SME builders say planning uncertainty is preventing more homes being built

Stripping the politics from planning as well as increasing help for first-time buyers would speed up housebuilding, according to SME developers.

Related topics:  Construction,  Property,  Developers
Property | Reporter
31st January 2024
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"Policy uncertainty is causing further delays where local authorities are withdrawing or pausing local plan consultations. Only when SMEs do well can the housing supply we need be delivered"
- Stewart Baseley - HBF

An overwhelming 90% of the 303 respondents cited planning permission delays as a major growth barrier in the Homebuilders Federation's fourth annual State of Play survey.

SMEs would like to see local councils' planning committees replaced by an independent body of trained planning experts with residents' input at the local plan state.

Homebuilders Federation executive chairman Stewart Baseley said: "The debate around planning has become increasingly political over the last year.

"Policy uncertainty is causing further delays where local authorities are withdrawing or pausing local plan consultations. Only when SMEs do well can the housing supply we need be delivered."

More financial help for first-time buyers and a review of green belt needed

SMEs said there should be more financial help for first-time buyers and that there should be a national review of the green belt.

They also called for more small sites in local plans with the process streamlined to make land available faster.

Respondents also asked for housing delivery targets to be ‘mandatory' again as an estimated 64 local councils have stalled on their local plans since the Government made them advisory in 2023.

Nine out of ten SMEs said that local planning authorities were under-resourced and 46 per cent said planning permission costs had risen by more than 30 per cent.

Rowland Thomas, managing director of Close Brothers Property Finance which played a part in the study said: "SME house builders are particularly exposed to delays caused by under-resourced local authorities and the inefficient, embedded processes as they often don't have the time or funds to navigate the system. If they aren't building, they aren't earning."

Respondents called for the threshold for affordable housing contributions to be raised from more than ten dwellings to 50 and that they should be paid at the end of the project rather than the start.

Finance brokers Hank Zarihs Associates said development finance lenders were keen to support SME developers as they regarded them as an important element in innovation. The survey showed two-thirds were exceeding current regulations when it came to constructing sustainable homes.

James MacKenzie, managing director of Travis Perkins, concludes: "Too often the contribution that SME homebuilders make to our economy is overlooked, as is their role in helping to deliver high-quality homes that are tailored to the needs of local communities."

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