2 specialists design and install garden offices across East Midlands. Typical builds run 8–20m² and £15,000–£35,000 fully fitted.

Custom garden rooms designed for functionality and style, serving the UK.

Handcrafted garden rooms to enhance your living space at home.
A typical fully insulated garden office in East Midlands costs between £15,000 and £35,000 in 2026, fully installed and ready to use. Below £15,000 you're usually looking at uninsulated summer houses or kit builds with thin (under 70mm) insulation that won't perform year-round.
The price range is wide because four variables drive most of the cost: floor area (typically £1,500–£2,500 per m² installed), cladding choice (cedar and larch add £1,000–£3,500 over composite), glazing package, and groundworks. Sites in East Midlands with easy vehicle access and level ground sit at the lower end; sloped or restricted-access sites can add £2,000–£5,000.
Connectivity and all-day climate control are the main extras over a bare room — budget for data cabling and an efficient heater/cooler.
A garden office is designed around a full working day: glare-free natural light, a quiet shell that blocks household noise, and enough power and data for monitors, a docking station and video calls. Most owners prioritise a tidy desk wall, fast connectivity and heating that's comfortable from 8am.
For a garden office specifically, insist on hardwired Ethernet (or a mesh node), several double sockets at desk height, dimmable low-glare lighting, and a heat source efficient enough to run all day — an air-source unit or a low-wattage panel heater.
Most garden offices in East Midlands fall under permitted development and don't require planning permission, provided the build is single-storey, no taller than 2.5m at the eaves (or 4m to a pitched ridge if more than 2m from any boundary), and doesn't cover more than half your garden.
Nottingham, Leicester and Derby councils generally follow standard permitted-development rules with minimal friction.
A home office used personally stays firmly within permitted development and doesn't trigger business rates; that only becomes a question if clients regularly visit or staff work on site.
Standard UK weatherproofing applies. Composite cladding is popular here as a low-maintenance, mid-budget option.
More affordable house prices mean budgets stretch further — full glazing and bespoke specs are common at mid-market price points.
When comparing quotes, look beyond headline prices. The four quality markers that matter most are: insulation depth (aim for 100mm minimum), structural warranty (10 years is standard, 25 is excellent), build approach (bespoke vs modular vs kit), and whether they handle planning and groundworks themselves or sub-contract them.
Ask to visit a previous garden office build in East Midlands before signing — most reputable installers will arrange this. Check that the company has been trading for at least 3–5 years and look for consistent independent reviews on Trustpilot, Google and Houzz.
Always get at least three quotes, with itemised pricing for foundations, structure, glazing and electrics so you can compare apples-to-apples. Be wary of any quote significantly cheaper than the others — corners are usually being cut on insulation, glazing or warranty.
Most garden offices under 30m², no taller than 2.5m at the eaves and sited at least 2m from a boundary fall under permitted development and don't need planning permission.
Typical lead times are 6–10 weeks from order. On-site installation usually takes 1–3 weeks once foundations are ready.
Yes — quality builds use 100–150mm of insulation in walls, floor and roof, double or triple glazing, and an electric heater or air-source heat pump for year-round comfort.