Article 4 direction explained
What an Article 4 direction is
An Article 4 direction is a planning tool that removes permitted development rights in a specific area or for specific types of development.1 It requires a planning application for works that would normally proceed without permission.
Article 4 directions do not prevent development. They simply require you to apply for planning permission so the council can assess the proposal against planning policy. Many applications in Article 4 areas are approved.
When councils use Article 4 directions
Councils make Article 4 directions when permitted development would harm local character or planning objectives. Common reasons include:
- Conservation areas: Protecting historic character by requiring consent for replacement windows, roof alterations, or demolition of boundary walls.
- HMO control: Preventing excessive concentration of houses in multiple occupation, particularly in university towns and seaside areas.
- Office-to-residential conversions: Protecting employment land by removing permitted development rights for office-to-residential conversions.
- Residential extensions: Controlling the size and design of extensions in areas where permitted development limits would allow inappropriate development.
- Change of use: Protecting retail frontages or community facilities by requiring permission for changes to other uses.
Article 4 directions must be justified by clear evidence of harm. Central government can cancel directions that lack proper justification.
Types of Article 4 direction
There are two types:2
- Non-immediate directions: Require 12 months' notice before coming into effect. This gives property owners time to carry out permitted development before rights are removed.
- Immediate directions: Come into force immediately when made, but must be confirmed within 6 months. Only used where there is an urgent threat of harm (e.g., imminent demolition of heritage assets).
Immediate directions are rare and closely scrutinised by central government. Most Article 4 directions follow the non-immediate procedure.
How to check if an Article 4 direction applies
To find out if your property is subject to an Article 4 direction:
- Search your council's planning policy pages for "Article 4 directions" or "permitted development restrictions"
- Check the council's local plan or supplementary planning documents
- Submit a pre-application enquiry or call the planning department
- Search planning history for your property on the council's planning portal (Article 4 directions are sometimes recorded as planning constraints)
Many councils publish interactive maps showing Article 4 direction areas. Search for "[your council name] Article 4 direction map".
What happens if you breach an Article 4 direction
If you carry out work covered by an Article 4 direction without planning permission, the work is a breach of planning control. The council can serve an enforcement notice requiring you to undo the work.
You cannot rely on permitted development rights if an Article 4 direction applies. The direction removes those rights. Unauthorised work must be remedied or granted retrospective planning permission.
Unlike some planning breaches, there is no compensation for Article 4 directions affecting residential permitted development (extensions, loft conversions, etc). Compensation may apply to commercial permitted development in limited circumstances.
Challenging an Article 4 direction
You can object to a proposed Article 4 direction during the consultation period (usually 6 weeks). The council must consider objections before confirming the direction.
Once confirmed, Article 4 directions can only be challenged by judicial review within 6 weeks of the decision. Grounds for challenge are limited to procedural errors or irrationality.
Councils can modify or revoke Article 4 directions if circumstances change. If you believe a direction is no longer justified, you can request that the council reviews it.
Related guides
Sources
- The Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (England) Order 2015, Article 4.
- The Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development etc.) (England) (Amendment) Order 2021. Immediate and non-immediate Article 4 directions.