Stroud District Local Plan Call for Sites: Key Dates
Stroud District Council’s Call for Sites for the Emerging Stroud District Local Plan 2026 opened on 1 June 2026 and closes at 5:00pm on 29 June 2026. This early evidence-gathering stage gives landowners and promoters an opportunity to put forward land for future consideration.
The Council is preparing a new Local Plan to guide future development across the district. The Call for Sites is intended to identify land that may have potential for housing, employment, infrastructure, Gypsy and Traveller provision or other appropriate uses.
Sites submitted now may be assessed alongside other evidence and policy considerations as the Council prepares the new Local Plan. Submission does not guarantee allocation or planning permission, but it can be an important first step in having land properly considered.
The Council has also commenced preparation of a new Local Plan under the reformed plan-making system. The Council report identifies the need to publish a Notice of Commencement by 30 June 2026 and a Gateway 1 Self-Assessment by 31 October 2026, meaning this Call for Sites sits at the very start of a fast-moving plan-making timetable.
Value My Land can assist at this early stage by reviewing the planning context, checking whether your site is likely to be a realistic candidate for promotion, preparing the submission material and explaining how your land could contribute to Stroud District’s future development strategy. This can be particularly valuable where land is affected by access issues, landscape sensitivity, the Cotswolds National Landscape, ecology, heritage, flood risk, highways or infrastructure considerations.
Consultation Opens
1 June 2026
Deadline
5:00pm, 29 June 2026
Site Submissions
Via Stroud District Council online form
Why This Call for Sites Matters for Landowners
Local Plan reviews can create major opportunities for landowners. Value My Land can help ensure your site is properly presented, supported by planning reasoning and submitted before the 29 June 2026 deadline.
Housing Land
We can assess whether land near villages, settlements or existing residential areas may be capable of contributing towards future housing needs and explain this clearly within the submission.
Employment Land
We can review whether sites with access to strategic roads or established employment locations may be suitable for commercial, logistics or mixed-use opportunities.
Landscape and Settlement Context
Stroud District contains a mix of market towns, villages, countryside, sensitive landscapes and strategic transport corridors. We can consider settlement-edge, landscape and accessibility arguments so the site is not dismissed without a proper planning case.
Access and Deliverability
We can identify potential access points, ownership matters and delivery issues so the Council understands how the site could realistically come forward.
Environmental Constraints
We can identify landscape, ecology, flood risk, heritage, trees and biodiversity issues early so the submission is realistic, balanced and evidence-led.
Development Value
We help landowners understand how Local Plan promotion could affect future development value before they sell or enter into any arrangement with a developer.
What Types of Land Could Be Submitted?
The Call for Sites may be relevant to a wide range of landholdings across Stroud District. Value My Land can review the type of land you own and advise whether it should be promoted for housing, employment, mixed-use development or longer-term strategic growth.
Agricultural land: farmland adjoining settlements or located near existing infrastructure may have long-term potential.
Paddocks and edge-of-village land: smaller sites may be suitable for residential development or village growth in some circumstances.
Sensitive landscape and countryside land: landscape sensitivity, countryside location or proximity to protected landscapes does not mean land should automatically be ignored, but the planning case must be carefully prepared.
Brownfield land: previously developed land can often be an important source of future housing or employment supply.
Employment land: land near strategic corridors may be suitable for commercial, logistics or mixed-use development.
Strategic land: larger land parcels can sometimes help deliver homes, open space, infrastructure and community benefits.
How Value My Land Can Assist With a Stroud District Call for Sites Submission
A Call for Sites submission is often the first opportunity for a landowner to place their land before the Council for future development consideration. However, the strength of the submission can influence how clearly the site is understood. Value My Land can help landowners move beyond a basic form submission by preparing a more complete, structured and persuasive planning case.
We begin by reviewing the site location, surrounding settlement pattern, planning designations, access opportunities, physical constraints and likely development options. We then consider whether the land is best promoted for housing, employment, mixed-use development, specialist accommodation, community uses or a longer-term strategic allocation.
Where a site has potential, we can prepare submission material explaining why the land is suitable, available and achievable. This may include a written planning statement, site description, constraints and opportunities summary, indicative capacity assumptions, ownership and availability details, and a clear explanation of how the land could contribute to Stroud District’s future development needs.
We can also help identify issues that may need to be addressed before submission, such as access visibility, landscape impact, landscape sensitivity, flood risk, ecological features, heritage assets, trees, public rights of way, utilities, abnormal costs and adjoining land relationships. Early identification of these matters allows the submission to be realistic rather than speculative.
For many landowners, the Call for Sites is only the first step. Value My Land can continue to monitor the Local Plan review, respond to future consultations, engage with emerging evidence, review site assessment findings and promote the land through later stages where it has realistic prospects.
Our aim is to help landowners present their land professionally, avoid missed opportunities and maximise the chance that suitable land is properly considered through the Stroud District Local Plan process.
Why a Professional Site Submission Can Make a Difference
Submitting land to a Call for Sites is not simply a box-ticking exercise. Councils usually assess sites against planning criteria such as location, accessibility, sustainability, constraints, deliverability and whether the land is available within the plan period.
A brief or unsupported submission may fail to explain why a site is suitable. By contrast, a properly prepared submission can set out the planning case, identify constraints, explain how those constraints could be addressed and demonstrate why the land should be considered through the Local Plan process.
Early technical review is particularly important in Stroud District because matters such as landscape sensitivity, the Cotswolds National Landscape, ecology, heritage, highways, flood risk, infrastructure and settlement relationships can all influence whether a site is shortlisted or rejected.
Value My Land can prepare submissions that focus on the points councils usually need to understand: where the land is, what use is being promoted, whether the landowner supports development, how access may be achieved, whether the site can be delivered within the plan period and why the land represents a logical option when compared with other potential growth locations.
We can also help landowners avoid common mistakes, such as submitting an unclear boundary, failing to explain ownership, ignoring obvious constraints, overstating development capacity or missing the wider Local Plan strategy. A balanced submission is often stronger because it acknowledges constraints while explaining how they could be mitigated.
If your land is well located, available and capable of being delivered, the current Call for Sites could be an important opportunity to put it forward before the 29 June 2026 deadline.
How Value My Land Can Help
We can help Stroud District landowners understand whether their land should be promoted through the Local Plan and prepare a submission that properly explains the site’s development potential.
Our role is to identify the planning opportunity, highlight the strengths of the land, address likely objections and ensure the Council receives a clear, professional and well-structured representation.
- Free initial review of your land’s development potential
- Assessment of planning policy, landscape and settlement context
- Review of access, constraints and deliverability issues
- Preparation of a professional Call for Sites submission and supporting representation
- Advice on likely development use, capacity and delivery strategy
- Ongoing Local Plan promotion where a site has realistic prospects
Send Us Your Site Details
For an initial review, please send us the location of your land. You can provide:
- A postcode
- A Google Maps pin
- A what3words reference
- A site plan or Land Registry title plan
We can then provide initial feedback on whether your land may be suitable for promotion, what type of submission may be required and whether further evidence would strengthen the case.
Get Your Free ReviewWe Assess Land Across Stroud District
We review land across Stroud District, including edge-of-settlement sites, rural land, paddocks, agricultural land, brownfield land, employment land, infrastructure opportunities and larger strategic landholdings.
Whether your site is a small paddock adjoining a village, a larger farm holding, land near a strategic road corridor, brownfield land close to an existing settlement or a longer-term strategic growth opportunity, Value My Land can assess how it fits within the emerging Local Plan process and prepare a submission that reflects its specific circumstances.
Here Are Just Some of the Areas We Cover in Stroud District
- Stroud
- Stonehouse
- Dursley
- Nailsworth
- Berkeley
- Wotton-under-Edge
- Minchinhampton
- Painswick
- Cam
- Frampton on Severn
- Hardwicke
- Whitminster
- Eastington
- Leonard Stanley
- Kingswood
- Uley
- Chalford
- Bisley
We also assess land close to Gloucester, the Severn Vale, the M5 corridor, the Cotswold edge and the wider Gloucestershire area where sites may relate to Stroud District’s future growth strategy.
Our Call for Sites Submission Process
Step 1 – Free Initial Assessment
We review the site location, settlement relationship, planning policy position and broad development potential. This helps establish whether the land should be submitted and what form of development may be most appropriate.
Step 2 – Constraints Review
We consider relevant matters such as access, landscape, ecology, flood risk, heritage, trees, utilities and infrastructure. Where constraints exist, we consider whether they are likely to prevent development or whether they could be addressed through design, mitigation or a reduced developable area.
Step 3 – Planning Strategy
We identify whether the site should be promoted for housing, employment, mixed-use development or another appropriate use. We also consider whether the site should be promoted as a standalone opportunity, part of a wider land assembly or a longer-term strategic growth option.
Step 4 – Site Submission
Where appropriate, we prepare and submit a robust representation that explains the site’s merits and why it should be considered through the Local Plan. This can include a written submission, site details, planning justification, constraints commentary and clear availability information.
Step 5 – Ongoing Promotion
Following submission, we monitor the Local Plan timetable and continue to promote suitable sites through later consultation stages. If the Council publishes site assessment results, draft allocations or evidence documents, we can review them and prepare further representations where required.
Frequently Asked Questions
When does the Stroud District Council Call for Sites close?
The scoping consultation and Call for Sites closes at 5:00pm on 29 June 2026.
Should I submit my land to the Call for Sites?
If your land is available, deliverable and has potential for housing, employment or mixed-use development, it may be worth submitting. A professional review can help establish whether the site has realistic prospects.
Can land in Stroud District be submitted?
Yes. Land in Stroud District can be submitted where it is available and supported by the landowner. Sites may be promoted for housing, employment, infrastructure, Gypsy and Traveller provision or other appropriate uses, subject to site-specific assessment.
Does a Call for Sites submission guarantee allocation?
No. Submission does not guarantee allocation or planning permission. However, land normally needs to be identified and promoted before it can be seriously considered through the Local Plan process.
What information is needed for a site submission?
Useful information usually includes the site location, ownership position, proposed use, approximate site area, access arrangements, known constraints and evidence that the land is available for development.
Can Value My Land prepare the submission for me?
Yes. We can review your land, advise whether it has realistic prospects, prepare the Call for Sites material and assist with ongoing Local Plan promotion where appropriate.
What makes a site submission stronger?
A stronger submission usually explains the planning case clearly, confirms land availability, identifies constraints, explains access and deliverability, and shows how the site could contribute to future housing, employment or mixed-use development needs.
Do You Own Land in Stroud District?
The Stroud District Local Plan Call for Sites is now open. If you own land and want to understand whether it should be submitted before the deadline, contact us today for a free initial review. We can assess the site, identify planning opportunities, prepare the submission and help promote your land through the Local Plan process.