How Much Does a Garden Room Cost in London? An Honest 2026 Price Guide
How much does a garden room cost?” is the most common question we get on first contact, and the most often dodged on garden room company websites. This page gives you honest, useful pricing — not a vague “prices start from” tease. Real ranges by size, real factors that move the price, real examples of what’s included at each level. After reading this, you should be able to walk into your free site survey with a realistic budget in mind.
The Short Answer
Bespoke fully insulated garden rooms in London typically cost between £22,000 and £75,000 depending on size, specification and complexity.
More usefully, three honest price bands:
- Compact garden office (3×2.5m, basic spec) — £22,000–£28,000
- Standard garden room (4x3m, full spec) — £30,000–£42,000
- Large garden room or annexe (5x4m+, full spec) — £45,000–£75,000+
These are real 2026 London prices for properly-built, fully-insulated, premium-specification garden rooms. They are not flat-pack or shed-style builds.
What’s Included in a Garden Room London Price
Our quoted prices include the entire job, not just the shell. Specifically:
- Site survey, design and 3D visualisation (free)
- All planning consultation and applications where needed
- Ground screw foundation installation
- Full SIPs structural shell
- EPDM rubber roof with 20-year manufacturer warranty
- Insulation, plasterboard and skimmed walls / ceilings
- Aluminium double-glazed doors and windows
- Engineered wood, luxury vinyl or laminate flooring
- Full electrical first and second fix (Part P certified)
- Multiple sockets, LED lighting and switches
- Internal painted finish (white as standard)
- External cladding (timber as standard, alternatives available)
- All waste disposal and site clean-up
- 10-year structural guarantee
There are no hidden extras for the items above. If we quote it, it is included.
What Typically Adds Cost
Optional extras commonly added to our garden rooms:
- Toilet or WC installation — £4,500–£7,000
- Shower room or full bathroom — £6,500–£14,000
- Kitchenette — £3,500–£8,000
- Bi-fold doors (vs standard French doors) — £2,500–£5,500
- Premium cladding (cedar, charred timber, aluminium) — £2,000–£6,000
- Air conditioning unit — £1,800–£3,200
- Underfloor heating — £1,500–£3,500
- Pitched or vaulted roof (vs flat) — £2,500–£5,500
- Wood-burning stove with flue — £2,500–£4,500
- Acoustic treatment for music studio — £4,000–£10,000
- Smart-home integration (lighting, heating, audio) — £1,500–£5,000
Real Examples
Example 1: Compact home office, Finchley
3×2.5m garden office, basic spec, timber cladding, electric heating, standard French doors. Total: £24,500.
Example 2: Mid-range garden room, Watford
4x3m garden room with bi-fold doors, premium flooring, full electrics, underfloor heating, small WC. Total: £36,000.
Example 3: Premium garden office, Highgate
4.5×3.5m garden office with vaulted ceiling, cedar cladding, full bi-folds, acoustic insulation, kitchenette, WC, air conditioning. Total: £52,000.
Example 4: Granny annexe, Enfield
6x4m one-bedroom annexe with separate bedroom, living area with kitchenette, full bathroom, underfloor heating. Total: £71,000.
Example 5: Music studio, Muswell Hill
5x4m garden studio with full acoustic specification — floating floor, acoustic doors, double-skin walls, treated internal surfaces, dedicated electrical circuits, premium ventilation. Total: £58,000.
What Affects the Price Most
Size
The largest variable. Each additional square metre adds roughly £900–£1,400 to the build cost depending on spec.
Specification level
Basic spec versus premium spec on the same footprint can vary by 30–40%. The difference is mostly in materials (standard timber vs cedar cladding; standard glazing vs aluminium bi-folds; electric panel heating vs underfloor).
Plumbing
Adding water and drainage adds £4,500–£14,000 depending on what facilities are included and whether gravity drainage works (cheaper) or a pumped system is needed (more expensive).
Site access and conditions
Easy side-access reduces cost. Crane-lift over a building adds cost. Tight access through narrow side passages may require panelised builds, which is fine — we plan for it — but can affect detail design.
Planning
Permitted Development adds nothing. Full planning applications add £2,000–£4,000 in fees and time, which is included in our quoted price where applicable.
Cheaper Garden Rooms — Why Be Cautious
You will find garden rooms advertised at £8,000–£15,000. These are almost always:
- Insulated to summer-house standard only — unusable November to March
- Built on timber-frame with cheap composite or PVC cladding that ages poorly
- Roofed with bitumen felt rather than EPDM — typical 8–12 year life vs 50+ years
- Fitted with non-Part-P electrics — a fire and insurance risk
- Sold as “DIY assembly” or assembled by inexperienced subcontractors
A £12,000 garden room that becomes unusable in 5 years is more expensive than a £35,000 garden room that lasts 50. We have replaced several budget garden rooms that failed within 5–7 years.
Financing & Payment Structure
Most clients pay in three stages: deposit on order (typically 25%), interim payment at structural completion (50%), final payment at handover (25%). We do not currently offer in-house finance, but many clients use home improvement loans, mortgage extensions, or savings drawdowns. Happy to discuss budgeting during the consultation.
FAQ
Around £22,000 for a 3×2.5m basic-spec build. Below that we cannot guarantee the quality standard we put our name to.
Demand is highest from March to September. November–February is our quieter period and we sometimes have more competitive availability — particularly for clients flexible on start date.
Sometimes — but only by like-for-like specification. If a competitor’s quote is significantly lower, we will explain exactly what’s different in the specification rather than just dropping our price. Most clients find the comparison helps clarify what they are actually buying.

