Planning Policy

Planning permission in Leeds

Leeds City Council is the local planning authority for Leeds, a metropolitan borough in the Yorkshire and the Humber. Below is what its official planning data shows — and a free check for any Leeds postcode.

1.0 — The official data

What Leeds has published

Dataset · national planning data indexPublished
Conservation areas80
Article 4 direction areas (permitted development removed)1
Tree preservation zones3,710
Listed building outlines2,368
Local Plan documents0

Counts are read from planning.data.gov.uk and refreshed daily. A zero or dash means the council has not yet published that dataset to the national index — not that the designation doesn’t exist on the ground. We show what we found and tell you what we didn’t. We never infer a restriction — or the absence of one — from missing data.

2.0 — What this means for your project

Reading Leeds’s planning landscape

With 80 conservation areas on the official index, design and character carry real weight in Leeds decisions. Inside a conservation area the bar for external alterations rises, and some permitted development rights narrow — which side of a boundary your property sits on can change your project’s planning route entirely.

Leeds City Council has 1 Article 4 direction area in force. An Article 4 direction removes specific permitted development rights, so work that would normally need no application — certain extensions, alterations, even paving — can require full permission. This is the single most common surprise we find for homeowners, and it is address-specific: the free check below reads it for your exact postcode.

Every application in Leeds is decided against national policy (the NPPF) and Leeds City Council’s adopted Local Plan. A Planning Policy report quotes the specific policies that apply to your project — verbatim, verified, and linked to the official documents.

3.0 — Check your address

The free check for Leeds postcodes

Free check — official data · Leeds

Checked against the national planning data index. We show what we found and tell you what we didn’t. We never infer a restriction — or the absence of one — from missing data.

4.0 — Questions

Planning in Leeds, answered

Do I need planning permission for an extension in Leeds?
It depends on your address. Many extensions fall under permitted development, but designations change the answer street by street — and Leeds City Council has 1 Article 4 direction area where permitted development rights are removed. The free check above reads the official data for your exact postcode.
How many conservation areas are there in Leeds?
Leeds City Council has 80 conservation areas published to the national planning data index. Inside one, the design bar is higher and some permitted development rights are restricted.
Where can I read Leeds's local planning policies?
Leeds City Council decides applications against its adopted Local Plan alongside national policy (the NPPF). A Planning Policy report quotes the specific policies that apply to your project, verbatim and linked to the official documents, and the council's own site is https://www.leeds.gov.uk.
What does a planning report for a Leeds address include?
Your site at a glance (every designation on your property, linked to its official record), the national and local policies that apply to your project, the likely blockers, things to consider, and — on the Pro report — real decided applications near you with outcomes. Every quote is verified character-for-character against its source before the report generates.
5.0 — Nearby authorities

Other councils in the Yorkshire and the Humber