A practical extensions guide to permitted development, conservation areas, RASCs, and realistic build costs (2026) in Test Valley.

Permitted Development: What you can build without applying.
Permitted Development (PD) rights let homeowners extend without a full planning application, within national limits on size, height, and position. These rights will typically allow you to complete:
- Single Storey Rear Extensions
- Two-Storey Rear Extensions
- Single Storey Side Extensions
- Loft Conversions
- Minor Alterations to Windows & Doors
These limits apply in standard residential areas. However, a significant number of Test Valley properties sit in areas where PD rights are reduced or removed.
Conservation Areas and Article 4: where PD rights don’t apply
Test Valley has 36 Conservation Areas, covering parts of Andover, Romsey, Stockbridge, and villages including Abbotts Ann, Chilbolton, Longparish, and the Wallops. Inside them, works that are Permitted Development elsewhere may require full planning permission:
In a Conservation Area, you typically need planning permission to:
Clad external walls · Install side-facing windows visible from a public road · Carry out any demolition · Add solar panels visible from the street · Change rooflights on front-facing slopes · Alter window or door materials where character is affected
Where an Article 4 Direction also applies – removing PD rights further – almost any external alteration triggers a consent requirement.
Stockbridge is an active example: the High Street’s character is closely protected and Officers scrutinise anything affecting the roofscape or frontage.
Check whether your property sits in a Conservation Area before design work begins. Your architect should do this as a first step. Test Valley provide a Conservation Area document, which appraises the character and significance of the area. The design should take this into account from the outset to provide you with the best chance of planning success.
Residential Areas of Special Character (RASC)

What Test Valley uses to assess extensions: Policy COM11 and Policy E1
| Design test | What they’re looking for | Common failure |
|---|---|---|
| Scale and massing | Extension reads as secondary to original | Rear extension at or above the eaves height of the original |
| Roof form | Pitch and ridge direction reference the original | Flat roof on a traditionally-pitched building without a coherent design argument |
| Materials | Palette consistent with host building and local vernacular | Grey render or non-native brick on a red-brick property |
| Windows and openings | Proportions reference the original | Oversized glazing reading at commercial rather than domestic scale |
| Neighbour impact | No significant loss of light, outlook, or privacy | Side extension with upper-floor window directly overlooking an adjacent garden |
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Materials: what to do, and what to avoid.
Some materials to think about:
- Brick: Red or warm-brown hand-made facing brick. Yellow, grey, and salmon-pink bricks are explicitly described as non-native to the region.
- Flint: Used in traditional panels with brick quoins or lacing, particularly in village settings.
- Roofing: Natural slate, clay plain tile, or wheat-reed thatch in village and countryside locations. Concrete tiles are routinely flagged as a suburbanising influence in rural areas.
- Contemporary approaches: Dark-stained timber, standing seam zinc, or black-painted steel can be accepted where clearly differentiated – but the design argument must be made explicitly.
How much does an extension cost in Test Valley in 2026?
- Standard Finish (expect £2,800 – 3,400 per square meter.). This includes for a good quality contractor, with no bespoke joinery.
- High Specification (expect £3,500 – 4,200 per square meter.). This includes for bespoke detailing, premium materials and a considered contractor.
- Exceptional Finish (expect £4,500+ per square meter). This would include fine joinery, stone, structural glazing, and complex roof forms.
Add professional fees – architect, structural engineer, planning consultant where needed – at 12–15% of build cost. Projects in Conservation Areas or RASCs requiring pre-application advice and heritage arguments sit toward the upper end.
| Additional cost | Approximate figure | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Householder planning fee | £548 | Standard fee for extensions outside PD |
| Pre-application advice | £82 | For householders, this is 15% of your householder planning fee. |
| Structural engineer | £1,500-£3,500 | Required for Building Regulations regardless of planning route |
| Party Wall surveyor | £900-£2,500 per surveyor | Required where works affect shared walls or dig within 3m of a neighbour’s structure |
| Building Regulations application | £500–£1,200 | Always required for structural works and separate from planning permission |
One of the first things we do with new clients at ZAHRADA is prepare a realistic cost estimate alongside early concept work. There’s no point designing something your budget can’t deliver. If you’re at the early stages, book a free initial consultation and we’ll give you an honest picture of what’s achievable.
Working with an architect in Test Valley
The value an architect adds here is in knowing which Conservation Areas have active design priorities, how RASC policy has been applied in recent decisions, and producing a design that makes it easy for Officer’s to accept and approve.
ZAHRADA works with homeowners across Test Valley – Andover, Romsey, Stockbridge, and the surrounding villages – from feasibility through planning and into delivery. The projects that go most smoothly are the ones where the planning strategy is settled before the design is fixed.
If you want an honest early view on what’s achievable – including whether you need planning permission at all – we’re happy to talk it through.
We work with homeowners across Test Valley, Winchester, Stockbridge and the wider Hampshire area.

About the Author
Email: design@zahrada.co.uk
Phone: +44 01962 453990
ZAHRADA is led by Tim Willment, an ARB-registered Architect. He is supported by his wife Zofia, an Architectural & BIID-registered Interior Designer.
We’ve built a design practice that is small, intimate and approachable. We have a particular fondness for breathing new life into old and forgotten spaces, giving them a “glow up” that respects their history while adding a fresh, modern twist.



