Title

PLANNING

Autumn Statement: Councils to be able to recover planning costs

Councils will be able to recover the costs of business planning applications in return for being required to meet faster timelines, Chancellor says.

Councils will be able to recover the costs of business planning applications in return for being required to meet faster timelines, the Chancellor said in the autumn statement.

Mr Hunt also confirmed people living near new pylons and electricity substations will receive up to £10,000 off energy bills over a decade.

The Chancellor told Parliament that it currently ‘takes too long to approve infrastructure projects'.

The new measures are aimed at fixing the 'outdated planning system' and preventing 'lengthy delays to connect to the electricity grid'.

The Government hopes to halve the time it takes to build new grid infrastructure to seven years.

Under the plan, local authorities will be able to claim back the costs of processing major business planning applications on the condition that they meet faster timelines.

If the planning authority fails to meet the guaranteed timelines, the fees will be automatically refunded.

‘A prompt service or your money back – just as would be the case in the private sector,' he told Parliament.

The Government will also invest £5m to incentivise greater use of Local Development Orders in England, to end delays for businesses.

Responding to the announcement, Localis chief executive, Jonathan Werran said: ‘[W]hile the news that council planning departments can reclaim more money for fast-tracking major infrastructure schemes is to be welcomed, from a localist perspective it remains perplexing that councils' overstretched, and under-resourced planning departments should continually subsidise development at the expense of funding other vital local public services upon which residents depend.'

PLANNING

Regeneration: Hiding in plain sight

By David Godfrey | 15 May 2026

Spatial planning and a development corporation – or similar mechanism – are crucial to realising the full economic potential of the Thames Estuary, says Davi...

PLANNING

Regeneration: Developing devolution

By David Blackman | 13 May 2026

UK plans for fiscal devolution, announced by chancellor Rachel Reeves, could significantly reshape how city regions fund transport and regeneration projects....

PLANNING

EXCLUSIVE: Whitehall delay to reorganisation legislation

By Dan Peters | 13 May 2026

Reform UK vows to ‘be awkward’ to thwart government plans for local government reorganisation.

PLANNING

A calm place in the storm

By Ann McGauran | 13 May 2026

The new leader of England’s place directors, Katie Stewart, talks to Ann McGauran about the need for adaptability, resilience, and a broader basket of skills...

Popular articles by William Eichler