Bright finished loft conversion bedroom with Velux skylights and exposed timber beams
Independent UK loft conversion guidance

Straight answers about loft conversions.

No sales pitch, no jargon — just clear, accurate guidance on whether your loft qualifies, what each type costs, what the planning and building regulations require, and how to choose a company you can trust. Sourced from the Planning Portal, LABC building regulations, RICS and the Party Wall etc. Act 1996.

Free · no obligationSourced from Planning Portal & RICS
Planning Portal, LABC & RICS sourced Independent guide, not a builder Free, no-obligation specialist enquiry

In 40 seconds

A loft conversion turns unused roof space into a habitable room — typically a bedroom, en suite, home office or playroom — without extending the house outwards. Most conversions fall within permitted development and do not need planning permission, but building regulations approval is always required to create a safe, mortgageable room. The four main types are Velux (skylights only), dormer (box projection), hip-to-gable (rebuilds a hipped end) and mansard (near-vertical walls). Costs typically range from £20,000 for a simple Velux to £75,000+ for a mansard. The key suitability test is head height — you need at least 2.2 metres at the ridge. A conversion typically adds 15–25% to a property’s value when it creates a genuine extra bedroom.

£20k–75k+
typical total cost range, by type
2.2 m
minimum ridge height for a habitable room
15–25%
typical value uplift from adding a bedroom
0
obligation — the first specialist enquiry is free
The answer library

Every question people actually ask about loft conversions.

Organised the way you think about it — what a loft conversion is and whether yours qualifies, what it costs, how planning permission and building regulations work, the risks to understand before you commit, and how to choose the right type and the right company.

Loft basics

What a loft conversion is, the main types and how to check whether your roof qualifies — the essentials before you talk to anyone.

Pillar guide

What is a loft conversion?

Turning unused roof space into a proper room — how it works, what it involves, and whether your home qualifies.

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Basics

What are the different types of loft conversion?

Velux, dormer, hip-to-gable and mansard — which type suits your roof, your budget and your planning position.

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Basics

Is my loft suitable for a conversion?

Head height, roof structure, access and floor space — the four things to check before spending anything.

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Basics

Dormer vs Velux loft conversion: which should I choose?

The two most common conversion types compared on space, cost, planning and disruption.

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Cost & value

What loft conversions typically cost by type, what drives the price and whether the investment stacks up in your market.

Cost

How much does a loft conversion cost in the UK?

Typical price ranges by conversion type, and the factors that push a project up or down.

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Cost

How much does a dormer loft conversion cost?

What a rear dormer, L-shaped dormer and side dormer each typically cost — and what moves the price.

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Cost

How much does a hip-to-gable loft conversion cost?

Why this type costs more than a dormer — and when it is worth it for a semi-detached or detached home.

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Cost

Does a loft conversion add value to your home?

What the evidence shows about property value uplifts from loft conversions — and when the maths works.

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Process & rules

Planning permission, building regulations, timelines and staircase rules — the legal and practical framework every homeowner needs to understand.

Process

Do I need planning permission for a loft conversion?

Permitted development rules, volume limits and when an application is required — a plain-English guide.

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Process

What building regulations apply to a loft conversion?

Fire safety, structure, insulation, stairs and more — what the inspector checks and why each requirement matters.

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Process

How long does a loft conversion take?

From the first survey to the completion certificate — realistic timelines for every conversion type.

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Process

What are the building regulations rules for loft conversion stairs?

Pitch, headroom, width, balustrades and fire doors — what the regulations require and why each rule matters.

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Risks & reassurance

Party walls, head-height limits, difficult lofts and the risks of skipping building regulations — honest answers to the trickier questions.

Risks

Do I need a party wall agreement for a loft conversion?

When the Party Wall etc. Act applies to a loft conversion — the notice, the agreement and how to manage the process.

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Risks

What is the minimum head height for a loft conversion?

The 2.2 m rule explained — how to measure, what it means and what to do if your loft falls short.

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Risks

Can any loft be converted?

The honest answer — most lofts can be converted, but the type, cost and complexity vary enormously with the specific constraints.

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Risks

What are the risks of a loft conversion without building regulations?

Why skipping building regulations approval is a serious legal and financial risk — and what to do if it happened at your property.

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Comparison & choosing

Dormer vs mansard, loft vs extension, choosing the right type and finding the right company — guides to help you decide with confidence.

Choosing

Dormer vs mansard loft conversion: which should I choose?

The two most space-maximising types compared — when a mansard justifies its premium and when a dormer is the smarter choice.

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Choosing

Loft conversion or house extension: which should I choose?

Two ways to add space to your home — compared on cost, planning, disruption and what each actually gives you.

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Choosing

Which is the best type of loft conversion for my home?

A practical decision guide — matching conversion type to roof shape, budget and planning environment.

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Choosing

How to choose a loft conversion company?

Credentials, quotes, contracts and the red flags to avoid — a practical checklist before you sign anything.

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Choosing

How do I get loft conversion quotes?

What the quoting process involves, what to ask for, and how to compare quotes before you commit.

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How it works

From a quick check to a finished room, in three steps.

You don’t need to know whether your loft qualifies before you enquire. A site visit from a specialist is what tells you — and it’s free.

  1. Tell us about your home. A short, no-obligation enquiry — your property type, what you’re hoping to create and your rough budget.
  2. Get a specialist site visit. We connect you with a loft conversion specialist who will measure your ridge height, assess your roof structure, identify the staircase position and confirm what type of conversion is feasible — and at what cost.
  3. Get a clear, itemised quote. The specialist provides a written, itemised quote covering all trades, building regulations and structural engineering — with no obligation to proceed.

Ready to find out what your loft could become?

Get a specialist to visit, measure your loft and give you an honest picture of what’s possible — the type that suits your roof, the planning position and a fully itemised quote. It’s free to enquire and there’s no obligation to proceed.

Free to use. No obligation. We are an independent guide, not a builder.