Everything UK and Irish buyers need to know about purchasing a wooden cabin or garden building — planning permission, wall thickness, delivery, maintenance, and how to choose the right European supplier.

There is something quietly compelling about a wooden building at the end of a garden. Maybe it is the way timber ages — softening and silvering over the years rather than cracking and peeling. Maybe it is the smell of fresh-cut pine on the first morning after installation. Or maybe it is simply that, in a country where space is expensive and planning rules are notoriously complicated, a well-designed garden cabin represents a kind of freedom: a room of your own, built to your specification, sitting on your land.
Across the United Kingdom and Ireland, demand for wooden garden buildings has grown substantially over the past decade. The pandemic-era shift toward home working accelerated what was already a steady trend — and by 2026, garden offices, insulated summerhouses, and bespoke timber cabins have become a mainstream purchase rather than a niche one. Yet for many buyers, the process of finding a quality building remains unnecessarily confusing. The market is fragmented, terminology is inconsistent, and the gap between a flat-pack shed and a properly engineered timber structure is rarely made clear.
This guide is written for UK and Irish buyers who want to do it properly. Whether you are planning a garden office in Surrey, a weekend retreat in Connemara, or a year-round residential cabin on a rural plot in the Scottish Highlands, the decisions you make at the research stage — supplier, wall specification, foundation, planning — will determine whether your building lasts twenty years or twenty months.
The first and most important question is not which building to buy, but what you actually need the building to do. This sounds obvious, but it is surprising how many buyers jump to dimensions and prices before they have properly defined the use case — and end up either over-specifying (and overspending) or, more commonly, under-specifying and regretting it within the first winter.
A garden office used five days a week by someone working from home has fundamentally different requirements from a summerhouse used on weekends between April and October. A residential annexe for an elderly relative has different structural, insulation, and regulatory requirements from a teenage games room. Getting this definition right before anything else saves time, money, and the particular frustration of ordering a building and realising mid-installation that it is not quite what you needed.
In broad terms, UK and Irish buyers tend to fall into one of five categories. The first is the home worker: someone who needs a proper office separate from the main house, with good insulation, year-round usability, and enough space for a desk, storage, and perhaps a meeting area. For this buyer, thermal performance is non-negotiable — a poorly insulated cabin becomes unbearable in January and insufferable in July. The second category is the occasional retreat: a summerhouse, studio, or hobby room used seasonally, where comfort matters but year-round heating bills do not. The third is the residential upgrade — a guest annexe, teenager's den, or rental accommodation — which brings its own planning and building regulation considerations. The fourth is the commercial or agricultural buyer: a farm office, retail cabin, or holiday letting unit. And the fifth, growing steadily, is the buyer who wants a full timber residential home on a rural plot.
Being honest about which of these categories applies to you will shape every subsequent decision, from wall thickness to foundation type to the supplier you choose.
Planning is the subject that preoccupies UK buyers more than any other, and with good reason. The rules are specific, occasionally counterintuitive, and carry real consequences if you get them wrong. The good news is that the majority of garden buildings — particularly single-storey timber structures used as outbuildings — fall within what is known as Permitted Development rights, meaning you do not need to apply for planning permission at all, provided certain conditions are met.
Under current Permitted Development rules in England, an outbuilding is exempt from planning permission if it is located behind the principal elevation of the house (i.e. not in front of the main wall facing the road), does not exceed four metres in height for a dual-pitched roof or three metres for any other type, does not cover more than 50% of the total garden area, and is not within the curtilage of a listed building or within a designated area such as a National Park or Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The full guidance, which is worth reading carefully before you order anything, is available on the UK Planning Portal.
There are important caveats. If you are planning to use the building as a self-contained dwelling — with sleeping accommodation, a kitchen, or a bathroom connected to services — Permitted Development rights do not apply, and you will need full planning permission. Similarly, if your property is in a conservation area or is a listed building, different rules apply and you should consult your local planning authority before proceeding. Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland each have their own planning frameworks, which broadly follow the English model but differ in specific details — the respective planning authorities for each nation maintain their own guidance online.
The practical upshot for most buyers is reassuring: a well-designed timber garden building used as an office, studio, or summerhouse will almost always qualify as Permitted Development, and you can proceed without an application. If you are in any doubt, a pre-application enquiry to your local planning authority typically costs a small fee and provides clarity in writing — worth doing before committing to a significant purchase.
Irish planning rules operate under a different legislative framework, governed by the Planning and Development Act and administered by local authorities rather than a centralised body. The principles, however, are broadly similar: smaller garden structures used for incidental domestic purposes are generally exempt from planning permission, while structures intended for habitation, commercial use, or that exceed certain size thresholds require a full application.
Under Irish exemption regulations, a garden shed or outbuilding at the rear of a house is generally exempt if it does not exceed 25 square metres in floor area, does not reduce the private open space to less than 25 square metres, and is not used as a dwelling. For buyers considering larger timber buildings — residential cabins, annexes, or commercial structures — a consultation with your local county council planning office or an independent planning consultant is strongly advisable. Citizens Information provides a useful plain-English overview of the Irish planning system as a starting point.
The British and Irish climate is not extreme by European standards, but it is persistent. Average temperatures rarely fall below minus five degrees Celsius even in Scotland, and rarely exceed thirty degrees in summer — but the combination of high humidity, sustained rainfall, and variable temperatures year-round creates specific demands on a timber building that many buyers underestimate.
The primary challenge is moisture. Timber is a hygroscopic material — it absorbs and releases moisture in response to the surrounding environment — and in a climate where relative humidity is frequently above seventy percent, this has real consequences for structural stability, thermal performance, and longevity. A thin-walled timber building with inadequate treatment will absorb moisture during the wet months and release it in summer, leading to cyclic expansion and contraction, joint movement, and eventually the cracking and warping that characterises poorly built garden structures.
Wall thickness is the single most important variable in addressing this. A 44mm wall is adequate for dry storage or occasional seasonal use, but it provides minimal insulation and limited resistance to the moisture cycling that characterises the UK climate. For a building used as a home office or guest room, a minimum of 58mm — and ideally 70mm or a double 44+44mm system — represents the sensible baseline. The double-wall system is particularly well-suited to the UK and Ireland: the cavity between the two wall layers can be filled with insulation, effectively eliminating the moisture cycling problem while delivering thermal performance comparable to a well-built conventional extension.
We have written a detailed guide on choosing the right wall thickness for your timber building that covers each option in detail, including how to match specification to climate and use case. If you are buying for the UK or Ireland, we would recommend reading it before settling on a specification.
"We went with the 44+44mm double-wall system for our garden office in County Wicklow. The first winter completely justified it — the building stays warm without constant heating, and there has been no movement in the joints at all after two years."
— Michael R., Co. Wicklow, Ireland
A timber building is only as good as what it sits on. This is an area where cutting corners tends to be expensive in the medium term, and where the difference between a building that lasts decades and one that develops problems within five years is often determined.
In the UK and Ireland, the ground is rarely frozen but frequently saturated, which means that foundations need to address drainage and movement rather than frost heave. The most common approach for garden buildings is a concrete pad or a pressure-treated timber frame on compacted hardcore, but the right solution depends on your specific site — its drainage characteristics, the slope, and the weight of the building being placed on it.
Satus Baltic buildings come with a standard 44×70mm timber base, with an upgrade option to a 70×70mm criss-cross system for larger or heavier structures. For UK and Irish sites, we generally recommend the upgraded base combined with a well-prepared external foundation — either a poured concrete pad or a proprietary adjustable steel post system, which allows for levelling on uneven ground and permits airflow beneath the floor to reduce moisture accumulation.
The UK wooden building market is broadly divided into two categories of supplier: domestic retailers and distributors who import finished or part-finished buildings and resell them, and European manufacturers who supply direct or through authorised dealers. Both have their place, but understanding the difference matters when you are making a significant purchase.
UK retailers and garden centre chains offer the significant advantage of proximity — you can see the product in person, deal with a local company, and have a straightforward point of contact if something goes wrong. The trade-off is that the buildings are typically sourced from a range of manufacturers, quality control is variable, and customisation options are limited. Most retail-channel timber buildings are designed to hit a price point rather than a performance specification.
Buying direct from a European manufacturer — or through an authorised dealer of a specific manufacturer — gives you access to a wider range of specifications, genuine customisation, and better value for the same or higher quality. The manufacturer knows exactly what they have built, can provide full technical documentation, and takes direct accountability for the product. The practical disadvantage is lead time: European manufacturers typically work to a production schedule, and delivery to the UK takes longer than sourcing from a domestic stockist. For a purchase you will be using for twenty years, this is rarely a compelling reason to compromise on quality.
When evaluating any supplier, whether domestic or European, there are several specific things worth checking. Does the timber carry FSC certification? This matters both for environmental reasons and as a proxy for supply chain discipline — manufacturers who track their timber sourcing carefully tend to take the same approach to production quality. We have explored why FSC certification matters in detail here.
Can the supplier provide documentation — treatment certificates, structural calculations, and material specifications — that would be required if you ever needed to satisfy a building inspector or insurer? Are windows and doors produced in-house or sourced externally? In-house production typically means better quality control and easier replacement if something is damaged in transit or during assembly. What is the warranty position, and who handles any post-delivery issues?
"As a reseller, I appreciate the reliable delivery times and consistent craftsmanship. Our customers love these wooden houses."
— Verified partner, United Kingdom
For buyers who have not purchased a timber building from a European manufacturer before, the logistics can feel opaque. In practice the process is straightforward, but it is worth knowing what to expect.
Buildings are manufactured to order in kit form — each component numbered, pre-cut, and packaged for efficient assembly. Delivery to the UK typically takes place by curtainsider truck, with most orders arriving within four to eight weeks of order confirmation. For Ireland, delivery is by the same method with additional sea freight across the Irish Sea, adding a few days to the timeline. The delivery vehicle drops the kit at your property boundary — crane offloading or access to the garden itself is your responsibility to arrange, and worth thinking about in advance if your access is restricted.
Assembly is either self-build, using the detailed technical documentation provided, or through a local contractor. Satus Baltic buildings are designed for efficient assembly — a 35 square metre building can typically be erected by two competent people in two to three days — but for larger structures or buyers who prefer professional installation, engaging a local timber frame contractor is a straightforward option. Satus Baltic can provide assembly documentation in advance so a contractor can assess the work and quote accordingly before delivery.
The longevity of a timber building in the UK or Ireland is almost entirely a function of how well it is maintained, and maintenance is less demanding than most people assume if the right habits are established from the start. The core principle is simple: keep moisture out, and keep the timber treated.
All Satus Baltic buildings use slow-grown Nordic timber, which has a naturally tighter grain and higher resin content than fast-grown equivalents, making it inherently more resistant to moisture and decay. But even good timber benefits from a proper maintenance regime. Initial treatment — applying a penetrating wood preservative or stain within the first few months of installation — is the single most important step. After that, annual inspection and a light re-treatment every two to three years is typically sufficient to maintain both the appearance and the structural integrity of the building.
Specific things to check annually include the condition of the roof (particularly around flashings and any penetrations), the state of any external joinery, and the gap between the base of the building and the ground surface. Ensuring that water drains away from the building rather than pooling against the base will significantly extend the life of the floor structure. We cover all of this in detail in our complete guide to maintaining wooden houses, which is worth bookmarking before your building arrives.
Pricing is the question almost every buyer arrives at eventually, and the honest answer is that it varies considerably depending on size, specification, and what is included in the price. A compact garden office of around twenty square metres with 44mm walls, a standard roof, and basic windows and doors will typically cost between £4,000 and £7,000 ex-works from a European manufacturer, plus delivery and any foundation work. A larger, well-specified building with 70mm or double-wall construction, upgraded windows, insulation packages, and a quality roof covering can reach £15,000 to £25,000 for a residential-grade structure — still significantly less than a brick-built equivalent of comparable quality.
The key is to think about total cost of ownership rather than purchase price. A well-built, properly specified timber building installed on a good foundation with appropriate maintenance will comfortably last thirty to fifty years. A cheaper building that requires significant remedial work after five years, or that needs replacing after ten, is not a saving — it is a deferral of the proper cost with an additional disruption fee built in.
If you are considering purchasing for resale or as a commercial venture, our wholesale and dealer guide covers the B2B market in detail, including how European supply chains work for trade buyers.
The best starting point is the Satus Baltic product catalogue, which shows the full range of standard models with dimensions, specification options, and configuration choices. Most buyers find a model that closely matches their requirements and then customise from there — adjusting wall thickness, roof type, window placement, and internal layout to suit their specific site and use case.
Quotes are provided within one working day and are fully itemised, so you can see exactly what is included and what optional upgrades add to the base price. There is no obligation, and the team is accustomed to working with UK and Irish buyers through the full process from initial enquiry to delivery. Get in touch here to start the conversation.
In most cases, no. Single-storey timber garden buildings used as outbuildings — offices, studios, summerhouses, hobby rooms — typically fall within Permitted Development rights in England, meaning no planning application is required. The building must be located behind the principal elevation of your house, must not exceed four metres in height for a dual-pitched roof, and must not cover more than fifty percent of your garden. Different rules apply to listed buildings, conservation areas, and National Parks. Full guidance is available on the UK Planning Portal.
For a home office used year-round in the UK, a minimum of 58mm is recommended, with 70mm or the double 44+44mm system offering significantly better thermal performance and comfort in winter. The UK's persistent damp climate means thicker walls pay dividends in both comfort and long-term structural stability. Our wall thickness guide covers the options in detail.
Standard production and delivery takes four to eight weeks from order confirmation, depending on the model, specification, and time of year. Delivery to Ireland adds a small amount of time for sea freight. We confirm the exact timeline at the point of order, and most UK and Irish deliveries arrive within the standard window.
Smaller buildings can be assembled by two people with basic construction experience using the detailed documentation provided. For larger or more complex structures, engaging a local timber frame contractor is straightforward — we provide full technical drawings in advance so a contractor can assess and quote the work before delivery arrives.
Yes. All timber used in Satus Baltic buildings is FSC-certified, meaning it originates from responsibly managed forests. We provide full certification documentation with every order, which is useful if you need to satisfy planning conditions, building regulations, or insurer requirements relating to sustainable materials.
For UK and Irish sites, we recommend either a poured concrete pad or an adjustable steel post system on compacted hardcore, combined with our 70×70mm timber base upgrade. The key considerations for British and Irish ground conditions are drainage and airflow beneath the floor — good preparation here significantly extends the life of the structure.
Yes — wall thickness, internal layout, window size and placement, door position, roof type, and finishing details can all be configured to suit your site and requirements. Custom dimensions are also available. Send us your sketch or brief and we will work up a specification and quote from there.