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New Build Land Market: Development Pipeline Trends

New Build Land Market: Development Pipeline Trends
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New Build Land Market: Development Pipeline Trends

Published by New-Builds Team

The land market is the upstream driver of everything that happens in UK new build housing. Before a single brick is laid or a show home opened, the complex, capital-intensive, and often opaque world of land acquisition, planning consent, and site preparation determines where, when, and how many new homes are built. Understanding the dynamics of the land market is essential for anyone seeking to comprehend why housing delivery targets are met or missed, why certain locations see development booms while others stagnate, and why the price of a new build home reflects far more than just the cost of construction. In 2025-2026, the land market is in a state of recalibration — recovering from a sharp correction, adapting to new planning rules, and adjusting to the higher build costs and energy standards that are reshaping development economics. The picture is one of cautious optimism underpinned by significant structural uncertainty.

This article provides a detailed, data-driven analysis of the UK land market for residential development. We draw on valuation data from Savills, Knight Frank, and the Valuation Office Agency (VOA); planning pipeline data from DLUHC, Glenigan, and Barbour ABI; developer land bank disclosures from listed company accounts; and policy analysis from the Home Builders Federation, RICS, and the Town and Country Planning Association. Whether you are a buyer wanting to understand why new builds cost what they do, an investor assessing future supply trends, or a developer benchmarking your land strategy, this is the most comprehensive available analysis of where the UK land market stands today.

Land Values: The Great Recalibration

Residential land values in the UK experienced a significant correction from their 2022 peaks, driven by the mortgage rate shock, increased build costs, and the additional expenditure required for Part L 2021 and anticipated Future Homes Standard compliance. After falling 15-25% from peak depending on location and site type, values have largely stabilised during 2025 and are showing the first tentative signs of recovery. The picture varies considerably by land type (greenfield vs brownfield), location, and planning status.

Greenfield Bulk Land
-18%
From 2022 peak (stabilising)
Brownfield Urban
-12%
From peak (recovering +5-7%)
Strategic Land
-22%
From peak (uncertain outlook)

Regional Land Values: Greenfield with Outline Planning

RegionPer Hectare (2025)Per Plot (est.)Change from Peak2025 H2 Trend
Greater London fringe£5.2M£130,000-20%Flat
South East (exc. London)£3.8M£95,000-18%+2%
South West£2.8M£72,000-16%+3%
East of England£3.2M£82,000-17%+2%
East Midlands£1.6M£48,000-15%+4%
West Midlands£1.8M£52,000-16%+3%
North West£1.4M£40,000-14%+5%
Yorkshire & Humber£1.2M£35,000-13%+5%
North East£0.8M£24,000-10%+6%

Sources: Savills Research, Knight Frank, RICS Land Market Survey. Per-plot estimates assume 30-40 dwellings per hectare on typical greenfield sites.

The recovery is being led by northern and midlands markets, where stronger price growth and relatively lower land costs create more favourable development economics. Southern markets, where land values are highest in absolute terms, have been slower to recover due to the greater impact of the affordability squeeze on residual land values. The London fringe remains particularly challenged, with flat values reflecting ongoing viability concerns around high S106/CIL contributions and the additional cost of FHS compliance.

Strategic Land: The Long Pipeline

Strategic land — sites purchased without planning permission, typically in locations where future allocation through the local plan process is anticipated — represents the longest-dated and highest-risk segment of the land market. The value gap between agricultural land (approximately £25,000-£30,000 per hectare) and land with residential planning permission (£800,000-£5,200,000 per hectare depending on location) creates enormous potential returns but also carries substantial risk and very long timescales.

Strategic Land Pipeline: From Field to First Occupation
Year 0-2: Land Identification & Option
Developer or land promoter identifies site, agrees option or promotion agreement with landowner. Typical option price: 10-15% of consented land value. Land value at this stage: £25K-£50K/ha (agricultural + hope value).
Year 2-5: Local Plan Promotion
Site promoted through local plan review process. Technical studies (ecology, transport, drainage, heritage) commissioned. Estimated cost: £200K-£500K per site. Timeline highly variable — some local plans take 5-10 years.
Year 5-7: Allocation & Outline Planning
Site allocated in adopted local plan. Outline planning application submitted and determined. S106/Infrastructure Levy negotiated. Land value at allocation: 40-60% of full consented value.
Year 7-9: Reserved Matters & Site Preparation
Reserved matters application approved. Conditions discharged. Infrastructure works (roads, drainage, utilities) commenced. Land typically purchased at this stage at full consented value.
Year 9-12+: Construction & Sales
Homes constructed and sold in phases. Large strategic sites can deliver homes over 10-20+ years. First occupation typically 9-12 years from initial land identification on a standard site.

The strategic land market has been profoundly affected by the government's planning reforms. Mandatory housing targets and the grey belt policy have increased the probability of allocation for many strategic sites that were previously stalled or at risk. However, the reform of the Infrastructure Levy and the uncertainty around its implementation have created a new variable in the viability equation, making developers more cautious about pricing strategic land acquisitions until the full levy methodology is confirmed.

Major Developer Land Banks (2025)

DeveloperOwned PlotsControlled PlotsTotalYears Supply
Barratt Redrow72,50035,200107,700~5.0
Persimmon52,80018,40071,200~6.6
Taylor Wimpey48,20032,60080,800~7.8
Bellway38,50012,80051,300~6.3
Vistry Group28,40042,10070,500~4.3
Berkeley Group18,6008,20026,800~6.5

Sources: Company annual reports, analyst estimates. "Controlled" includes options, conditional contracts, and promotion agreements. Years supply based on current completion rates.

The Planning Pipeline: From Permission to Completion

The planning pipeline — the total stock of sites with planning permission or a resolution to grant — is a critical leading indicator of future housing supply. DLUHC data reveals that the pipeline has remained remarkably large in absolute terms, even during the downturn, but the conversion rate from permission to construction start continues to be a key concern.

Total Pipeline
1.1M
Plots with permission
Not Yet Started
580K
53% of pipeline
Under Construction
320K
29% of pipeline
Conversion Rate
48%
Start within 2 years of permission

The headline figure of 1.1 million plots with planning permission is often cited as evidence that planning is not the binding constraint on housing supply — the argument being that if developers have permission for a million homes but are only building 224,000, the problem must lie elsewhere. However, this interpretation is misleading for several reasons. A significant proportion of the pipeline consists of permissions that are not yet implementable (conditions remain undischarged), stalled sites where viability has deteriorated, and phased developments where permissions cover decades of future delivery.

Why Permissions Do Not Equal Starts

Reasons for Pipeline Non-Conversion
Viability challenges / build cost inflation28%
Pre-commencement conditions undischarged22%
Infrastructure not yet delivered18%
Phased delivery (later phases)15%
Nutrient neutrality / environmental blocks9%
Other (ownership disputes, utility delays)8%
Pipeline by Application Type
Outline permission only35%
Full/reserved matters approved42%
Under construction (active)18%
Prior approval / permitted development5%

Brownfield vs Greenfield: The Policy Battleground

The debate between brownfield-first development and greenfield release remains one of the most politically charged issues in housing policy. The government has positioned itself firmly in favour of prioritising brownfield land — previously developed land that is available for reuse — while also acknowledging through the grey belt policy that some greenfield development is necessary to meet housing targets.

Brownfield Development
Available Land (England)
27,000 hectares
Estimated Housing Capacity
1.2M homes
Average Density
45 dph
Avg Build Cost Premium
+15-30%
Key Challenges
Contamination remediation, fragmented ownership, infrastructure costs, viability
Greenfield Development
Share of New Build Output
~65%
Allocated in Local Plans
~650K plots
Average Density
32 dph
Avg Build Cost
Baseline
Key Challenges
Political opposition, Green Belt restrictions, biodiversity net gain, infrastructure provision

The reality is that both land types are essential to meeting housing targets. The CPRE (Campaign to Protect Rural England) and DLUHC's Brownfield Land Register data suggest that there is capacity for approximately 1.2 million homes on brownfield sites across England. However, converting this theoretical capacity into actual homes requires overcoming viability challenges that make many brownfield sites uneconomic without public subsidy. The government's Brownfield Land Release Fund (BLRF), which provides grants to local authorities for site preparation, was expanded in the 2025 Autumn Statement to £400 million over three years — a significant increase but still insufficient to unlock the full potential.

The Land Banking Debate

Few topics in housing policy generate as much heat — and as little light — as the land banking debate. The accusation that major housebuilders deliberately sit on permitted land to restrict supply and maintain house prices is a recurring political and media narrative. The reality, as with most complex issues, is considerably more nuanced.

Understanding Land Banks: Key Facts
  • Operational necessity: Developers need land banks of 4-6 years' supply to maintain a continuous pipeline of sites at different stages of planning, preparation, and construction. Without this forward inventory, production would be highly volatile.
  • Planning timeline: The typical time from land acquisition to first occupation is 3-5 years for a site with outline permission, and 7-12+ years for strategic land. Much of the "unbuilt" pipeline is at various stages of this process.
  • Market response: During the 2023-2024 downturn, developers deliberately slowed completions and reduced land buying in response to falling demand and rising costs. This is a normal market response, not evidence of strategic supply manipulation.
  • Absorption rates: Even if developers tried to build faster, the local market can only absorb a finite number of new homes per year. Building too fast leads to unsold stock, price reductions, and financial distress — as demonstrated by Persimmon's experience in 2019-2020.

That said, there are legitimate concerns about the pace of build-out on large sites. The Letwin Review (2018) found that build-out rates on large sites averaging 15.5% of total capacity per year could be significantly accelerated through greater housing diversity — mixing different tenure types, housing styles, and price points to appeal to a wider market. The government's planning reforms encourage this approach, and some developers, particularly those working in the partnerships sector, have adopted mixed-tenure models that achieve higher build-out rates.

Land Market Cost Components

Understanding what goes into the price of a plot of land — and therefore a significant portion of the price of your new build home — helps explain why housing costs what it does. The residual land value model, which is how most development land is priced, works backwards from the expected selling price of the completed homes, deducting all development costs and developer profit to arrive at the price that can be paid for land.

Typical New Build Cost Breakdown (£350,000 home, greenfield site)
Land cost (inc. stamp duty, fees)£87,500 (25%)
Construction costs (build + site works)£140,000 (40%)
S106 / CIL / Infrastructure Levy£28,000 (8%)
Sales, marketing & overheads£24,500 (7%)
Developer profit (margin)£70,000 (20%)

Land typically accounts for 20-30% of the final selling price of a new build home, though this varies enormously by location — from as little as 15% in the North East to over 40% in parts of London and the South East. This means that land value movements have a directly proportional impact on new build pricing. The 15-25% fall in land values since 2022 has helped partially offset rising construction costs, creating a slight easing in the new build premium relative to existing stock.

Emerging Trends in Land Strategy

Several significant trends are reshaping how developers approach land acquisition and site selection. These reflect both the changing regulatory environment and shifting market dynamics.

Partnership-Led Land Models
Vistry's partnerships model — where land is provided by housing associations or local authorities, and the developer provides construction services — is being widely replicated. This model reduces land capital requirements, lowers risk, and creates guaranteed sales channels. Estimated 30% of new affordable housing now delivered through partnership models.
Brownfield Specialists
A new generation of brownfield specialist developers has emerged, with expertise in contaminated land remediation, complex planning negotiations, and higher-density urban design. Companies like Urban Splash, Latimer (Clarion's development arm), and HUB are building track records that attract institutional capital and public sector partnerships.
Build-to-Rent Land Appetite
Institutional BTR investors are now significant land buyers, particularly for urban sites well-served by public transport. Their ability to forward-fund entire schemes and accept lower initial yields has made them competitive against traditional developers for prime brownfield sites. BTR-specific land transactions were estimated at £1.8bn in 2025.
Grey Belt Opportunities
The grey belt policy is already influencing land buying strategies, with strategic land promoters actively identifying qualifying Green Belt sites for promotion through local plan reviews. Early movers are targeting sites near transport nodes in the London fringe and around major conurbations. See our policy analysis.

The Impact of Energy Standards on Land Values

The Future Homes Standard is having a direct and measurable impact on residual land values. The additional cost of FHS compliance — estimated at £5,000-£10,000 per unit by the Home Builders Federation — must be absorbed somewhere in the development appraisal. In a market where selling prices are constrained by affordability, the primary absorption mechanism is reduced land value.

FHS Impact on Land Values: Worked Example
A 100-unit greenfield development with an average selling price of £350,000 per unit would generate gross development value of £35 million. Under current Part L 2021, the residual land value might be £6.5M. Under FHS, with £7,500 additional cost per unit (£750,000 total), and assuming selling prices do not increase to fully compensate, the residual land value falls to approximately £5.75M — a reduction of 11.5%. This creates a tension between landowner expectations (based on historical values) and developer willingness to pay (based on current economics), which is a key factor in the current pipeline stall on some sites.

Nutrient Neutrality: A Continuing Block

One of the most significant environmental constraints on the planning pipeline is the nutrient neutrality issue affecting developments in the catchment areas of protected habitats (Special Areas of Conservation and Special Protection Areas). First flagged by Natural England in 2019, the requirement for developments to demonstrate zero additional nutrient loading on affected waterways has blocked an estimated 160,000 homes in the pipeline across affected areas of England.

The government's proposed solution — a statutory nutrient mitigation scheme funded by developer contributions — was included in the Planning and Infrastructure Bill. However, the operational framework for the scheme is still being finalised, and affected sites in areas including the Solent, the Somerset Levels, and parts of Norfolk and Suffolk remain in planning limbo. The HBF has estimated that resolving the nutrient neutrality issue alone could unlock 40,000+ homes within two years.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does land add to the price of a new build home?
Land typically accounts for 20-30% of the selling price of a new build home nationally, but this varies enormously by region. In the North East, land might be 15-18% of the selling price; in London, it can exceed 40%. This is why regional price differences are so stark — a large proportion of the price gap between a £225,000 new build in the North East and a £562,000 equivalent in London is simply the cost of the land underneath.
Are developers really "land banking" to keep prices high?
The evidence does not support the conspiracy theory version of land banking. Developers hold land banks of 4-7 years' supply as an operational necessity — the planning and construction pipeline requires this forward inventory. The Letwin Review confirmed that build-out rates are primarily constrained by local market absorption capacity, not deliberate restriction. However, there is valid criticism that greater tenure diversity on large sites could increase absorption rates.
Is brownfield development the solution to the housing crisis?
Brownfield land can make a significant contribution — estimates suggest capacity for approximately 1.2 million homes across England. However, it cannot be the sole solution. Many brownfield sites face viability challenges (contamination, infrastructure, fragmented ownership) that require public subsidy to unlock. Even with maximum brownfield utilisation, greenfield development is essential to meeting the 300,000 homes-per-year target. The most realistic approach is "brownfield first, but not brownfield only."
Will planning reform increase housing supply?
Planning reform should increase supply over time, but the effect will be gradual rather than immediate. Mandatory housing targets, the grey belt policy, and streamlined processes will unlock more land for development, but the construction industry also needs to scale up capacity. Industry estimates suggest planning reform could add 40,000-60,000 plots to the pipeline within three years, with a proportional increase in starts and completions following 2-3 years later. See our 2025 market review for the latest data.
What does the land market mean for me as a buyer?
As a buyer, the land market indirectly affects the price, location, and availability of new build homes. Lower land values (as seen since 2022) can feed through to slightly lower selling prices or better incentive packages from developers. Planning reform and increased land release should increase the choice of locations and housing types available over the coming years. In the short term, the best strategy is to compare developments across different areas and developers, as land cost differences create significant price variations for similar-quality homes. Browse available new builds to see current options.

Outlook: Land Market Trends for 2026

Looking ahead, the land market is expected to continue its gradual recovery through 2026, supported by improving sales rates, declining mortgage rates, and the positive impact of planning reform. However, the pace of recovery will be moderated by the additional costs of FHS compliance, ongoing uncertainty around the Infrastructure Levy transition, and the time required for planning reform to translate into actual land release.

Savills forecasts greenfield land value growth of 3-5% nationally in 2026, with brownfield values expected to outperform at 5-8% as government brownfield-first policies and increased funding begin to bite. The strategic land market is likely to see renewed activity as mandatory housing targets force local authorities to allocate more land through their local plan reviews, creating new opportunities for land promoters and strategic developers. For buyers, this means a gradually expanding pipeline of new homes in more locations, with the buyer sentiment improvements seen in late 2025 expected to sustain through 2026.

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