At under 233,000, the number of units approved in 2023 dropped 20% on 2022, 27% on 2021 and was down 30% compared to pre-pandemic levels.
Following a similar pattern, the number of sites that gained planning permission in 2023 dropped to the lowest level for a 12-month period since the Housing Pipeline Report started recording in 2006.
The number of sites granted permission in 2023 was 10,527, a 16% dip from 2022 and a 23% decrease on 2021.
The number of projects being approved is almost half the number that were typically being approved each year before the pandemic, when housing delivery was increasing year on year.
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Looking regionally, southern regions have seen the most severe impacts of the combination of anti-development measures.
While all regions are seeing a general downward trajectory, the number of units approved in 2023 was the lowest since 2015 in the Southeast, the lowest since 2013 in London and the lowest since 2012 in the Southwest.
Year on year, each of these regions saw fall of 13%, 26% and 18% respectively.
The falls coincide with fall in the number of EPCs being registered for new build properties.
While EPCs in the year to December 2023 dropped 9% nationally, the south of England saw at 13% drop.
Both planning permissions and EPC registrations are key indicators for housing supply, tracking the same trajectories, and so these consistent drops are concerning for our housing delivery in the coming months and years.
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