Epping sits at the meeting point of established residential streets, the historic high street, and large detached properties along tree-lined roads such as Bury Lane and Theydon Road. The town's stock of period housing and inter-war detached homes means that most existing windows comfortably exceed the 20-year easement threshold under the Prescription Act 1832, so significant rear and side extensions, garden plot subdivisions, and new builds in conservation areas can all raise rights of light questions with immediate neighbours. Epping Forest District Council planning consent does not resolve that legal position.
Our Wickford office handles Epping work with reach across Theydon Bois, Coopersale, Loughton, and Buckhurst Hill, supported by colleagues in London and Hampshire. CHP is RICS regulated and has been advising on rights of light since 2004. The local Essex team handles this work faster than London-led practices, and we can also bring in our rights of light assessments overview for design teams new to the process.


Every Epping project starts with a free initial assessment of the proposed scheme against the surrounding context. We identify the neighbouring windows that are likely to carry the 20-year easement and the points of the proposed massing most likely to cause an issue. A full rights of light analysis follows using specialist software, with the existing and proposed light levels modelled and tested against the Equivalent First Zone and the 50/50 rule for each affected room.
Where modelling shows likely infringement, we run a cutback analysis to test design variations until the scheme works for both the planning case and the rights of light position. For Epping projects this usually means significant rear or side extensions on period housing, infill new builds in conservation areas, and small apartment redevelopment. Most schemes also involve daylight and sunlight reports for the planning submission to Epping Forest District Council, and we run both pieces of work from the same team to keep them aligned.
Adjoining owners in Epping have several options when faced with a nearby development that threatens the light through their windows. We assess the impact of the proposed scheme on the affected rooms, advise on the strength of the legal position under the acquired easement, and set out the available remedies including negotiation, formal objection to Epping Forest District Council, and ultimately court action where matters cannot be resolved. Light Obstruction Notices can also be deployed to protect future development potential of the adjoining owner's own land.
For developers, the same early assessment work removes surprises during construction and gives certainty over the cost of any required release. Both sides can also draw on airspace development advice where rooftop or upper-floor schemes are involved. A short free initial assessment is the quickest way to know where you stand.
