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Wychavon Self-Build Register Data

Wychavon has an outstanding deficit of 139 plots

Since 2016, 348 people have registered interest in self-build here. Wychavon has permitted 134 plots.

Part 1 registrations
293
legal duty applies
Part 2 registrations
55
local eligibility
Plots permitted
134
since 2016
Current deficit
139
Period 7 (2022)

People on Wychavon's self build register

Each icon represents one person on the self build register.

People on Wychavon's self build register

348

Part 1: 293Part 2: 55

How has demand evolved?

The chart below tracks cumulative Part 1 demand, combined Part 1+2 demand, permissions granted, and the total outstanding demand over time.

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⚠️Errors and inconsistencies in reported demand data
OriginalAdjusted

Summary of Errors Found

  1. Running Total (Flow vs Stock) Mismatch (All Years): There is a consistent error where the 'Start of Period' does not match the previous year's 'End of Period', and the 'End of Period' does not mathematically match 'Start + Added - Removed'. Priority was given to the 'Added' figures (Flow) to reconstruct the correct running totals. By 2024, the reported stock was 265, but the calculated stock based on registrations added over time is 323.
  2. Group Register Disappearance (2017-2022): In 2016, 6 groups were added. In subsequent years (2017-2022), the register reported 0 groups, despite no removals being recorded. These 6 groups have been reinstated in the running totals. In 2023, 1 new group was added, bringing the corrected total to 7 (Reported: 1).
  3. 2020 Data Misplacement: In the 2020 entry, the 'Part 1 Individuals End of Period' (9) and 'Part 2 Individuals End of Period' (13) sum exactly to the 'Total Individuals Added' (22). It is highly probable these figures represented the Added breakdown rather than the Stock. These values have been moved to part_1_individuals_added and part_2_individuals_added respectively.

Detailed compliance calculations

The full breakdown of how the deficit is calculated, including how demand carries forward for three years while surplus permissions do not.

Cells highlighted indicate values changed by error adjustments
Base Period123456789
Year201620172018201920202021202220232024
Part 1 — Individuals Added4048192097259137
Part 1 — Groups Added600000000
Part 1 — Total Added4648192097259137
Part 1 — Cumulative4694113133142214273286293
Part 2 — Individuals Added000013002417
Part 2 — Groups Added000000010
Part 2 — Total Added000013002517
Permissions Granted0121812134263316
Permissions — Cumulative0123042555985118134
Permissions Matched to Base Period42134263316000
Deficit/Surplus for Base Period-4-35-15624-56-59-13-7
Unusable Surplus Permissions000000000
Outstanding Demand43954482480139152159

What's happening each year?

Looking at annual data shows whether registration rates are increasing or decreasing, and how permissions compare to new demand each year.

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What policies are in place?

Local authorities can implement various policies that affect self-build. Some restrict who can join the register, while others actively support self-build delivery.

Entry requirements

These policies can limit who is eligible to join the register.

Local connection test
Requires proof of local ties to the area
Yes
Financial viability test
Requires proof of ability to complete a build
No
Registration fee
Charges a fee to join the register
No

Support measures

Wychavon has implemented 3 of 8 possible support measures.

Local Plan general support
Housing mix policy
Percentage policy
Supplementary guidance
Land allocations consideration
Supported specific projects
Housing strategy action
Neighbourhood plan support

Frequently asked questions

Understanding self-build registers and local authority duties.

Under the Self-build and Custom Housebuilding Act 2015, all local authorities in England must maintain a register of individuals and groups who want to build their own homes. The register helps councils understand demand for self-build plots in their area and plan accordingly.
Part 1 includes everyone who meets the basic eligibility criteria (over 18, seeking to acquire land in the area, and a British citizen/EU national with right to reside). Local authorities have a legal duty to grant enough permissions to meet Part 1 demand. Part 2 is optional and councils can apply additional local eligibility tests—such as local connection requirements—to filter applicants. While Part 2 numbers still represent real demand, there's no specific legal duty attached to meeting it.
A base period runs from 31 October to 30 October the following year. The first base period began on 1 April 2016 (when the duty came into force) and ended on 30 October 2016. Councils must count how many people joined Part 1 during each base period, then grant enough "suitable" permissions within 3 years of the end of that base period.
For each base period, we compare the Part 1 demand (registrations) against suitable permissions granted within the 3-year compliance window. If permissions fall short of demand for any base period, that shortfall becomes an outstanding deficit. Importantly, surplus permissions from one period cannot be carried forward to offset deficits from later periods—each base period must be addressed independently.
The legislation refers to granting permissions for "suitable serviced plots of land"—meaning sites with access to connections for electricity, water, and sewerage (or can be provided in a reasonable time). Councils can count permissions they've granted directly, as well as those granted on appeal or through permitted development. The permission doesn't have to be for a council-owned site.
Councils must: (1) maintain the register and allow eligible people to join, (2) have regard to the register when carrying out planning and housing functions, and (3) grant enough suitable permissions to meet the Part 1 demand from each base period within 3 years.
This data comes from Wychavon's annual returns published by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC), Freedom of Information requests, and published council documents. We cross-reference multiple sources to verify accuracy and flag any inconsistencies. If you spot an error, please let us know.