£24,500
- Rooflights
- Insulation
- Plaster

Estimates derived from UK trade benchmark data and regional labour indices, updated May 2026. Methodology →
Loft Conversion in North East England is often among the more affordable in Great Britain for like-for-like work. Our UK guide supplies the structure; this page shows what that usually means on the ground here.
In North East England, typical rates are frequently among the most affordable in Great Britain. For the full UK-wide baseline, compare with Loft Conversion 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 loft conversion in North East England, with scope and a representative figure for each. Run your own numbers in the calculator for a tailored range.
£24,500
£54,000
£106,000
| Item | Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Velux / rooflight conversion | £14,100 – £28,000 |
| Dormer loft conversion | £23,500 – £47,000 |
| Hip-to-gable conversion | £28,000 – £56,500 |
| Mansard conversion | £37,500 – £66,000 |
| Staircase installation | £1,900 – £4,700 |
Indicative range: £950–£2,350 per m².
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.
Every loft conversion alters roof loads. A structural engineer (IStructE-registered) calculates the new floor joists, ridge beam, dormer steelwork (if any) and how the existing roof transfers loads. This is non-negotiable; a quote without it is a red flag.
Fair UK range: £800–£2,000 for engineering calculations on a typical conversion. Expect £1,500–£3,500 for architect drawings.
Ask: Are structural engineer fees and architect drawings included separately, and what's the engineer's name?
Loft conversions require Building Regs approval (Full Plans submission preferred over Building Notice). Building Control inspects at key stages: foundations/structure, insulation, fire protection, completion. Fees vary by council but should be itemised.
Fair UK range: £600–£1,200 for council Building Control fees on a standard loft conversion.
Ask: Is the Building Regs application a Full Plans submission, and are inspection fees itemised?
Adding a habitable room above two existing storeys triggers Part B fire regs: 30-minute fire-rated doors on all rooms opening onto the new escape stairwell, sometimes mains-wired smoke alarms throughout. This is often forgotten in cheap quotes and added as 'extras' later.
Fair UK range: £800–£1,800 for fire-rated doors throughout escape route + interlinked smoke/heat alarms.
Ask: Are fire-rated doors and Part B compliance included for the full escape route, not just the loft?
New roof and walls must hit Part L thermal performance — typically 270mm mineral wool between/over rafters for a warm roof, or 150mm PIR rigid board. This is materials + labour heavy and should be a clear line, not bundled.
Fair UK range: £40–£70 per m² of roof/wall area for Part L compliant insulation including materials and fitting.
Ask: What insulation system are you using, what's the U-value target, and is it itemised separately?
The new staircase must meet Part K (steepness, headroom, balustrades). On constrained sites, space-saving stairs (alternating tread) need building control approval. The staircase often eats more square footage downstairs than people expect.
Fair UK range: £1,500–£4,000 for a standard timber staircase; £4,000–£8,000+ for bespoke or steel.
Ask: Is the staircase design Part K compliant, and how much downstairs floor space does the new run consume?
Want this run on your actual loft conversion 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: A loft conversion without proper structural calculations is dangerous and unmortgageable. Reputable contractors name their engineer; vague 'structural will be sorted' answers usually mean a 'mate who does drawings' rather than an IStructE professional.
Ask: Who is the structural engineer, are they IStructE registered, and can you share their PI insurance details?
Why it matters: UK 2026 typical for dormer is £1,700–£2,500/m². Below £1,500/m² usually means: corner-cutting on insulation, no proper fire compliance, sub-standard staircase, or a contractor who underbid and will hit you with extras.
Ask: Can you walk me through how you've achieved this price? What's the spec on insulation, fire compliance, and staircase?
Why it matters: Many loft conversions fall under Permitted Development (no planning application needed), saving £462 application fee + 8 weeks. A contractor who pushes straight to planning hasn't checked. Equally, conservation areas often DON'T have PD rights — a contractor unaware will waste your time.
Ask: Is this conversion within Permitted Development limits? If so, will you apply for a Lawful Development Certificate (£103) for resale protection?
Why it matters: If the loft includes an ensuite, 'finishes' should specify: tile spec, sanitaryware brand, taps, lighting. Without itemisation, you get whatever the contractor's mate has on the van — usually the cheapest available.
Ask: Can you itemise the ensuite finishes — tiles, sanitaryware, taps, lighting — by brand and product?
Why it matters: Loft conversions on attached homes almost always trigger the Party Wall etc. Act 1996. Awards take 4–8 weeks and cost £700–£1,500. A contractor who doesn't mention it is either inexperienced or hoping you won't notice — until your neighbour serves notice mid-build.
Ask: Will this trigger the Party Wall Act, and have you allowed for surveyor fees and timing in your programme?
Why it matters: Building Regs Part B requires a protected escape route — typically the existing staircase enclosed in fire-rated doors all the way to the front door. If the design doesn't show this, the conversion will fail Building Control sign-off.
Ask: Show me the protected fire escape route on the drawings — every door from the loft to the front door must be 30-minute fire-rated.
Why it matters: Loft conversions are 8–12 week projects with material spend spread across the timeline. A 50% upfront demand is a structural risk — if the contractor goes bust mid-job, you're an unsecured creditor. Industry norm: stage payments tied to verifiable milestones.
Ask: Can we agree stage payments tied to milestones (structure complete, first fix complete, etc.) with no more than 20% upfront?
Spot a couple of these on your loft conversion 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've had three quotes for this loft conversion. Yours is competitive overall, but the structural design line is £X above the median, and the finishes line is £Y below. The other quotes specify [brand/spec] for sanitaryware and 270mm warm-roof insulation. Can you walk me through how your spec compares, and let me know if you're willing to use a JCT Minor Works contract with stage payments tied to milestones?
Want to know which line items on your loft conversion 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: FMB members are vetted financially and on workmanship. They also offer FMB Insurance-Backed Warranties. Membership isn't legally required, but absence + no other body membership is a softer signal.
Why it matters: Loft work has a long failure tail — issues appear at 12+ months. Recent local references let you visit (or at least photograph) actual completed work and ideally speak to past clients.
Why it matters: Structural engineering on lofts is critical and regulated. The engineer should be IStructE registered with current PI insurance. Vague 'we'll get one' answers mean the contractor doesn't have an established relationship.
Why it matters: JCT contracts are industry standard, define payment terms, variations, and dispute resolution. Contractors offering only 'their own terms' usually have less protection for you.
Why it matters: Stage payments tied to verifiable milestones (structure complete, first fix complete, etc.) protect you if the contractor goes bust. Calendar-based payments don't.
Why it matters: Full Plans is preferable to Building Notice for lofts (you get a written approval before work). Some contractors prefer Building Notice (less paperwork, more risk).
Why it matters: Loft work generates massive amounts of dust and creates an open hole in your roof for weeks. Reputable contractors use proper dust screens and weather-tight scaffolding/protection. Vague answers mean ruined carpets.
Why it matters: Industry norm: 10-year insurance-backed warranty (FMB IBG, BuildSure, etc.) for structural; 12–24 months for other workmanship. Verbal-only warranties are worthless if the contractor goes bust.
Why it matters: Variations are where projects bleed budget. A reputable contractor uses signed variation orders with prior approval; cowboys verbally agree and add to the final invoice.
Why it matters: VAT registration matters for invoicing and warranty enforcement. Public liability of £5M minimum is industry norm for £40k+ projects (£2M is bare minimum). Ask to see certificates.
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