Department for Levelling Up, Housing & Communities
Printable version E-mail this to a friend

New measures will provide a boost to eager self-builders

Self-builders will save thousands of pounds with new measures.

The changes will save self-builders thousands of pounds from the cost of building their ‘grand design’ by ensuring they are exempt from a levy charge paid for new buildings over a certain size.

The government is committed to helping more people achieve their aspirations of owning a home and wants to help boost housing supply by making self-build housing a mainstream option.

The relief from paying the community infrastructure levy would cover homes built or commissioned by individuals, families or groups of individuals for their own use and that will be owner-occupied.

Other operational changes to the levy will ensure it is fairer and more flexible in supporting development that will build other new homes and businesses.

Changes soon to be implemented will provide more transparency and make the levy a more efficient way for development to contribute to the essential infrastructure needed to support development.

Levy money can be used to fund infrastructure that local people want in their area, such as traffic or park improvements or better community facilities.

The levy already provides developers and landowners with more certainty ‘up front’ of how much money they will have to contribute towards infrastructure.

Planning Minister Nick Boles said:

Our changes will make an enormous difference to people looking to realise their dream of having their grand design built and will save self-builders thousands of pounds.

We urgently need to build more homes and changes to the levy will help increase housing supply and help businesses grow by making the system more flexible and fairer.

Changes will also make sure we make the most of the buildings we already have and get more vacant properties back into use.

The government will bring in changes following a recent consultation that will:

  • ensure people building or extending their own homes are exempt from the levy
  • make sure more buildings are brought back into use without incurring a levy charge by changing the vacancy test
  • extend by 1 year the date when councils can no longer use pooled Section 106 planning obligations for infrastructure that is not funded by the levy
  • allow councils to accept levy payments in kind from developers providing infrastructure instead of cash or land to ensure timely delivery of infrastructure

The community infrastructure levy has the potential to raise an estimated £1 billion a year of funding by 2016 to support growth locally. It gives councils more choice and flexibility in how they fund the infrastructure that their communities want and need.

Further information

The government intends to lay regulations in Parliament that will allow the changes to come into effect by the end of January 2014 – subject to the Parliamentary process.

Media enquiries

Derby City Council Showcase