We are improving our site by involving residents.
Help us continue to improve by giving your feedback
Applicants have a right of appeal to the Secretary of State if:
Only the applicant can submit an appeal. Other interested parties, such as neighbours, can't appeal the decision, but they will be consulted.
For more information on making an appeal, go to The Planning Inspectorate website.
You must send your appeal to the Planning Inspectorate within 6 months of the planning decision being given. If a decision has not been given, the time limit is 6 months from the date by which the decision should have been made.
Other than enforcement appeals, there is no charge for making an appeal. Within Croydon, less than 35% of appeals succeed.
Instead of making an appeal, you can submit a revised application instead, as it’s often quicker.
If your initial application is refused, the decision letter and report published on our website will advise you on what was wrong with your application. We recommend that you consider the issues we raised and then submit a pre-application enquiry prior to a resubmission, so that your re-submitted application is more likely to succeed.
Once a successful decision has been made, you may wish to amend the proposal. For example, to reduce the cost of the development or to follow a different design.
To make an amendment, you may need to apply for a non-material amendment or a minor material amendment through The Planning Portal.
You’ll need to submit plans showing the approved scheme and the revised scheme, clearly showing what the changes are. You'll also have to pay a fee.
Guidance note 6 – What happens after your application is approved? (PDF, 220KB)
Guidance note 7 – What happens after your application is refused? (PDF, 230KB)
NEW Help improve this site by giving feedback Show Hide
Send feedback directly to the content team using our website feedback form
You can also join our user research group to receive invites to activities and surveys to help shape future improvements to the site.