Home business planning
Do cake sheds need planning permission?
How to think about cake shed planning permission, material change of use, traffic, visitors, signage and neighbour impact.
01
Planning is about the effect on the home and area.
A home can be used for some business activity without automatically becoming a commercial premises. The question is whether the business changes the overall character of the property or creates planning impacts.
Lower-risk signs
Low collection volume, no queueing, no major signage, no regular delivery disruption, little neighbour impact.
Higher-risk signs
Frequent customer visits, traffic, parking pressure, noise, external signs, structural changes or neighbour complaints.
Best next step
Ask the local planning authority. If the answer matters commercially, ask whether a Lawful Development Certificate is appropriate.
02
Collection slots reduce planning friction.
A popular cake shed can accidentally create a traffic and neighbour problem. Collection slots help the baker control demand instead of letting every customer arrive whenever a social post goes live.
- Limit how many orders can be collected in the same window.
- Give clear parking and collection instructions.
- Avoid public queueing outside the house or shed.
- Pause walk-up sales if the council is concerned about on-site browsing and payment.
03
What to document.
If a council asks how the business works, the baker should have a clear answer.
Operating model
Online ordering, online payment, collection-only, or walk-up sales.
Customer volume
Expected collections per day and peak periods.
Physical setup
Where customers arrive, where they wait, where they collect and whether signs are visible from the street.
Neighbour impact
Parking, noise, delivery traffic, lighting and opening hours.
Start the cleaner version
Keep the shed. Move the sale online.
Launch a paid collection flow with a menu, collection times, order records and a pass that brings buyers back for the next bake drop.