Unsure whether bats could delay your planning application in Lichfield?
Our expert-led PRAs provide early clarity on constraints and protect your programme from avoidable setbacks.
Calls answered in 2 rings, emails replied to within the hour.
Clear guidance before you commit.
Working in partnership with clients to ensure planning approval first time
Industry Leading Standard
We stay with you from first call through to submission.
Homeowners in Lichfield typically need a Preliminary Roost Assessment (PRA) when loft extensions, roof replacements, barn conversions or structural changes involve buildings with features that bats might use. The District Council commonly requires confirmation that bats are absent before works commence.
Developers must obtain a PRA where buildings, trees or structures form part of a planning application and planners need early, defensible evidence of bat-risk levels. This frequently applies to residential development, mixed-use sites, redevelopment areas and infrastructure improvements.
By undertaking a PRA early, applicants can avoid survey-season restrictions, project redesigns and unexpected bat licensing issues.
Within Lichfield and its surrounding settlements, Preliminary Roost Assessments are typically required where:
Lichfield District Council usually triggers PRA checks at validation whenever bat roost potential is present.
Our Bat Dusk Emergence Survey services cover the whole of Lichfield, from urban centres to rural landscapes.
Lichfield District Council requires Preliminary Roost Assessment evidence wherever structures, trees or built features may offer potential bat habitat. This is essential for compliance with the Wildlife & Countryside Act 1981, the Habitats Regulations 2017 and relevant national guidance. If the PRA is missing, planners cannot confirm whether additional surveys or licensing routes apply, which commonly results in invalidated applications or ecological conditions that prolong the process.
Any Lichfield proposal involving building alteration, conversion or demolition should confirm PRA findings before an application is validated.
Our Preliminary Roost Assessments in Lichfield provide fully compliant reports accepted by local planning authorities. It prevents avoidable emergence delays, stabilises planning submissions and ensures that any further survey requirements are proportionate and justified.
For projects in Lichfield District, when bat scoping is necessary to support planning, a PRA provides:
a compliant, evidence-led preliminary assessment
an agreed classification of roost potential
confirmation of any need for follow-up emergence surveys
upfront indication of licensing requirements
documentation aligned with Lichfield District Council’s expectations escalating survey demands.
This gives reliable certainty instead of escalating survey demands.
Proposed works, construction sequence and planning feedback are reviewed to define PRA scope.
Inspection of buildings, structures or trees for roost features and bat evidence in line with lawful survey guidance.
Roost potential classification and planning implications interpreted against LPA validation requirements.
Evidence is reported for planning submissions and coordinated with Bat Emergence Surveys or PEAs where required.
Need to confirm whether a Lichfield property or development requires a Preliminary Roost Assessment?
Submit the site details and confirmation is provided before your application reaches validation.
Not all, but where buildings present any level of roost potential, Staffordshire LPAs commonly require a PRA to support validation.
Yes. PRAs are daytime inspections and can be undertaken year-round. Seasonal restriction only applies to dusk emergence surveys if further work is required.
Even low potential commonly triggers at least one dusk emergence survey before planners will validate demolition or conversion works.
Yes. Supplying PRA evidence early prevents validation problems and seasonal constraints.
Low potential generally means planning can progress without additional survey requirements.
Yes, it provides an early indication of whether licensing will be needed.