System map

Planning permission (residential, Ireland)

Overview

Statutory chain a residential planning application follows in Ireland: optional pre-planning consultation with the planning authority, submission of the application, the statutory 8-week decision period, the planning authority's decision (grant, refuse, or request further information), the appeal to An Bord Pleanala, the ABP decision, and the residual judicial-review route to the High Court. The model is the residential case; strategic infrastructure, large-scale residential development variants and substitute consent are out of scope for v0.

Steps (7)

  1. Step 1 · entry point

    Pre-planning consultation with the planning authority

    Section 247 of the Planning and Development Act 2000 allows (and in practice often encourages) an applicant to consult the planning authority before lodging an application. The consultation is informal: any opinion the authority forms is non-binding and does not prejudice its later decision. The point is to surface obvious objections, scoping requirements and likely conditions early. Note: the planning authority is the relevant local authority; individual planning authorities are not first-class nodes in the static dataset, so this step references the Department of Housing (the regulator) as the closest resolvable body. See PR body for the known node gap.

    Timeframe
    Typically several weeks before application; no statutory minimum.
    Leverage
    Meadows 6: information-flows - information-flows: the structure of what an applicant learns before they commit shapes every downstream decision.

    Outcomes

    • Applicant proceeds to submit an applicationgo to next step
    • Applicant abandons or revises proposal without applying
  2. Step 2

    Submit application to the planning authority

    The applicant lodges the application with the planning authority (local authority for the area). Required documentation, application fees, and the form of site notice and newspaper notice are set by the Planning and Development Regulations 2001 (as amended). Failure on any of these formal preconditions is grounds for invalidation before the decision clock even starts.

    Timeframe
    Single-day event; validation by the planning authority within days.
    Leverage
    Meadows 12: constants-parameters - constants-parameters: fee amounts and notice formats are the most visible (and least powerful) lever - they change application volume at the margins.

    Outcomes

    • Application validated; statutory clock startsgo to next step
    • Application invalidated for procedural defect; not lodged
  3. Step 3

    Statutory 8-week decision period at the planning authority

    Section 34(8) of the Planning and Development Act 2000 sets an eight-week window from receipt of a valid application within which the planning authority must make its decision. The clock pauses if the authority issues a request for further information. The eight-week figure is set by primary legislation - changing it requires an Act.

    Timeframe
    8 weeks (paused by any RFI).
    Leverage
    Meadows 5: rules-of-system - rules-of-system: the 8-week clock is set by statute, not guidance - high-leverage to identify, hard to move without primary legislation.

    Outcomes

  4. Step 4

    Planning authority decision: grant, refuse, or further information

    The planning authority decides to grant permission (with or without conditions), refuse it, or request further information. Conditions are imposed under s.34(4); the catalogue of conditions and the proper-planning-and-sustainable-development test combine statute, statutory instruments and the relevant Development Plan, plus ministerial guidelines that the authority is required to have regard to. Whether a particular condition is grounded in statute or only in guidance varies by condition type and is sometimes contested - see PR body.

    Timeframe
    Within the 8-week statutory window (or after the further-information loop).
    Leverage
    Meadows 5: rules-of-system - rules-of-system: conditions are where the rule actually bites; the statute-vs-guidance split for what triggers a condition is where reform without legislation is possible.

    Outcomes

  5. Step 5

    Appeal to An Bord Pleanala

    Either the applicant or any qualifying third party (a person who made a valid submission to the planning authority, subject to the rules in section 37) may appeal the decision to An Bord Pleanala. The appeal must be lodged within four weeks of the planning authority's decision (s.37(1)) and accompanied by the prescribed fee. ABP conducts a de novo consideration: it reopens the whole decision rather than only reviewing the planning authority's reasoning.

    Timeframe
    Appeal must be lodged within 4 weeks of the planning-authority decision.
    Leverage
    Meadows 5: rules-of-system - rules-of-system: the four-week appeal window is set by statute; who counts as a qualifying third party is also statutory.

    Outcomes

    • Appeal validly lodged; ABP takes the casego to next step
    • No appeal lodged within four weeks; planning-authority decision stands
  6. Step 6

    An Bord Pleanala decision

    ABP determines the appeal. The statutory objective is 18 weeks (s.126), but ABP's own annual reports show that this target is regularly missed by a wide margin for many case categories: the Board reported median timelines materially longer than 18 weeks across recent years, and the backlog has been a recurring public-policy issue. ABP may grant, refuse, or modify conditions; in some cases the Board can override the planning authority's decision entirely.

    Timeframe
    Statutory objective 18 weeks; actual median materially longer (varies by year and case type).
    Leverage
    Meadows 9: delay-lengths - delay-lengths: chronic ABP delay is the documented Irish planning failure mode - long delays compound uncertainty and ration housing supply more than the formal rule of refusal does.

    Outcomes

    • Appeal allowed (or planning-authority grant upheld); permission granted
    • Appeal refused (or planning-authority refusal upheld); permission refused
    • Permission granted with modified conditions
    • ABP decision challenged by judicial reviewgo to next step
  7. Step 7

    Judicial review (High Court)

    An applicant, third party or other person with sufficient interest may seek leave to apply for judicial review of the ABP decision in the High Court under section 50 of the Planning and Development Act 2000. The review is on legal grounds (jurisdiction, fair procedures, rationality) - not a re-hearing of the planning merits. Strict time limits (eight weeks from the decision under s.50) and a leave requirement filter most challenges out. NOTE: the courts are not modelled as a node in the static dataset; this step references the courts as an actor in text only, see PR body for the known node gap.

    Timeframe
    Leave application within 8 weeks of the ABP decision; substantive hearing many months later.
    Leverage
    Meadows 5: rules-of-system - rules-of-system: the leave threshold and 8-week clock are set by statute; judicial review is the residual constitutional check on the planning system.

    Outcomes

    • Leave refused; ABP decision stands
    • ABP decision quashed and remitted; case returns to ABPgo to next step
    • ABP decision upheld at substantive hearing; permission stands

Leverage points (3)

Candidate levers for a human to interrogate, decomposed from the steps above. Not a recommendation.

  • Meadows 5: rules-of-system

    The 8-week statutory decision clock at the planning authority is a rules-of-system lever set by primary legislation (PDA 2000, s.34(8)). It governs throughput across the entire planning system and cannot be moved without an Act.

  • Meadows 9: delay-lengths

    Chronic delay at An Bord Pleanala against its 18-week statutory objective (s.126) is the documented Irish planning failure mode. Per Meadows, length-of-delay is a higher-leverage intervention than tightening any single rule, and is the right lever to interrogate first when reading the system for outcomes-vs-intent gaps.

  • Meadows 5: rules-of-system

    What triggers a particular planning condition is a mix of statute, statutory instrument, the relevant Development Plan, and ministerial guidance the authority is obliged to have regard to. Where a condition rests on guidance rather than statute, the rule can be changed without primary legislation - high-leverage exactly because it is changeable (docs/systems-layer.md framing on guidance-only rules).

Edges used (2)

Typed relationships from the edge layer that this system relies on. Each links to both endpoints.

  • Regulates
    An Bord PleanálaBodyMeadows 5: rules-of-system

    An Bord Pleanála is the independent planning appeals board established under the Local Government (Planning and Development) Act 1976 and reconstituted under the Planning and Development Act 2000; it operates under the aegis of the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage, which sponsors its legislation and appoints its board members.

  • Regulates
    Local Government Management AgencyBodyMeadows 5: rules-of-system

    LGMA was established by ministerial order under the Local Government Acts and operates as an agency of the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage; the Minister appoints a minority of its board members.

Edge types used: Regulates.

Sources

Sources