Appealing a Canterbury refusal after April 2026
Most householder refusals in Canterbury — Canterbury, Herne Bay, Whitstable and Sturry and the surrounding area — turn on a handful of issues: design and character, neighbour amenity, and impact on constraints like Kent Downs National Landscape (AONB). Under the Part 1 expedited procedure, an appeal is decided on the papers and a site visit, argued only on the material already before the council — you can't add new evidence. So the honest first step is the free Route Check: it works out your procedure and deadline and tells you whether an appeal or a fresh application is the better route.
Grounded in Canterbury's own policies
Where an appeal is right and your application predates 1 April 2026, the appeal statement argues each refusal reason from the material already before the council, citing the same Canterbury policies the officer used — for example DBE3 (Principles of Design), DBE6 (Alterations and Extensions), DBE4 (Residential Space Standards) — and the NPPF. Everything is quoted from the adopted plan and verified, never invented, and every point is mapped to where it already sits in the application — so the Inspector sees a policy-anchored case with nothing new introduced.
- Canterbury District Local Plan (adopted July 2017)
How it works
The Route Check reads Canterbury's reasons for refusal, works out your procedure and deadline, and recommends appeal, re-apply, or neither.
Three short questions to confirm the material the appeal is argued on.
For applications before 1 April 2026, a full written-representations appeal statement — reasons for disagreeing with each refusal reason, cited to the local plan and the NPPF.
Example (excerpt)
"The reason for refusal cites Policy DBE3 (Principles of Design). On the material already before the council, the proposal accords with DBE3: the subordinate form and matching materials respond to the host dwelling and street scene, and the amenity concern is answered by the separation distances already submitted, engaging Policy DBE6…"
Frequently asked questions
Yes — refusals are appealed to the Planning Inspectorate, usually within 12 weeks (householder) of the decision. Since April 2026, most appeals follow a Part 1 expedited procedure decided on the material already before the council, with no new evidence allowed and no appellant's statement (a 250-word form box). Buildwise's free Route Check tells you which procedure applies and whether an appeal is the right route; where your application predates 1 April 2026, the appeal statement argues each refusal reason cited to Canterbury's policies and the NPPF.
It depends on the refusal. If the reasons look wrong on the material already submitted, an appeal may be right. If the scheme could be improved or evidence was missing, a fresh application is usually the better route — you can't fix that on appeal under the April 2026 rules. The free Route Check reads your Canterbury decision notice and gives you an honest recommendation.
The same policies the officer relied on in the refusal — typically DBE3 (Principles of Design), DBE6 (Alterations and Extensions), DBE4 (Residential Space Standards) from the Canterbury District Local Plan (adopted July 2017) — plus the NPPF, argued only on the material already before the council. The appeal statement is available for applications submitted before 1 April 2026.
Yes — the Route Check is always free. It reads your decision notice, works out your procedure and deadline, and recommends appeal, re-apply, or neither.
Check your Canterbury appeal route — free.
The Route Check is free — it reads your decision notice and tells you honestly whether to appeal or re-apply, and your deadline.
Check your route — free →