Kildare County Council granted permission to almost 80% of all planning applications in 2021
The Office of the Planning Regulator (OPR) has published its Annual Overview of the Planning System 2021. It found that Kildare County Council granted planning permission to
79% of all planning applications during 2021. The report reviews key trends and outputs over the year in the wider planning system in Ireland. It includes a comparison with
patterns in previous years and is the only analysis of its kind of the Irish planning system. The report also identifies and makes observations on some of the key trends which
reflect Ireland’s and each local authority’s planning performance in 2021. It includes key statistics and indicators relating to Kildare Council. To coincide with the report,
the OPR has also launched a new series of videos and flowcharts aimed at helping people navigate their way through the planning application process. Some of the key findings in
the report relating to Kildare County Council are:
The planning invalidation rate (the percentage of invalidated planning applications as a proportion of all
applications made) in Co Kildare decreased from 25.4% in 2020 to 18% in 2021;
In Kildare in 2021, 79% of all planning applications were granted permission while 21% were
refused. The national average grant-rate in 2021 was 88.5%;
In total, there were 1,096 planning applications approved and 288 refused by Kildare County Council in
2021;
Overall in 2021, 7.6% of planning application decisions made by Kildare County Council were appealed to An Bord Pleanála. Of these, 28.6% were reversed. The national
average rate of appeal in 2021 was 6.7%, the average reversal rate was 27.7%; and
Kildare County Council had a total of 223 sites designated by local authorities as either
vacant and/or derelict. This contrasts with the CSO figure for the county of 4,560.1
Commenting on these findings, Planning Regulator, Niall Cussen said: “2021 was a
year in which local authorities such as Kildare County Council continued to deliver key statutory planning functions within strict timelines and in an operational environment
that was challenging due to public health restrictions imposed as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. "It is a great credit to the planning process in general that high levels of
throughput in handling planning applications and appeals continued despite the pressures. "While core planning functions continue to experience high volumes of activity, more
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is also being asked of local authorities. "2021 was also a year of very significant activity by local authorities in starting to implement funding streams aimed at securing urban
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