£14,400
- Focused essentials
- Practical finishes

Estimates derived from UK trade benchmark data and regional labour indices, updated May 2026. Methodology →
Extension vs Conservatory in Yorkshire and the Humber benefits from healthy competition among trades, which often keeps totals below the UK average. These ranges still trace back to the same national guide — just read for Yorkshire and the Humber.
In Yorkshire and the Humber, competition among trades often keeps total renovation costs below average. For the full UK-wide baseline, compare with Extension vs Conservatory Cost UK.
Pick the path that fits where you are — running early numbers, or pressure-testing a quote you've already got.
Three planning tiers for extension vs conservatory in Yorkshire and the Humber, with scope and a representative figure for each. Run your own numbers in the calculator for a tailored range.
£14,400
£27,000
£49,000
| Item | Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Conservatory (lean-to, small) | £7,700 – £14,400 |
| Conservatory (medium) | £11,500 – £21,000 |
| Orangery / solid roof conservatory | £19,200 – £43,000 |
| Single-storey extension (15 m²) | £21,000 – £43,000 |
| Single-storey extension (25 m²) | £33,500 – £62,500 |
Three quick inputs and we'll email you an indicative range. Run the full calculator for a postcode-adjusted estimate.
Use this checklist to spot missing scope before you sign — each item names what should be priced and what to ask for if it isn't.
Conservatory: £800-£1,500/m² (basic poly roof to glass); £1,500-£2,200/m² (solid/tiled roof). Extension: £2,400-£3,500/m² (single-storey, full Building Regs, year-round usable). Extension is typically 2-3x more expensive per m² for similar floor area — but produces a fundamentally different result.
Fair UK range: Conservatory £8k-£25k typical; Extension £30k-£60k for similar floor area.
Ask: What's the per-m² rate, and what's the year-round usability of each option?
Polycarbonate-roof conservatories: unusable in summer (overheats to 40°C+) and winter (cold, condensation). Glass-roof conservatories: better but still 5-10°C colder than house in winter. Solid/tiled conservatory: usable year-round but starts approaching extension cost. Extension: full Building Regs Part L = year-round comfortable.
Fair UK range: Polycarbonate conservatory: usable ~6 months/year. Extension: usable 12 months/year (true habitable space).
Ask: Will I genuinely use this space in January? Polycarbonate conservatories rarely deliver on year-round use claims.
Conservatories EXEMPT from Building Regs IF: floor area ≤30m², separated from house by external-quality door, no fixed heating system independent of house. If you want heating or solid roof, Building Regs apply (typically £400-£800). Extensions ALWAYS need Building Regs — that's why they're properly habitable.
Fair UK range: Conservatory: Building Regs exempt if rules followed. Extension: full Building Regs always (£400-£1,200).
Ask: Will the conservatory keep the dividing door for Building Regs exemption, or do I want true integration (which triggers Part L)?
Polycarbonate conservatory: often £0 value uplift, sometimes -£5k (buyers see it as repair liability). Glass conservatory: £3k-£10k uplift typical. Solid-roof conservatory: £15k-£30k uplift (functions as extra room). Extension: £30k-£60k uplift typical, often best ROI of any UK home improvement.
Fair UK range: Conservatory ROI: poor to negative. Solid-roof conservatory: 50-80% ROI. Extension: 60-100% ROI.
Ask: Get 2-3 estate agent valuations comparing post-build value under each scenario. Conservatory ROI is often disappointing.
Conservatories: usually permitted development (no planning needed) if rear, single-storey, within size limits. Extensions: often need planning if over 3m/4m rear extension limits. Conservation areas restrict both.
Fair UK range: Conservatory: 90% permitted development. Extension: 50% permitted development depending on size.
Ask: Does each option fall within Permitted Development limits, or does either need full planning?
Want this run on your actual Extension vs Conservatory quote? Upload it and our AI Quote Checker flags missing line items, overcharges and the questions worth asking.
UK-specific signals — each red flag explains why it matters and the question that surfaces the truth.
Why it matters: Polycarbonate roofs make conservatories unusable in summer (overheating) and winter (cold + condensation). Anyone promising 'year-round use' with polycarbonate is misleading you. For year-round use, you need solid/tiled roof — which approaches extension cost.
Ask: If I want year-round use, what roof type and heating do you recommend? Polycarbonate isn't suitable.
Why it matters: Anglian, Everest, Britelite, SafeStyle have all faced regulatory action over inflated initial prices and 'today only' discounts. Their actual product is usually fine but you'll pay 50-100% more than equivalent local installer rates.
Ask: Can I take 2 weeks to compare quotes? National chain salespeople punish you for taking time — that's the answer.
Why it matters: If your goal is occasional/seasonal use of garden space, an extension is over-engineered (and 2-3x more expensive). A contractor who doesn't even discuss conservatory option for that use case is biased.
Ask: Could the same use case be met by a quality conservatory at lower cost?
Why it matters: Removing the dividing door between house and conservatory makes it part of the heated house — triggers Building Regs Part L. Most polycarbonate/glass conservatories fail Part L. Removing the door without compliance work is illegal.
Ask: Will the dividing door stay (for Building Regs exemption), or are you doing the Part L work to make this part of the heated house?
Why it matters: DGCOS (Double Glazing & Conservatory Ombudsman Scheme) and HIES provide insurance-backed guarantees. Conservatory installers fail at higher-than-average rates. Without IBG, the warranty dies with the installer.
Ask: Are you a member of DGCOS or HIES? Is the warranty insurance-backed?
Why it matters: UK 2026 typical for single-storey extension is £2,400-£3,500/m². Below £2,000/m² usually means: missing professional fees, Party Wall Awards, structural engineer, Part L insulation, or quality finishes.
Ask: How are you achieving this extension price? What's included for structural fees, Party Wall, and finishes?
Why it matters: Polycarbonate conservatory used as 'occasional' room: minimal running cost. Glass conservatory used year-round (with electric heaters): £400-£800/year electricity. Extension to Part L: £100-£200/year heating. Over 10 years, the running cost gap can be £4-£8k — partially offsetting build cost difference.
Ask: What's the realistic annual running cost for each option, and how does it shift the lifetime cost comparison?
Spot a couple of these on your Extension vs Conservatory quote? Upload it for a full red-flag scan and fair-rate comparison.
A simple framework, a verbatim script you can paste into an email or text, and the topic-specific levers that move the price.
I'm comparing a conservatory to a single-storey extension. My intended use is [year-round habitable / summer-only garden room]. Could you quote for the [conservatory option / extension option] honestly, and tell me what scope I'd need from the alternative type for a like-for-like comparison? I want to compare: build cost, year-round usability, running cost, value uplift, and disruption.
Want to know which line items on your Extension vs Conservatory quote are above market before you negotiate? Upload it for a fair-rate comparison.
Vet on competence, insurance, paperwork and process — not price alone. Each question spells out the answer you want and why.
Why it matters: Single-type specialists will bias the recommendation. Builders who do both honestly can give comparative advice.
Why it matters: Reputable contractors give both options. Single-option quotes mean you're not getting independent comparison.
Why it matters: DGCOS/HIES provides ombudsman + insurance-backed warranties. Conservatory installers fail at higher rates — IBG matters.
Why it matters: FMB/TrustMark vet contractors on workmanship and finances. Extension is £30-£60k+ project — IBG warranty essential.
Why it matters: Most conservatories are unusable December-February (cold/condensation) and July-August (overheating). Reputable installers are honest; salespeople aren't.
Why it matters: Industry norm: 10-year IBG for extension structural; conservatory IBG via DGCOS scheme. Verbal-only warranties worthless.
Why it matters: Removing dividing door is a one-way decision triggering significant Building Regs work. Make this decision deliberately.
Why it matters: Conservatory ROI is often disappointing. Local market verdict matters more than glossy brochures.
Why it matters: Conservatory used year-round: £400-£800/year heating. Extension to Part L: £100-£200/year. Over 10 years, the running cost gap is significant.
Why it matters: Industry norm: 10-25% deposit. Conservatory salespeople often demand large upfront (50%+) — that's a red flag.
Already chosen a extension contractor or conservatory installer and got a quote? Run it through our Quote Checker before you commit.
Whether you're still scoping or already comparing builders, the next step is one click away.
See national cost ranges, scenarios and timelines without the regional adjustment.
Compare extension vs conservatory costs across the UK