Short Term Letting Planning Permission: UK Host Guide 2026
The legal framework around short-term letting in the UK changed more between 2022 and 2026 than in the previous twenty years combined. Hosts who started letting a London flat on Airbnb in 2018 with no obligations beyond declaring their income now face a fragmented regulatory map: a 90-night cap in Greater London, mandatory licensing in Scotland, control areas in tourist hotspots from Edinburgh to the Highlands, Article 4 Directions in resort towns across England, and a national registration scheme moving towards full implementation in England.
Most enforcement notices issued by UK councils to short-term let operators share a common cause. Hosts assumed planning permission was a formality, or somebody else’s problem, and discovered too late that the local planning authority disagreed. The penalties are not theoretical: councils in Westminster, Cornwall, Bath and Edinburgh have all issued enforcement notices in the last two years with potential fines running into tens of thousands of pounds.
This guide explains when short term letting planning permission is required across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, what the 90-day rule actually says (and what it does not), how Article 4 Directions remove permitted development rights, what the new UK registration scheme means in practice, and which compliance obligations apply to each jurisdiction.
What Is Short Term Letting Planning Permission?
Short term letting planning permission is the formal authorisation a property owner must obtain from a local planning authority before using a residential property for short-stay guest accommodation, where that use constitutes a “material change of use” under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990.
In Greater London, planning permission is automatically required if a property is let on a short-term basis for more than 90 nights in a calendar year, under Section 25 of the Greater London Council (General Powers) Act 1973 as amended by Section 44 of the Deregulation Act 2015. Outside London, planning permission depends on whether the activity is judged to be a material change of use, and on whether the local council has adopted Article 4 Directions or designated the area as a Short-Term Let Control Area.
Three factors determine whether permission is needed in any given case:
- Where the property is located. London, England outside London, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland operate under separate regimes with different thresholds.
- The nature and intensity of the letting activity. Frequency, duration of stays, number of guests and impact on neighbours all feed into the planning judgment.
- Whether the local council has restricted permitted development rights. Article 4 Directions and Short-Term Let Control Areas override the default position in specific areas.
More about: Airbnb 90-Day Rule: London Hosts’ Guide to Compliance
When Does a Short-Term Let Need Planning Permission in the UK?
The default position varies sharply by jurisdiction. A host letting a flat in Westminster operates under a hard 90-night ceiling. A host letting a converted barn in rural North Yorkshire faces almost no automatic restriction. A host letting a tenement flat in Edinburgh is subject to mandatory licensing and, because the entire council area is a Control Area, planning permission for change of use as well.
| Jurisdiction | Default Rule | Planning Permission Required When |
|---|---|---|
| Greater London (32 boroughs + City) | 90-night annual limit | Letting exceeds 90 nights in a calendar year |
| England outside London | Material change of use test | Activity changes the character of the property’s use |
| Article 4 Direction areas (parts of Cornwall, North Devon, Lake District and others) | Permitted development rights removed | Any change of use to short-term let |
| Scotland (national licensing in force) | Mandatory licensing since 1 October 2023 | Properties in designated Control Areas + licensing required everywhere |
| Wales | Material change of use test + 252-day rule for tax | Activity changes property’s planning use |
| Northern Ireland | Tourism NI certification | Material change of use (council planning decision) |
The phrase that governs everything outside London is “material change of use”. It is not defined exhaustively in legislation. Whether a particular pattern of letting amounts to a material change is decided by the local planning authority in the first instance, and on appeal by the Planning Inspectorate. Three letting weekends per year almost certainly does not constitute a change of use. Year-round, full-time short-term letting almost certainly does. The territory between those poles is where most disputes happen.
The 90-Day Rule in London Explained
In Greater London, residential properties may be used for short-term lets (defined as stays of fewer than 90 consecutive nights to the same occupier) for up to 90 nights per calendar year without planning permission. Any letting beyond that 90-night threshold requires planning permission for a “change of use” from residential use (Use Class C3) to a temporary sleeping accommodation use. The cap was introduced by Section 44 of the Deregulation Act 2015, which amended Section 25 of the Greater London Council (General Powers) Act 1973.
The 90-night counter resets on 1 January each year. It applies to the property, not to the host: if a property is let by two different operators in the same year, both periods count towards the same 90-night total.
Several misunderstandings about this rule are widespread among London hosts. The most common is the assumption that planning permission can be requested retroactively after exceeding 90 nights. In practice, councils are far more likely to issue an enforcement notice than to grant retrospective consent, particularly in central boroughs.
Who is exempt from the 90-night rule?
The rule does not apply to genuine bed-and-breakfast operations where the host is present, to lets of 90+ consecutive nights to the same occupier (which fall outside the definition of short-term letting), or to properties that already hold planning permission for use as visitor accommodation. It does apply to entire-home Airbnb-style lets, regardless of whether the host is the freeholder or a tenant.
How do London councils enforce the 90-night limit?
Councils such as Westminster, Camden and Tower Hamlets monitor listings on Airbnb, Booking.com and Vrbo using third-party data services. Airbnb has, since 2017, automatically capped most London listings at 90 nights per year, but hosts can override the cap by submitting evidence of planning permission, or by listing on multiple platforms. Councils issue Planning Contravention Notices under Section 171C of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 to gather information, followed by enforcement notices where breaches are confirmed.
What happens if a London property exceeds 90 nights without permission?
The local planning authority can serve an enforcement notice requiring the property to revert to residential use. Failure to comply is a criminal offence under Section 179 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, with fines of up to £20,000 in the magistrates’ court and unlimited fines in the Crown Court for serious or repeated breaches. The notice runs with the land, meaning future owners inherit the obligation.
England Outside London: Material Change of Use
Outside Greater London, no automatic night-count applies. A property used occasionally for short-term lets does not normally require planning permission, because the use remains within Use Class C3 (dwellinghouses). Permission becomes necessary when the activity reaches the threshold of a “material change of use” under Section 55 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990.
Local planning authorities weigh a combination of factors when deciding whether the threshold has been crossed:
- Frequency of letting. Short-term lets occupying the property for the majority of the year point towards a change of use.
- Duration of typical stays. Persistent two- and three-night stays differ in character from longer holiday lets.
- Pattern of occupation. Continuous turnover of unrelated guests differs from a primary residence with occasional letting.
- Impact on neighbours. Noise complaints, refuse issues, parking pressure and antisocial behaviour all feed into the assessment.
- Physical alterations to the property. Removing kitchens, fitting commercial-grade locks, or installing key safes can support a planning case.
- Marketing and operational presentation. A property advertised continuously across multiple platforms, professionally managed, with commercial-style listings, looks more like a business than a home.
The Planning Inspectorate has confirmed in multiple appeal decisions that intensive, year-round short-term letting of a former dwelling normally amounts to a material change of use. Appeal decisions concerning properties in Bath and central London have upheld enforcement notices on the basis that the property had been let to short-stay visitors for almost the entire year, with no resident occupier and high turnover.
In England outside London, the planning use class for short-term lets has historically been ambiguous. The previous government consulted in 2023 on creating a new use class (proposed as C5: Short-Term Let) to draw a clearer line between short-term and traditional residential use. Implementation of the new class has been deferred during 2025 and remains pending. Hosts should monitor the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (now MHCLG) for updates rather than assuming the proposal has lapsed.
Article 4 Directions: When Councils Remove Permitted Development Rights
An Article 4 Direction is a legal mechanism under the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (England) Order 2015 that allows a local planning authority to remove permitted development rights within a specified area. In short-term let contexts, Article 4 Directions are used to require planning permission for any change of use from a residential dwelling to short-term holiday accommodation, even where the activity would not otherwise meet the material change of use threshold.
Several English councils have introduced or proposed Article 4 Directions targeting short-term lets:
| Local Authority | Status | Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| North Devon Council | Active | Designated parishes in tourist coastal areas |
| Cornwall Council | Consulted | Selected parishes including parts of St Ives |
| Lake District National Park | Considered | Specific settlements with high holiday-let density |
| City of York Council | Active in parts | Central conservation area |
| Bath and North East Somerset | Active | Central Bath and conservation areas |
Where an Article 4 Direction is in force, hosts must apply for planning permission for the change of use before beginning to operate as a short-term let. Operating without permission in an Article 4 area constitutes development without consent, and the council can issue an enforcement notice immediately, without needing to argue the material change of use threshold.
Hosts should check the local authority’s planning portal for Article 4 Directions covering their property’s address. The fact that a neighbour operates a short-term let without enforcement is not evidence that no Direction applies: enforcement is reactive in many councils, and an inactive enforcement record is not a permission.
Scotland: Licensing and Short-Term Let Control Areas
Scotland operates two parallel regimes that hosts must satisfy independently. Both apply to all short-term lets, including those operated by individual hosts on Airbnb.
The national short-term let licensing scheme
Since 1 October 2023, all hosts in Scotland letting any type of short-term accommodation must hold a short-term let licence issued by their local council, under the Civic Government (Scotland) Act 1982 (Licensing of Short-Term Lets) Order 2022. The scheme covers four licence types:
- Secondary letting. Letting of an entire property that is not the host’s principal home (the type covered by most Airbnb listings).
- Home letting. Letting the host’s own home while the host is absent.
- Home sharing. Letting rooms within the host’s own home while the host is present.
- Home letting and home sharing. Combined activity.
Operating without a licence is a criminal offence punishable by a fine of up to £2,500. Councils can also serve a temporary closure order on properties operating unlawfully.
Short-Term Let Control Areas (planning)
Separate from licensing, Scottish councils may designate Short-Term Let Control Areas under the Town and Country Planning (Short-Term Let Control Areas) (Scotland) Regulations 2021. Within a Control Area, the use of an entire dwelling for secondary letting is automatically deemed a material change of use, meaning planning permission is required regardless of how often the property is let.
The City of Edinburgh became the first council to designate a Control Area, covering the entire local authority area, on 5 September 2022. The Highland Council designated parts of Badenoch and Strathspey, covering Aviemore and the Cairngorms tourism corridor. Other councils have since consulted on similar designations.
A property in Edinburgh used as a secondary let therefore requires both a short-term let licence (national requirement) and planning permission for change of use (because it sits within a Control Area). Hosts who hold a licence but not planning permission remain at risk of enforcement.
What does Scotland’s short-term let regime require in practice?
Hosts must submit an application with safety certificates (gas, electrical, energy performance), public liability insurance documentation, floor plans, and identity verification for the host. Licence fees vary by council and by the number of guests the property accommodates. The City of Edinburgh’s published fee schedule places most secondary lets in a low four-figure range, with capacity-based scaling for larger properties. Decision timelines vary by council workload, with several months between application and grant being normal in busy authorities.
Wales and Northern Ireland
Wales and Northern Ireland have not introduced national licensing schemes for short-term lets, but each has its own distinctive obligations.
In Wales, planning permission for short-term lets follows the same material change of use test as England. The Welsh Government consulted in 2023 on a statutory licensing scheme for visitor accommodation, with implementation expected during the current Senedd term. Until that scheme launches, the most significant Welsh-specific rule concerns council tax and business rates: from April 2023, self-catering accommodation must be available to let for at least 252 days in a 12-month period and actually let for at least 182 days to qualify for non-domestic rates rather than council tax. Properties failing the test pay council tax at the local rate, often with the holiday-home premium of up to 300% applied by councils such as Gwynedd and Pembrokeshire.
In Northern Ireland, all tourist accommodation must hold a certificate from Tourism NI under the Tourism (Northern Ireland) Order 1992 before being marketed to the public. Planning permission for short-term lets follows the standard material change of use test, decided by the relevant district council. Belfast City Council and Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council are the two authorities with the highest enforcement activity in this area.
The UK Short-Term Let Registration Scheme
The Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023 (sections 313 to 318) gave UK ministers the power to establish a mandatory national registration scheme for short-term lets in England. The scheme was announced in February 2024, consulted on through 2024, and remains in implementation phase as of mid-2026.
When fully live, the scheme will require every short-term let in England to hold a registration number, displayed on listings across Airbnb, Booking.com, Vrbo and other platforms. Registration is intended to be lower-cost and lighter-touch than Scotland’s licensing scheme, focused on giving councils visibility into the short-term let market in their area rather than vetting each property individually.
The registration scheme does not replace planning permission. A property will need to be both registered and planning-compliant to operate lawfully. Hosts who are already operating without planning permission risk having that fact surface during the registration process.
Confirmed details for the scheme as of May 2026:
- Mandatory across all of England (the scheme does not extend to Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland).
- Operated through a central digital portal, with data shared with local authorities.
- Registration numbers must appear on all listings.
- Penalties for non-registration to be set by secondary legislation, with civil penalties expected up to several thousand pounds.
- Existing hosts will have a transitional window after launch to register.
Hosts should treat compliance with the registration scheme as a separate workstream from planning permission. The two regimes intersect but do not overlap.
Consequences of Operating Without Planning Permission
Operating a short-term let without the required planning permission exposes the property owner to several distinct risks, each capable of materialising independently.
- Enforcement notices. Local planning authorities can serve an enforcement notice under Section 172 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 requiring the unauthorised use to cease. The notice typically gives 28 days to comply. Failure to comply is a criminal offence under Section 179, with fines of up to £20,000 in the magistrates’ court and unlimited fines in the Crown Court.
- Stop notices. Where a council considers the breach urgent, it can serve a Stop Notice under Section 183 requiring the activity to cease immediately, before the enforcement notice takes effect.
- Mortgage and insurance complications. Most residential mortgages prohibit short-term letting without lender consent. Operating outside permission can constitute a breach of mortgage terms, triggering early repayment demands. Standard residential insurance does not cover short-term let activity, leaving hosts uninsured for guest-related claims.
- Lease and freehold restrictions. Many leasehold flats include covenants prohibiting short-term lets, regardless of planning status. Freeholders and management companies can sue for breach, with damages and forfeiture as potential remedies.
- Listing platform sanctions. Airbnb, Booking.com and Vrbo will remove listings reported by councils as operating unlawfully, and can ban hosts from re-listing.
- Inheritance for future owners. Enforcement notices run with the land. A buyer purchasing a property subject to an unresolved enforcement notice inherits the obligation to remedy the breach.
How to Apply for Planning Permission for a Short-Term Let
The application process follows the standard route under the Town and Country Planning (Development Management Procedure) (England) Order 2015, or the equivalent procedure in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland.
Step 1: Pre-application advice. Most local planning authorities offer pre-application advice for a fee (typically £100 to £500 for residential change of use). The pre-app provides an early steer on whether the application is likely to succeed, and on what supporting evidence the council expects.
Step 2: Gather supporting documents. A full change of use application normally requires:
- A planning statement explaining the proposed use, frequency of letting and management arrangements.
- A site location plan and a block plan at standard scales (1:1250 and 1:500).
- A noise management plan and house rules covering antisocial behaviour, refuse and parking.
- Floor plans showing the layout and any proposed alterations.
- Evidence of compliance with fire safety, gas safety and electrical safety regulations.
Step 3: Submit the application. Applications are submitted through the Planning Portal (England and Wales) or ePlanning (Scotland), with the relevant fee. The fee for a change of use to short-term let is usually £258 in England (as of 2026), though councils may charge differently for specific application types.
Step 4: Public consultation. The council notifies neighbours and publishes the application for a 21-day consultation period. Objections are common in residential streets and conservation areas. Hosts should anticipate concerns about noise, parking and the loss of permanent residential housing, and address them in the planning statement.
Step 5: Decision. Most applications are decided within 8 weeks of validation. Refused applications can be appealed to the Planning Inspectorate within 12 weeks for householder cases (or 6 months for full applications).
The success rate for change of use applications to short-term let varies sharply by council. Central London boroughs and Edinburgh refuse the majority of such applications, particularly where the property forms part of the long-term housing stock. In rural England outside Article 4 areas, well-prepared applications routinely succeed where the host can demonstrate active management and minimal neighbour impact.
FAQ: Short Term Letting Planning Permission
It depends on where the property is and how intensively it is let. In Greater London, planning permission is required if a property is let on short-term basis for more than 90 nights in a calendar year. Outside London, planning permission is needed when the activity is judged to be a material change of use, or where Article 4 Directions or Scottish Control Areas apply.
The 90-day rule, set by Section 25 of the Greater London Council (General Powers) Act 1973 as amended by the Deregulation Act 2015, allows residential properties in Greater London to be used for short-term lets for up to 90 nights per calendar year without planning permission. Beyond 90 nights, planning permission for change of use is mandatory.
Operating without required planning permission is not, in itself, a criminal offence. However, ignoring an enforcement notice issued by a council under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 is a criminal offence carrying fines of up to £20,000 in the magistrates’ court and unlimited fines in the Crown Court for serious or repeated breaches.
Airbnb caps most entire-home London listings at 90 nights per calendar year automatically. Hosts can override the cap by uploading evidence of planning permission for change of use. The Airbnb cap does not apply to listings on other platforms, and councils can still take enforcement action against properties exceeding 90 nights across all platforms combined.
Scotland operates two regimes. All hosts must hold a short-term let licence under the national licensing scheme since 1 October 2023. In addition, properties within Short-Term Let Control Areas (currently Edinburgh and parts of the Highlands) require planning permission for change of use. Outside Control Areas, planning permission is needed only where the activity meets the material change of use threshold.
A Short-Term Let Control Area is a planning designation under the Town and Country Planning (Short-Term Let Control Areas) (Scotland) Regulations 2021. Within a Control Area, the use of an entire dwelling as a secondary short-term let is automatically deemed a material change of use, requiring planning permission regardless of the frequency or duration of letting.
Retrospective applications are possible under Section 73A of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, but councils are increasingly reluctant to grant retrospective consent for unauthorised short-term lets, particularly in pressured housing markets. Submitting a retrospective application after receiving an enforcement notice does not pause the enforcement process.
No. The mandatory short-term let registration scheme for England, established under the Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023, sits alongside the planning system. A registered property still needs planning permission where the use constitutes a material change of use or where Article 4 Directions apply. Hosts must comply with both regimes independently.
How Chekin Supports Compliance for UK Short-Term Lets
Most UK property managers reach a single conclusion after spending an afternoon on planning portals: the rules are not the hard part. The hard part is proving, on demand, that a property is operated within them.
Councils enforcing the 90-night limit in London ask for booking records showing every night of guest occupation. Edinburgh requires licensing applications backed by guest data, identity verification and operational logs. The forthcoming English registration scheme will require a registration number on every listing and a digital trail councils can audit. Article 4 areas require planning evidence demonstrating responsible operation. Each of these obligations turns on the same underlying capability: structured guest data, captured automatically, available in a format councils accept.
Chekin gives UK property managers that capability across an entire portfolio:
- Online check-in and biometric identity verification capture verified guest data at booking, building the audit trail councils request when investigating planning compliance or licensing breaches.
- Digital guest guide and house rules deliver noise, refuse and parking instructions to every guest, reducing the neighbour complaints that trigger council investigations in the first place.
- Damage protection limits the operational risks (antisocial behaviour, property damage, neighbour disturbance) that local authorities cite when refusing planning applications or issuing enforcement notices.
- Unified inbox with AI consolidates platform messaging so managers can respond to council enquiries with full booking history pulled from a single source.
Compliance with short-term letting rules in the UK is a continuous operating standard, and the cost of getting it wrong rises every year as enforcement budgets expand. Chekin handles the compliance layer so property managers can focus on hospitality.
Conclusion
Short term letting planning permission in the UK no longer has a single answer. The rules differ across the four nations, between local councils, with the intensity of letting activity, and according to whether an Article 4 Direction or Control Area applies to the address. Greater London works to a 90-night ceiling. England outside London turns on the material change of use test. Scotland combines mandatory licensing with planning Control Areas in cities such as Edinburgh. Wales applies the 252-day test for self-catering classification while preparing a statutory licensing scheme. Northern Ireland requires Tourism NI certification alongside standard planning judgments. England’s national registration scheme adds a further layer that hosts will need to register under once it is fully operational.
Most property managers handle this as two separate workstreams. The planning question goes to a planning consultant or solicitor, who deals with the consent itself. The operational side stays in-house: guest verification, neighbour-impact mitigation, and the documentation councils ask for when an investigation starts. Short term letting planning permission is the headline obligation, but most enforcement actions begin with an operational complaint long before the planning question is reopened.

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