You can’t level up without proper policy

The Government has announced a £1.5billion ‘Levelling Up Home Building Fund’ to help small and medium sized housebuilders (SMEs) build 42,000 homes and it will form part of their ‘Levelling Up’ white paper. The details of the strategy are expected to be released during the week beginning 7 February 2022, but many will ask if it’s old money, old strategy; or, as required, a sign that the Government finally understand levelling up needs policy enablement to best use funding promise?

To example this, it is worth exploring a previous failure and comparing that to what a coherent approach might be.

Funding permissions, not housebuilders

Much like demand led and supply devoid ‘Help to Buy’, previous iterations of the Homes Building Fund (HBF) suffered from misunderstanding the planning process and how to support SMEs.

The glaring issue with previous HBF approaches was that in order to draw down any money, planning needed to be in place. This cut out most SMEs as for the last decade, planning has been the greatest barrier to house building. After a spluttering start, the Government changed the approach, so that to access lending, you needed to ‘already purchase a site in England that you have majority control of’ and have ‘a clear route to getting planning consent when the loan offer was made’.

This improvement still led to a conundrum, some SMEs may own a site, or have an option on it but most will not because the land market is constrained by a council’s allocation process, which identifies and allocates sites to meet local housing demand. This allocation process pushes land prices up because if a landowner knows their site is allocated, even if it doesn’t have permission of any kind, the price skyrockets to levels only investors and big builders can afford.

Some SMEs will have smaller sites allocated but if a councils’ housing demand is to deliver 2,000 homes over five years, the desire to more quickly permission a site of thirty-five isn’t all that great, therefore unlikely to be at the top of the ‘to do’ list. Evidence suggests this to be correct, with smaller sites taking on average 18 months to get permission.

What is most likely, is that SMEs don’t have control of sites, don’t own sites but are working with landowners on getting planning, or waiting for landowners to get planning themselves outside the allocation process. These sites fall into a category called ‘windfall.’

We don’t fund controversy, or SMEs

Windfall sites with planning are incredibly expensive, even compared to allocated ones and due to competition for them, they don’t get much cheaper if they only have ‘outline’ planning, which is halfway to a permission, as lots more needs to be agreed to achieve a full permission.

Therefore, if you have an allocated or full permission windfall site, you have a ‘clear route to getting planning consent’ but if you don’t, which is the case of most SMEs, another HBF eligibility barrier exists; the funding priority of ‘clear local support’.

Windfall is deemed ‘speculative’ and local people oppose speculative development, so even if you somehow convince Homes England that you have a clear route to permission and have control of the site, a campaign against you can end your lending request, or at the very least stifle it.

While an SME navigates all the above processes, they are still paying staff, vehicles, office costs etc and even new entrants who may have lower general overheads are restricted by the five home minimum and previous experience criteria.

It will surprise few that HBF isn’t all that popular with SMEs.

The solution

So, what is the solution? It’s quite simple. The Government delivers its planning reform proposals, which, ensured planning certainty – using a local design code that when met achieves a full permission – created a competitive land market – through area, not site-based allocations – and gave local authorities more borrowing power for infrastructure works, such like roads, schools, commercial and transport.

It also needs to give HomesEngland planning powers in areas where councils don’t have a local plan or aren’t meeting their minimum housing targets. This would allow SMEs to partner with HomesEngland and deliver on both their ambitions, as well as enable placemaking through strategic regional and national levelling up.

With a 75 seat majority, the Government has an opportunity to really make a difference and set a strategic vision that delivers in the South – where housing costs and undersupply are forcing out young people and sustaining poverty – as well as reform the North forever, where homes are affordable and already being built in high numbers but growth sustaining infrastructure and employment is lacking.

Cameron botched the ‘Big Society’, May mishandled the ‘just about managing’, so will ‘Levelling Up’ be lousy, or is Boris finally delivering where so many other grandstanding slogans could not?

Rico Wojtulewicz, Head of Housing and Planning Policy for 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

Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Mansion Tax on Homes over £2 million

Comment on Mansion Tax being introduced for homes over £2 million and £5 million from April 2028 Colleen Babcock, Rightmove’s property expert says: “The property market needs less taxation not more, to encourage and enable movement. Today’s announcement of a Mansion Tax could lead to some distortion at the top end of the market, particularly…
Read More
Breaking News

Autumn Budget 2025: Property Industry Reacts

The Autumn Budget has confirmed a series of major housing and property tax reforms that will reshape the market over the coming years. The measures place particular emphasis on higher value homes, revised council tax structures and long term planning reform. Below is a breakdown of the announcements that directly affect the property market, together…
Read More
Breaking News

Solutions to fix construction skills

The Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) has released a report titled, ‘Skills to Build: Fixing Britain’s construction workforce crisis.’ After speaking to several organizations and having roundtables to garner a wide understanding of the sectors’ perspectives and needs, they have proposed twenty six recommendations that will fix the issues underpinning the skills crisis. Richard Beresford,…
Read More
Breaking News

Budget Commentary – Mansion Tax, Business Rates & Planning Reform

Andrew Teacher, Co-founder at LauderTeacher, one of the UK’s leading advisors on real estate communications, investor relations and a former spokesman for the BPF, comments on the potential Budget. Mansion tax “Nobody likes paying tax, but the reality is a council tax revaluation is long overdue. Rather than distorting the market, which is what a…
Read More
Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Budget 2025 market data & home-mover and agent insight

Speculation about property tax changes is fuelling uncertainty across much of the market Rightmove research found that home-movers would favour staggered stamp duty payments, while a poll of estate agents also suggested that staggered payments would be a preferable change to shifting payment to the seller Rightmove data on rumoured property tax changes Mansion Tax…
Read More
Breaking News

Breaking Property News 24/11/25

Daily bite-sized proptech and property news in partnership with Proptech-X. Symple resolves four core issues in the new Renter’s Rights Act Automating compliance in the new PRS landscape   The Renters’ Rights Act has raised the bar for private landlords in England in terms of property condition, hazard resolution, evidence of compliance and regulatory registration. Symple…
Read More