How Many Sheds Can I Have in My Garden? (UK Guide)

How Many Sheds Can I Have in My Garden UK?

There’s no fixed “maximum number” of sheds you can have in a UK garden. What matters is whether your sheds (and other outbuildings) stay within permitted development rules — especially total garden coverage, height, placement, and use.

This guide explains the real limits in plain English, plus how to plan multiple sheds without running into permission problems.

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Quick takeaway: You can often have more than one shed, as long as your combined outbuildings meet the permitted development limits (especially the 50% rule) and your shed heights/locations comply.
Large apex garden shed in a UK garden

Is There a Limit on the Number of Sheds?

UK guidance focuses on what you build and how much land it covers, rather than a strict “one shed only” rule. That means two small sheds can be easier to keep within the rules than one oversized outbuilding.

What your council will look at

  • Total coverage: how much of the garden is covered by outbuildings and extensions
  • Height: especially if the shed is near a boundary
  • Position: usually must be behind the house, not in front of the main elevation
  • Use: storage/workshop/hobby is usually fine; separate living accommodation is not

If you want multiple buildings for different uses, consider: Workshop Sheds for tools and projects, plus a Security Shed for bikes and valuables.

The Real “Maximum”: The 50% Garden Coverage Rule

One of the biggest hidden limits is the 50% rule. Under permitted development, the total area of land covered by buildings (including outbuildings and extensions) usually must not exceed 50% of the curtilage (excluding the original house).

Rule Why it matters for multiple sheds
50% coverage limit Two or three sheds may be fine — but the combined footprint (plus any extensions/other buildings) can’t exceed the allowed garden coverage.
Single storey + incidental use Multiple sheds are more likely to be OK when used for storage/workshop/hobby, not as separate living accommodation.
Not in front of the house Sheds placed forward of the principal elevation commonly trigger permission issues.
Tip: If your garden is tight, a single well-designed shed can often replace two smaller ones. You can customise sizing with our Shed Builder.
Compact pent shed suitable for smaller gardens

Height & Boundary Rules That Affect “How Many”

Height rules don’t cap the number of sheds, but they can limit where you can place additional sheds. The most important one is: if an outbuilding is within 2m of a boundary, the maximum overall height is usually 2.5m.

Near boundaries: Lower-profile sheds (often pent sheds) can be easier to position while staying within the 2.5m limit.
More space available: If you can keep a shed over 2m from boundaries, an apex shed may be more practical for headroom and storage height.
Pent security shed in a UK garden

Examples: What Usually Works Without Planning Permission

  • Example 1: One medium shed + one small storage shed, both behind the house, both under height limits.
  • Example 2: One workshop shed + one security shed, positioned to stay under 2.5m if close to boundaries.
  • Example 3: A large shed only — when the garden footprint would make a second shed push you over the 50% rule.

Browse practical options: Small Sheds | Medium Sheds | Large Sheds

Large pent shed in a garden setting

When Multiple Sheds Might Need Permission

You’re more likely to need planning permission if:

  • Your combined outbuildings exceed the 50% garden coverage limit
  • Any shed exceeds height rules (especially within 2m of a boundary)
  • You’re in a conservation area, on designated land, or within the curtilage of a listed building
  • You’re creating self-contained living accommodation (kitchen/bathroom/sleeping use)

If you’re unsure, the safest step is to check official guidance (linked below) and your local council’s planning pages.

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Official UK Sources (Recommended)

For the most accurate, up-to-date permitted development rules, use these official references:

Final Answer: How Many Sheds Can You Have?

In most UK gardens, you can have more than one shed as long as your sheds:

  • Don’t exceed height limits (especially 2.5m within 2m of a boundary)
  • Are not in front of the house’s principal elevation
  • Stay within the 50% garden coverage rule
  • Are for incidental use (storage/workshop/hobby), not a separate residence

Need help picking sizes that work in your space? Try the Shed Builder Shop All Sheds

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