Solar PV and Planning Permission: Permitted Development Rights, Listed Buildings and Conservation Area Rules

Quick Answer: In England, solar panels on a dwelling's roof are Permitted Development (no planning permission needed) provided they don't protrude more than 200mm above the roof surface, the installation is not on a listed building, and in conservation areas the panels are not on a principal or side elevation visible from a highway. Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland have similar but distinct PD rules. For commercial buildings, PD applies up to specific size thresholds. Always confirm with the local planning authority (LPA) for conservation areas and listed buildings before installation.

Summary

Planning permission is not required for the majority of UK domestic solar PV installations. The Permitted Development (PD) rights introduced in 2008 (and subsequently updated) allow homeowners to install solar panels without needing to apply to their local authority, subject to specific conditions.

However, there are important exceptions: listed buildings (any grade), conservation areas, and certain flat or mansard roofs have restrictions that can apply. Getting the planning question wrong — installing without permission where it is required — can result in enforcement action and a requirement to remove the panels.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table: Solar PV Planning Summary (England)

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Scenario PD (No permission)? Notes
Domestic pitched roof, not listed, not conservation area Yes Subject to 200mm protrusion limit
Domestic pitched roof, conservation area, not visible from highway Yes PD retained; confirm panel not on principal elevation
Domestic pitched roof, conservation area, visible from highway No — planning permission required Apply to LPA; full planning application
Listed building (any grade) No — listed building consent + planning required Contact Historic England/LPA; full application
Commercial building, ≤1MW capacity Generally PD Part 14, Class B; subject to conditions
Flat roof, not visible from highway Yes Must not be highest part of building
Ground-mounted panels Separate PD class; conditions apply Up to 9m² in curtilage; not permitted in conservation area; check Part 14, Class C

Detailed Guidance

Permitted Development Conditions for Dwellings (England)

The relevant conditions under Schedule 2, Part 14, Class A of the GPDO are:

A.1 (what is permitted): Solar thermal equipment and solar PV panels on the roof or walls of a dwelling.

A.2 (conditions):

  1. The installation must not exceed the highest part of the roof by more than 200mm
  2. If on a wall or roof slope forming the principal elevation (the main face visible from the highway) or a side elevation visible from the highway: the panels are NOT permitted development
  3. In a Conservation Area (or World Heritage Site): the equipment must not be on a wall or roof slope that faces the highway

These conditions mean:

The 200mm rule: For standard flush-mounted solar panels on a pitched roof, the mounting typically projects 50–100mm above the tile surface — well within the 200mm limit. Taller tilt-frame systems on a pitched roof could potentially approach this limit; confirm if unusually tall mounting frames are specified.

Listed Buildings

Absolute requirement for consent: Solar panels on a listed building require:

  1. Listed Building Consent (LBC) — from the Local Planning Authority, to ensure the building's special architectural or historic interest is not harmed
  2. Planning permission — which may be considered alongside or separately from the LBC

There are no automatic exemptions for solar PV on listed buildings. This applies to the building itself and to any structures within its curtilage that are also listed.

What listed building officers typically consider:

In-roof solar (solar tiles/solar slates): Products such as Tesla Solar Roof, Marley SolarTile, and similar in-roof systems integrate panels within the roof structure, replacing tiles. These can present a lower visual impact and may be more favourably viewed by conservation officers for listed properties — but still require LBC and planning permission; they are not automatically exempt.

Grade I and Grade II buildings:* Grade I (exceptional interest) and Grade II* (particularly important) buildings face the strictest scrutiny. Solar PV on these buildings is very rarely approved.

Grade II buildings: The majority of listed buildings (over 90%) are Grade II. Planning authorities vary in how they treat Grade II listing — some are relatively pragmatic about solar on non-visible elevations (e.g., rear slopes of terraced houses); others refuse outright. Always check with the local planning authority before specifying an installation on any listed property.

Conservation Areas

Not all conservation areas prohibit solar: In a conservation area, the PD restriction applies only to panels on a principal elevation or on any elevation visible from a highway. Rear-slope installations, or installations on buildings that are set back from the road, may still be PD.

Checking visibility: Stand on the nearest public highway (including public footpaths) and assess whether the proposed panel location would be visible. If it would not be visible from any public highway, it is likely PD. Photograph this assessment and include it in the project file.

Where planning is required: If planning permission is required for a conservation area installation, the application will be assessed against the Local Planning Authority's conservation area management plan. Key factors: the character and appearance of the conservation area; the level of visibility; the type and colour of panel selected.

Practical advice: For conservation area projects where the planning position is uncertain, contact the LPA's duty planning officer informally before submitting. This can confirm whether planning is required and what the authority's approach is likely to be, saving time and cost.

Commercial Buildings

For non-domestic buildings, Part 14, Class B provides PD rights for solar panels subject to conditions:

For large commercial rooftop solar (above the PD threshold), or any commercial installation requiring a material change of use of land, a formal planning application is required.

Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland

Scotland: The Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (Scotland) Order 1992 as amended provides PD for solar panels. Conditions are broadly similar to England: panels must not protrude more than a defined distance above the roof; listed buildings require planning and listed building consent; conservation area restrictions apply. Check the current Scottish legislation as amendments have been made.

Wales: The Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) Order 1995 as amended for Wales. Similar conditions to England; Welsh Government policy (Planning Policy Wales, Technical Advice Note 8 on Renewable Energy) supports solar PV subject to planning requirements. Listed building and conservation area rules apply.

Northern Ireland: Different permitted development framework; consult the Department for Infrastructure (DfI) guidance and the Planning Appeals Commission for Northern Ireland.

Frequently Asked Questions

I'm not sure if a property is listed. How do I check?

The Historic England National Heritage List for England (NHLE) is searchable online at historicengland.org.uk — enter the address and it will confirm whether any listed buildings are registered at that address, their grade, and the listing description. For Scotland, use Historic Environment Scotland (HES); for Wales, Cadw; for Northern Ireland, NIEA.

The customer says their house is "just outside" the conservation area boundary. Do restrictions still apply?

No. Conservation area restrictions under planning law apply to buildings within the designated boundary. A property just outside the boundary is not subject to conservation area planning restrictions for PD purposes. However, confirm using the LPA's conservation area map — "just outside" should be confirmed rather than assumed.

Can I install panels on a roof slope that faces the highway if the panels are invisible because of a parapet wall?

This is a grey area. The GPDO condition refers to panels on a "roof slope that faces the highway" — it does not include a visibility test within the condition (unlike the conservation area clause). Strictly interpreted, a principal elevation roof slope is not PD even if the panels would not be visible due to a parapet. Some installers argue visibility should be the practical test; others comply strictly. Where uncertain, seek pre-application advice from the LPA.

Regulations & Standards