The Planning Inspectorate

Appeals & Other Casework


Planning Appeals
Enforcement Appeals
Common Land
Highways and Transport
Local Development Frameworks
Regional Spatial Strategy
Rights of Way
All types of Appeal / Casework
General Information

Complaints

Employment
FAQS
Forms
Freedom of Information
Newsletter
Press Releases and Notices
Publications
Related sites
Site Help
Statistics
Targets
Who's Who

Site Settings

You are currently viewing information for England.

View information for Wales

Modified: 20-Mar-2008

Purchase Notices Served under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990

Purpose of purchase notices

Previous Page Table of Contents Next Page

  1. Planning control is intended to regulate the development of land in the public interest. For this reason, planning decisions may conflict with the private interests of land owners. There is no entitlement to compensation for adverse planning decisions (except in limited circumstances where "permitted development" rights under a Development Order are withdrawn by direction or planning permission is revoked etc). This is because owners usually have some continuing benefit from current uses. But occasionally there may be no reasonably beneficial use for the land-so to remedy this situation, an owner has the right, in certain circumstances, to serve a "purchase notice" requiring a local authority to purchase his interest in land.

Previous Page Table of Contents Next Page