Technical housing standards - nationally described space standard
The ‘Housing Standards Review’ (HSR) was launched by the government in October 2012, following the housing and construction 'Red Tape Challenge', which began earlier in the year.
This was followed by a housing standards review consultation in 2013 which stated:
‘Aside from the Code for Sustainable Homes and the Housing Quality Indicators, which the government own, standards are all drawn from documents produced by non-Governmental groups who perceive that current national guidance, policy or regulation is deficient in some respect, and needs to be supplemented. They are rarely subject to cost benefit analysis when they are developed, unlike government guidance or regulation. Some examples of the most commonly imposed standards are Lifetime Homes, Secured by Design, the Merton Rule, the London Housing Design Guide, and local space standards.’
The government argued that this can lead to duplication and even contradiction and Communities Minister Stephen Williams stated an intention to reduce housing standards from 100 to fewer than 10, and confirmed that the government would develop a national space standard to be available to councils ‘where there was a need and where this would not stop development’.
In March 2015, the government launched a new approach to housing standards and published a new set of streamlined national technical standards. This included publication of Technical housing standards – nationally described space standard.
This 'space standard' can only be applied where there is a local plan policy based on evidenced local need (e.g. retirement homes, sheltered homes or care homes), and where the viability of development is not compromised. The space standard will replace existing space standards used by local authorities. It is part of the planning system and is not a building regulation.
The standard deals with internal space within new dwellings and is suitable for application across all tenures. It sets out requirements for the gross internal floor area of new dwellings at a defined level of occupancy as well as floor areas and dimensions for key parts of homes.
The standard requires that:
- A dwelling provides at least the Gross Internal Area and built-in storage area set out in Table 1 below.
- A dwelling with two or more bedspaces has at least one double (or twin) bedroom.
- In order to provide one bedspace, a single bedroom has a floor area of at least 7.5 sq. m and is at least 2.15 m wide.
- In order to provide two bedspaces, a double (or twin bedroom) has a floor area of at least 11.5 sq. m.
- One double (or twin bedroom) is at least 2.75 m wide and every other double (or twin) bedroom is at least 2.55 m wide.
- Any area with a headroom of less than 1.5 m is not counted within the Gross Internal Area unless used solely for storage (if the area under the stairs is to be used for storage, assume a general floor area of 1 sq. m within the Gross Internal Area).
- Any other area that is used solely for storage and has a headroom of 900-1,500 mm (such as under eaves) is counted at 50% of its floor area, and any area lower than 900 mm is not counted at all.
- A built-in wardrobe counts towards the Gross Internal Area and bedroom floor area requirements, but should not reduce the effective width of the room below the minimum widths set out above. The built-in area in excess of 0.72 sq. m in a double bedroom and 0.36 sq. m in a single bedroom counts towards the built-in storage requirement.
- The minimum floor to ceiling height is 2.3 m for at least 75% of the Gross Internal Area.
Table 1 - Minimum gross internal floor areas and storage (sq. m)
[2] Where a one person flat has a shower room rather than a bathroom, the floor area may be reduced from 39 sq. m to 37 sq. m.
In May 2016, during consideration of the Housing and Planning Bill in the Lords, Department for Communities and Local Government minister Baroness Williams confirmed that the standard would be reviewed, saying, “Now that the national space standard has been in place for more than a year, we agree that the time is right to assess how it is being used by local authorities. We therefore propose to undertake a review to see how the space standard is operating in practice. This will be completed by next spring and we will be happy to report back to the House on its findings and recommendations.”
In December 2017, the government announced they were putting rogue landlords 'on notice', with the introduction of new measures to crack down on bad practices, stamp out overcrowding and improve standards for those renting in the private sector. This includes new rules setting minimum size requirements for bedrooms in houses of multiple occupation:
- Room used for sleeping by 1 adult: No smaller than 6.51 sq. m.
- Room used for sleeping by 2 adults: No smaller than 10.22 sq. m.
- Room used for sleeping by children of 10 years and younger: No smaller than 4.64 sq. m.
For more information, see Tackling rogue landlords.
On 30 September 2020 Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick announced that new homes delivered through permitted development rights would have to meet the Nationally Described Space Standard. This begins at 37m² of floorspace for a new one bed flat with a shower room. Ref https://www.gov.uk/government/news/permitted-development-homes-to-meet-space-standards
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
- Bedroom standard.
- Bedspace.
- Building regulations.
- Building control body.
- Code for sustainable homes.
- Decent homes standard.
- Draft housing standards.
- Draft London Housing Strategy (blog November 2013).
- GLA Housing Design SPG.
- Housing health and safety rating system.
- Housing Standards Review.
- London Plan.
- Minimum bedroom size proposals.
- Minimum space standards.
- NHBC technical standards.
- Scottish housing standard.
- Tackling rogue landlords.
Featured articles and news
Do you take the lead in a circular construction economy?
Help us develop and expand this wiki as a resource for academia and industry alike.
Warm Homes Plan Workforce Taskforce
Risks of undermining UK’s energy transition due to lack of electrotechnical industry representation, says ECA.
Cost Optimal Domestic Electrification CODE
Modelling retrofits only on costs that directly impact the consumer: upfront cost of equipment, energy costs and maintenance costs.
The Warm Homes Plan details released
What's new and what is not, with industry reactions.
Could AI and VR cause an increase the value of heritage?
The Orange book: 2026 Amendment 4 to BS 7671:2018
ECA welcomes IET and BSI content sign off.
How neural technologies could transform the design future
Enhancing legacy parametric engines, offering novel ways to explore solutions and generate geometry.
Key AI related terms to be aware of
With explanations from the UK government and other bodies.
From QS to further education teacher
Applying real world skills with the next generation.
A guide on how children can use LEGO to mirror real engineering processes.
Data infrastructure for next-generation materials science
Research Data Express to automate data processing and create AI-ready datasets for materials research.
Wired for the Future with ECA; powering skills and progress
ECA South Wales Business Day 2025, a day to remember.
AI for the conservation professional
A level of sophistication previously reserved for science fiction.
Biomass harvested in cycles of less than ten years.
An interview with the new CIAT President
Usman Yaqub BSc (Hons) PCIAT MFPWS.
Cost benefit model report of building safety regime in Wales
Proposed policy option costs for design and construction stage of the new building safety regime in Wales.
Do you receive our free biweekly newsletter?
If not you can sign up to receive it in your mailbox here.























