
Farms are told to diversify – but they can't get the planning through
An obvious solution to the mounting financial pressures, for Hogg, was to convert unused farm buildings into holiday accommodation. Diversifying is just 'making use of everything – I suppose it's nothing new,' he says. As well as a mixed arable, beef and sheep farm, 'when our great-grandparents bought the place, there was a sandstone quarry, a clay mine. There was a brickworks. There's been all sorts going on.' He soon found out it was not that simple. 'The difficulties with planning laws mean that businesses are held back and don't grow,' he says.
Behind every farm gate, there's a glut of red tape. The Country Land and Business Association (CLA) has warned that farmers, and rural communities more broadly, are facing lengthy waits to secure planning permission, sometimes of five years or more. To illustrate this, the CLA sent Freedom of Information (FOI) requests to 38 councils in rural areas. Of the 35 that replied, 14 had stalled planning applications from before 2020 still waiting for approval. Dorset council, for instance, took an average of 1,372 days, or three years and nine months, to issue a decision. In one case in south Norfolk, a 2007 application for a recreational fishing lake took seven years to process before apparently stalling in 2014. Victoria Vyvyan, the CLA's president, said 'our planning system is in crisis and it's stagnating growth in the countryside.'
In Hogg's case, an application to turn a disused farm building into a B&B took 18 months because of a quibble over adding a sunroom. 'It was exactly where there was a building that my father knocked off about 40 years ago. So we just thought, 'oh, we'll stick it back on,'' he continues. 'The planners came along and said, 'you need planning permission for that.' It took 18 months and £8,000 in planning fees, architectural drawings, building inspection fees and god knows what to get it through, and then once it was done, it cost £800 and a fortnight to put the thing up.'
The majority of farmers have no choice but to turn to other sources of income, and are being actively encouraged to diversify their businesses: most commonly by letting out buildings for non-agricultural use, selling produce or, like Hogg, providing holiday accommodation.
In most cases, it is no longer enough to work the land: government figures show that in 2023-24, even before sweeping reforms to inheritance tax were enacted, 30 per cent of farms in the UK failed to make a profit. 'You're trying to do your best to run a business, and then in every way they're putting blocks in front of you,' Hogg says. 'There's a load of bureaucracy in the way. We're trying to work our way towards being sustainable [as a business].' But the local authority's planning system makes this far harder than it needs to be.
Henry Doble is the associate director of rural planning consultancy Acorus and advises farmers on a daily basis. 'On the one hand, you've got government ministers coming out and saying, 'well, tough, the inheritance tax [rise] has come in and you'd better go out and diversify',' he says. 'But it's not actually as simple as that, because of a whole raft of issues in the planning system. The main thing we're experiencing at the moment is just the cost and time involved.'
Local authority planners are one thing, but farmers face another foe when it comes to securing planning permission: the great-crested newt. This species of newt, like bats, badgers, water voles and otters, is protected by legislation including the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. They are an old adversary: Boris Johnson once claimed ' newt-counting delays ' were holding the country back. Rachel Reeves said that developers would no longer need to worry about ' the bats and the newts ' in an attempt to kick-start Labour's ambitious house-building plans. Despite this, for farmers, they are still a going concern.
Hogg says a local friend was widowed and decided to renovate an old farm building she owned that had previously been used for storage. 'She thought she would convert it back into a house and go and live in it,' he says. 'She had to apply for planning permissions, as you do, and they said you'll need to do a bat survey, an owl survey, a hedgehog survey, a crested newt survey, a toxicology report on the soil, in case there have been toxins stored in the shed, an environmental impact study… it took forever, because they said they can only do some in nesting season,' he continues. Some ecology surveys can only be done in certain seasons, which can add significant delays before an application has even been submitted.
'Eventually she got planning permission, but they said some of the wildlife surveys were now out of date, and she'd have to do them again, Hogg says. 'It cost her over £30,000 before she'd even bought a brick.' For small business owners and farmers who are short on cash, the lengthy surveys and the cost of building delays can be debilitating.
These stories will likely resonate with farmers nationwide. Jeremy Clarkson was so frustrated by the red tape he encountered when he applied to build a restaurant and car park on his Diddly Squat farm near Chadlington, Oxfordshire, that he lobbied the government into changing planning laws last year. ' Clarkson's clause,' as it has been called, came into effect last May. Officially an extension of Class R and Q permitted development rights, the changes apply across all local authorities and were designed to allow farmers to diversify their businesses more easily by turning certain disused agricultural buildings into homes or shops without applying for planning permission.
While this has gone some way in encouraging growth in the countryside, it does not seem to have cleared the backlog. 'I've seen a number of applications that technically should have been determined in eight weeks rumble on for 12 months or more,' says Mark Turner, a partner at Aaron & Partners solicitors who specialises in planning and the environment. 'I have, on occasion, seen applications drag on for five years.'
This is an issue that the National Farmers Union (NFU) is all too aware of. In its newly published blueprint for growth, it calls on the Government to address planning delays by adequately funding the planning system and making a biodiversity net gain (BNG – a mandatory requirement in England for developers to leave the natural environment in a better state than before) exemption for development relating to agriculture.
The changes permitted development rights have 'certainly provided a bit of encouragement and impetus in the industry for more diversification,' he adds, 'but the issue is still resources in local authorities – or a lack of resources. It can be difficult to get anything from them when it's needed.' Hogg says, all things considered, the situation is 'dismal'. 'Our farm will survive,' he says, 'but in an increasingly uncertain future.'

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Not claiming your state pension means you are, indirectly, deferring taking it. You might want to do this if you're still healthy enough to work and don't need the cash boost. You may also want to deliberately keep your income lower so you don't have to start paying income tax. How much extra could you get? The extra amount you get varies depending on when you reached state pension age. If you hit state pension age on or after April 6, 2016, your payments increase for every week you defer, so long as you defer for at least nine weeks. Your state pension rises by the equivalent of 1% for every nine weeks you defer, or 5.8% for every 52 weeks. As an example, you get £230.25 a week under the full new state pension. By deferring for 52 weeks, you would get an extra £13.35 a week (5.8% of £230.25), or £694.20 a year. If you reached state pension age before April 6, 2016, you can take your extra state pension as a higher weekly payment or a lump sum. 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First, you can't defer your state pension if you're on certain benefits including Income Support, Universal Credit and Pension Credit. You cannot build up extra state pension during any period you are receiving: Income Support Pension Credit Employment and Support Allowance (income-related) Jobseeker's Allowance (income-based) Universal Credit Carer's Allowance Carer Support Payment Incapacity Benefit Severe Disablement Allowance Widow's Pension Widowed Parent's Allowance Unemployability Supplement You also cannot build up extra state pension during any period your partner gets: Income Support Pension Credit Universal Credit Employment and Support Allowance (income-related) Jobseeker's Allowance (income-related) If you are claiming certain benefits you will need to let the Pension Service know if you want to defer. Second, delaying your state pension will mean you won't receive any during the time you've postponed it. This means it can take years to recoup the losses you've made during that time period. Third, it can mean you're pushed over income tax thresholds, and fourth it might make you no longer eligible for benefits. Helen Morrissey, head of retirement analysis at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: "Make sure that deferring doesn't end up costing you money. "For instance, it could push you over a threshold that means you end up paying more tax. "It could also push your income above a threshold meaning you don't get a benefit that you otherwise would be entitled to. "It's also worth thinking about how long it would take to make your money back by deferring. "For instance, the full new state pension is currently worth just under £12,000 per year – if you defer for a year you have lost this income and it will take years before you recoup the full amount through the increased payments." If you're not sure whether deferring is for you, you could speak to PensionWise, a free-to-use government service. Or, you could hire a financial adviser. Just bear in mind you'll have to pay fees or an hourly rate of up to £350, says If you've not already claimed a state pension and can still work, you can also top up your pot by buying extra National Insurance years. .