Letwin Review: SMEs are crucial to solving the housing crisis

The Review focuses almost entirely on large sites and volume developers overlooking best practice already carried out by SMEs.

The Letwin Review rejects criticisms of landbanking and welcomes calls from industry bodies to diversify the housing market and speed up house building on large sites.

Small and medium-sized (SME) house builders have previously told the Government on repeated occasions that large sites which deliver standardised design, do not lead to good master planning and sustainable property sales.

The Review states the need to build on sites of all sizes, as well as identifying the lack of skilled workers as a major barrier to house building.

Letwin has made the following recommendations, suggesting they come into force in 2021:

  • introducing new planning and funding rules for large sites in high housing demand areas;
  • forming a national expert committee to adjudicate disputes;
  • creation of a ‘flash’ skills programme to be delivered by major house builders;
  • increasing compulsory purchase order (CPO) powers.

The National Federation of Builders (NFB) welcomes the Letwin Review’s conclusion on the skills challenge, the benefit of splitting large sites, and the importance of small sites.

While the NFB agrees with Letwin on the challenges and conclusions, the Review focuses almost entirely on large sites and volume developers. It therefore overlooks best practice already carried out by SMEs.

SMEs have a long history of building diverse housing on sub-divided large sites. They tackled Britain’s post war housing crisis in the 1950s and built the numerous 1980s estates. Planning policy may not need to change to promote diverse housing types.

SMEs train 66% of construction apprentices, employ within 15 miles of their head offices, and are the predominant rural employer. Excluding them from any ‘flash’ skills programme would be highly imprudent.

Statistics show that we rely on large sites and not small or medium sites to meet housing need. With the Government keen to encourage greater housing diversity, the industry should redouble efforts to enable more small sites and infill.

Richard Beresford, chief executive of the NFB, said: “The Letwin Review recognises that developers would rather build and sell, than not build at all. Its recommendations will help build sites more quickly. It also needs fine tuning to build the right homes and train skilled workers in the right places.”

Rico Wojtulewicz, senior policy advisor for the House Builders Association (HBA), added: “SMEs have a bigger part to play in implementing Letwin’s recommendations than the Review itself concludes. We welcome the review period before the Government publishes its final response.”

Shared by: National Federation of Builders

EAN Content

Content shared by this account is either news shared free by third parties or sponsored (paid for) content from third parties. Please be advised that links to third party websites are not endorsed by Estate Agent Networking - Please do your own research before committing to any third party business promoted on our website. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

You May Also Enjoy

Breaking News

Rent Increases Under Review: What Landlords Need to Know

By Allison Thompson, National Lettings Managing Director, Leaders The Renters’ Rights Bill is currently moving through the House of Lords and is expected to bring wide-ranging changes to the way privately rented homes are managed. Among the most significant are new limits on how and when landlords can increase rent. These reforms aim to improve…
Read More
Breaking News

Breaking Property News 9/09/25

Daily bite-sized proptech and property news in partnership with Proptech-X.   Why those who adopt AI responsibly stand to unlock efficiency, trust, and long-term relevance Artificial intelligence is no longer a distant promise—it is a practical tool transforming how the UK property market operates. From agencies and developers to investors and property managers, it has…
Read More
Breaking News

Industry reacts as Renters’ Rights Bill set to become law

The Renters’ Rights Bill has cleared its final stage in the Commons with Housing Minister Matthew Pennycook confirming that the Government has rejected almost all amendments proposed by the House of Lords. The legislation is now set to proceed through its final ‘ping-pong’ stage before receiving Royal Assent, with all of its major measures intact…
Read More
Home and Living

We asked housemates what really matters when living together

Finding a new houseshare can feel like a gamble. Will it be the warm, welcoming home of your dreams, or the kind of place you actively avoid until bedtime? With so many variables at play, what should you actually be looking for when viewing a co-living house, and what questions are worth asking the current…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

The Rise of DIY Law: 8 Disputes Brits Are Handling Without Solicitors

A new study by South East law firm, Stephen Rimmer, has raised concern over the number of people attempting to handle legal disputes without professional help, often unaware of the costly risks involved. By analysing UK Google search activity from the past 12 months, the research uncovered the eight areas of dispute law most commonly…
Read More
estate agency contracts
Estate Agent Talk

Homebuyers demand transparency when referred to estate agents

The latest research from GetAgent Exchange has revealed that while referrals to estate agents are now commonplace in the home moving process, buyers and sellers want these referrals to come with transparent data and comparison options, not simply a single recommendation. The survey of more than 1,000 recent homebuyers found that 90% had been referred…
Read More