or negotiate with your neighbour. If the boundary feature is a non-combustible solid masonry wall, it may be able to act as fire separation, but you should still maintain 600mm from it to allow inspection access.

Does the tank need a concrete base?

Yes, for virtually all domestic oil tanks. The base must be solid, level, non-combustible, and capable of bearing the loaded weight of the tank. Concrete (minimum 100mm C25) is the standard solution. Pre-cast concrete pads are available from tank suppliers if casting in situ is impractical. Timber, gravel, or bare earth are not acceptable.

What is a bunded tank and when do I need one?

A bunded tank has an outer shell (the bund) that captures any oil released from the inner tank, holding at least 110% of the tank's capacity. Bunding is required by law in England when the tank is within 10m of a watercourse, within 50m of a drinking water source, or in a flood risk area. Many OFTEC engineers now recommend bunded tanks as standard practice regardless of location, to avoid future liability.

Can I site the tank inside a garage or outbuilding?

Yes, subject to conditions. The tank must still be separated from ignition sources (boiler, electrical equipment). Ventilation must be adequate to prevent vapour accumulation. The building must have appropriate fire resistance. OFTEC OFS T100 provides specific guidance for internal tank siting. In practice, internal tanks are less common for domestic installs because they complicate delivery access and increase the complexity of pipework.

Regulations & Standards