Garden Room Cost & Prices 2026: UK Pricing by Size, Material & Specification
The complete UK pricing guide covering cost per m², size brackets, materials, foundations, electrics, insulation, planning, and VAT—with real numbers for every budget level.
Quick Answer
Garden room costs in 2026 range from £15,000 to £80,000+. Budget/modest designs cost £15,000–£25,000, mid-range garden rooms £25,000–£50,000, and luxury bespoke builds £50,000–£100,000+. Cost per square metre typically falls between £1,200 and £2,500 depending on specification.
Watch the extras: Foundations (£1,500–£5,000), groundwork, internal finishes, and VAT (20%) are often excluded from headline prices. A £25,000 garden room can easily become £35,000 once everything is included. Always ask for a fully-inclusive price.
Garden Room Costs & Prices at a Glance (2026)
- Budget garden rooms: £15,000–£25,000 (8–12m², basic specification)
- Mid-range garden rooms: £25,000–£50,000 (12–20m², good specification)
- Luxury garden rooms: £50,000–£100,000+ (20m²+, bespoke design)
- Cost per m²: £1,200–£2,500 depending on specification
- Foundations: £1,500–£5,000 extra (often excluded from quotes)
- Electrics: £1,500–£6,000 depending on complexity
- VAT: 20% applies (check if prices include or exclude)
- Cheaper than an extension: £1,500/m² vs £2,500–£4,000/m² for a house extension
Understanding Garden Room Pricing
The garden room market has exploded since 2020, and with it, pricing has become increasingly varied—and sometimes confusing. A “garden room” might cost anywhere from £8,000 to £150,000 depending on who you ask, what’s included, and what quality you’re getting.
This guide cuts through the noise. We’ll explain what drives costs, what’s typically included (and excluded) in quotes, and what you should realistically budget at each quality level. Whether you’re after a modest home office or a magnificent entertaining space, you’ll know what to expect.
The Price Comparison Problem
Comparing garden room quotes is notoriously difficult because suppliers include different things. One company’s £20,000 quote might include foundations, electrics, and flooring. Another’s £20,000 might be for the shell only—with another £10,000 needed to make it usable.
Always ask: What’s included? What’s excluded? Is VAT included? What will the final, all-in price be?
Costs Often Excluded From Headline Prices
One of the most common frustrations with garden room pricing is discovering costs that weren’t included in the original quote. Here are the items most frequently excluded—and what to budget for each.
| Cost Item | Typical Range | How Often Excluded | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Foundations | £1,500–£5,000 | Frequently | Depends on ground conditions, size, and type (concrete slab, screw piles, or pads). Screw piles are quicker but may cost more. |
| Groundwork & site preparation | £500–£3,000 | Often | Clearing, levelling, drainage, and access. Steep, uneven, or waterlogged sites cost more. |
| Electrics (Part P certified) | £1,500–£6,000 | Sometimes | Basic (lights + sockets): £1,500–£3,000. Complex (underfloor heating, data, smart controls): £3,000–£6,000. |
| Internal finishes | £1,000–£5,000 | Sometimes | Plasterboard and paint at the budget end; quality ply panelling or bespoke joinery at the top end. |
| Flooring | £500–£2,500 | Sometimes | Many quotes include only a subfloor. Finished flooring (engineered wood, vinyl, tiles) is extra. |
| VAT (20%) | 20% of net price | Often unclear | VAT-registered companies must charge 20%. A £30,000 net quote becomes £36,000 including VAT. |
| Delivery & crane hire | £500–£2,000 | Occasionally | Relevant for modular builds or sites with restricted access. |
The Real Cost of a £25,000 Quote
A headline price of £25,000 can realistically become £33,000–£38,000 once foundations, groundwork, finished flooring, and VAT are added. This doesn’t mean the supplier is being dishonest—but it does mean you need to ask the right questions upfront.
Our advice: Always request an all-inclusive price that covers everything needed to walk in and use the space on day one. That’s what Room Outside provides as standard.
The Three Price Tiers Explained
Garden rooms broadly fall into three quality and price tiers. Understanding what you get at each level helps set realistic expectations.
Budget / Modest
- 8–12m² floor area
- Standard timber or composite cladding
- Double glazing (standard)
- Basic insulation (functional)
- Standard electrics package
- Foundations often extra
Mid-Range
- 12–25m² floor area
- Quality cedar or composite cladding
- High-performance double/triple glazing
- Superior insulation (year-round comfort)
- Comprehensive electrics + heating
- Quality internal finishes
- Foundations often included
Luxury / Bespoke
- 20–40m²+ floor area
- Premium materials (cedar, hardwood, zinc)
- Slim-frame aluminium glazing
- Architectural design service
- Underfloor heating, smart controls
- Kitchen/bathroom options
- Turnkey—everything included
Cost by Size: What Can You Get?
Size is the primary driver of garden room cost. Here’s what different sizes typically cost and what they’re suited for:
| Size | Dimensions | Typical Cost | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small (8–10m²) | 2.5m x 3.5m to 3m x 3.5m | £15,000–£25,000 | Single home office, yoga/meditation space |
| Medium (12–16m²) | 3m x 4m to 4m x 4m | £22,000–£35,000 | Home office with meeting area, studio space |
| Large (18–25m²) | 4m x 5m to 5m x 5m | £35,000–£55,000 | Office + breakout, gym, music room |
| XL (25–35m²) | 5m x 5m to 5m x 7m | £50,000–£80,000 | Multi-use space, entertaining, games room |
| Luxury (35m²+) | Custom designs | £80,000–£150,000+ | Guest annexe, pool house, home cinema |
The “Sweet Spot” for Value
For most homeowners, a 15–20m² garden room (around 4m x 4m to 4m x 5m) offers the best balance of usable space and cost. At this size, you get enough room for comfortable working or multiple uses without the cost escalating dramatically.
Budget approximately £30,000–£45,000 for a well-specified garden room in this size range, including foundations and electrics.
Garden Room Cost Per Square Metre
Cost per square metre is the most useful way to compare garden room quotes on a like-for-like basis. It strips out the effect of size and lets you focus on specification and quality.
| Specification Level | Cost Per m² | What You Get |
|---|---|---|
| Budget | £1,200–£1,500/m² | Basic timber frame, standard double glazing, mineral wool insulation, basic electrics. Functional but minimal finishes. |
| Mid-range | £1,500–£2,000/m² | Quality frame, cedar or composite cladding, high-performance glazing, good insulation, comprehensive electrics, quality internal finishes. |
| Premium | £2,000–£2,500/m² | SIPs or engineered frame, premium cladding, slim-frame aluminium glazing, superior insulation, underfloor heating, bespoke design. |
| Luxury bespoke | £2,500+/m² | Architectural design, premium materials throughout, smart home integration, kitchen/bathroom fit-out, full landscaping. |
How to Use Cost Per m² When Comparing Quotes
When you receive quotes from different suppliers, divide the total all-inclusive price by the internal floor area in square metres. This gives you the true cost per m² and makes comparison straightforward—provided you’re comparing like-for-like specifications.
Be wary of very low per-m² figures (below £1,000/m²). They often indicate thin insulation, basic finishes, or significant exclusions from the quoted price.
What Drives the Cost? Breaking Down the Variables
Understanding the cost components helps you make informed decisions about where to spend—and where to save.
Foundations
Concrete slab, screw piles, or pad foundations. Cost depends on ground conditions, size, and access. Often excluded from headline prices.
Structure & Frame
The building itself: frame, walls, roof structure. SIPs cost more but perform better than stick-built frames.
Cladding
Budget timber: £2,000–£3,500. Western red cedar: £4,000–£6,000. Premium composite: £5,000–£8,000.
Glazing
Standard uPVC double glazing is cheapest. Aluminium frames cost more. Triple glazing adds 15–25% to glazing costs.
Insulation
Basic mineral wool is cheapest. PIR/PUR rigid boards perform better. Premium SIPs include insulation in the structure.
Roofing
Flat EPDM: £1,500–£2,500. Pitched roof: £3,000–£5,000. Green roof: £4,000–£8,000.
Electrics
Basic package: £1,500–£3,000. With underfloor heating, data cabling, smart controls: £3,000–£6,000.
Internal Finishes
Basic plasterboard and paint: £1,000–£2,000. Quality ply or panelling: £2,000–£4,000. Premium finishes: £4,000+.
Garden Room VAT Guide: Understanding the 20% Charge
VAT: The 20% You Might Have Missed
Garden rooms are subject to 20% VAT as they’re classed as construction work. Some smaller suppliers below the VAT threshold don’t charge VAT—which can make their headline prices seem lower. But most established companies are VAT-registered and will add 20% to the net price.
Always ask: “Is that price including or excluding VAT?” A £30,000 garden room excluding VAT actually costs £36,000.
Garden Room vs House Extension: The Cost Comparison
Many homeowners weigh a garden room against a traditional house extension. Here’s how they compare on the factors that matter most:
| Factor | Garden Room | House Extension | Cost per m² | £1,200–£2,500 | £2,000–£4,000 | Planning permission | Usually not required | Often required | Building Regulations | Usually not required | Always required | Installation time | 1–3 weeks typically | 3–6 months | Disruption | Minimal—work is in garden | Significant—affects daily life |
|---|
A garden room isn’t always the right choice—if you need the space physically connected to your home (an open-plan kitchen-diner, for example), an extension is the answer. But for a separate workspace, studio, gym, or guest accommodation, a garden room typically delivers more usable space for less money with far less disruption. See our guide to home office options for a more detailed comparison.
What Should Be Included in a Quote?
When comparing quotes from different suppliers, use this checklist to make sure you’re comparing like for like:
Essential Inclusions:
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About This Guide
Prices based on Room Outside’s experience in the South East UK market and industry research as of March 2026. Actual costs vary by specification, location, and supplier.
Last updated: April 2026 | Author: Room Outside
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a garden room cost in 2026?
Garden rooms cost £15,000–£25,000 for budget, £25,000–£50,000 for mid-range, and £50,000–£100,000+ for luxury bespoke builds. These prices typically include the structure, insulation, electrics, and installation but may exclude foundations and VAT.
What size garden room can I get for £30,000?
For £30,000 you can typically get a well-specified garden room of around 15–20m² (approximately 4m x 4m to 4m x 5m) with good insulation, double glazing, electrics, and quality internal finishes including foundations.
Are foundations included in garden room prices?
It varies by supplier. Foundation costs typically range from £1,500–£5,000 depending on ground conditions, size, and type (concrete slab, screw piles, or pads). Always clarify what is included when comparing quotes.
Do I pay VAT on a garden room?
Yes, garden rooms are subject to 20% VAT as they are classed as construction work. Some smaller suppliers below the VAT threshold may not charge VAT. Always check whether quoted prices include or exclude VAT.
What is the cheapest type of garden room?
Budget flat-pack or modular units start around £8,000–£12,000 but often have thin insulation and basic finishes. For a properly insulated, year-round usable garden room, expect to pay at least £15,000–£20,000 for a small to medium unit.
How much do electrics cost for a garden room?
Basic electrical installation costs £1,500–£3,000 covering lighting, sockets, consumer unit, and connection. Complex installations with underfloor heating, data cabling, or longer cable runs can cost £3,000–£6,000. All work must be Part P certified.
Is a garden room cheaper than an extension?
Generally yes. Garden rooms cost £1,200–£2,500 per square metre versus £2,000–£4,000 per square metre for house extensions. They also install in weeks rather than months with minimal disruption.
What affects garden room cost the most?
Size is the biggest factor, followed by glazing specification, cladding material, insulation quality, roof type, and internal specification. Site access and ground conditions also significantly affect installation costs.
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