North West loft conversions: add a bedroom upstairs without losing the garden.
Family-run loft conversion specialist across Greater Manchester, Lancashire and the wider North West. Rooflight from £14k. Full mansards up to £75k. Fixed-price, written-in-1-working-day, no deposit.
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Sixteen ways we've turned dead loft space into rooms people actually live in.
Most lofts are just storage for Christmas decorations and the suitcases you use twice a year. Here's what they're really good for.
Don't see what you're picturing? We've probably done it. Give us a call and we'll tell you straight whether your loft will take it.
Loft conversion costs — honest, fixed, written.
Realistic 2026 prices for a standard North West home, including structural calcs, Building Regs, full insulation, staircase and finished room. Every quote agreed in writing after a free on-site survey.
Rooflight / Velux
- Velux skylights into existing roof slope
- Best where head height already works
- No external roof changes — quickest route
- Full insulation, plaster, finished flooring
- New staircase + balustrade to Building Regs
- Building Regs submission and sign-off
Dormer
- Box dormer extending out from the rear roof slope
- Massive boost to floor area & head height
- Standard windows + door-height ceilings
- Ensuite-ready (plumbing included on most jobs)
- New staircase + balustrade to Building Regs
- Building Regs + planning prep if needed
Hip-to-Gable
- Hipped roof rebuilt into a vertical gable wall
- Adds substantial floor area at the side
- Pairs brilliantly with a rear dormer (combo build)
- Master suite + ensuite + walk-in wardrobe spec
- Structural calcs & steel beams included
- Planning permission usually required
Full Mansard
- Roof structure rebuilt with near-vertical walls
- Maximum useable floor area & head height
- Effectively a new top storey to your home
- Premium spec — master suite + family bath
- Full structural rebuild + steel beams
- Planning permission required
Is a loft conversion the right call for you?
We'd rather tell you it's not a fit than sell you a project you'll regret. Here's the honest answer.
A loft conversion makes sense if…
- Your loft has at least 2.2m head height at the ridge (peak) — we'll check at the free survey
- You need an extra bedroom (or two) and don't want to lose your garden
- You'd rather invest £30k–£55k once than spend £400k+ moving house
- The kids are sharing and growing fast — you need to split them up
- You want a master suite with ensuite, dressing area and proper privacy
- You're working from home and need an office that's really separated from family life
- You want to add 15–25% to the value of your home in 6–10 weeks
It's probably not the right fit if…
- Your loft head height is under 2.2m — you'd need a roof raise, which often doesn't make the maths work
- Your home is listed or in a tight conservation area (possible but adds significant time/cost)
- You're a bungalow with a shallow-pitch roof and no possibility of dormer or rebuild
- You only need one small extra room and the ground floor has unused space worth refurbishing first
- You're hoping for a sub-£10k conversion — we won't pretend the maths works on a habitable, regs-signed-off loft
- Your roof needs full replacement first — better to budget those together rather than convert under a tired roof
What's actually in your Wolsten quote.
One itemised quote, one fixed price, one crew start to finish. Here's exactly what you're paying for — and the few scenarios that carry an extra line item.
Always included (every conversion)
- Free on-site survey with a fixed written quote within 1 working day
- Architectural drawings and structural engineer calculations
- Building Regulations submission, inspections and sign-off
- Party Wall Notices drafted for neighbours (semi/terrace properties)
- Scaffolding erected and managed throughout the build
- Structural steel beams (purlins, ridge supports) where required
- New loft floor — joists, deck, sound-deadening underlay
- Stud walls built to plan with full insulation
- Velux rooflights or dormer construction as per spec
- Full roof, wall & ceiling insulation to current Building Regs U-values
- Plasterboard, skim, two-coat paint throughout
- New staircase built to current Building Regs spec (rise, going, headroom)
- Balustrade and handrail finished to your chosen style
- FD30 fire doors on all new doorways into the loft
- Interlinked smoke alarms on every floor (Building Regs requirement)
- Full electrical installation — sockets, lighting, switches, heating control
- Central heating extension — radiators plumbed in to existing system
- Finished flooring (LVT, laminate or carpet of your choice)
- Full site clean-down, waste removal and roof tile clear-up
- Walkthrough and aftercare documents before handover
Things that can add cost
- Ensuite or family bathroom in the loft (£4k–£10k depending on spec)
- Hip-to-gable side rebuild on top of a standard dormer (£10k–£15k uplift)
- Premium dormer cladding (zinc, slate, render) vs standard tile-hung
- Bi-fold doors or a Juliet balcony off the rear dormer
- Bespoke fitted wardrobes and eaves storage
- Underfloor heating in lieu of radiators
- Asbestos removal on older properties (rare, surveyed pre-quote)
- Major roof works if existing roof needs replacing alongside the conversion
- Planning permission fees (we handle the submission; Council fees are your responsibility)
Loft conversion vs the alternatives.
Two quick comparisons — one on the project itself, one on who you hire to do it.
Loft conversion vs moving house
| Factor | Moving house | Loft conversion |
|---|---|---|
| Cost to gain an extra bedroom | £80k–£200k+ (stamp duty, fees, deposit, removal) | ✓ £14k–£55k |
| Timescale | 6–12 months (find, offer, complete, move) | ✓ 6–12 weeks on site |
| Hassle | Estate agents, solicitors, chains, packing | ✓ Stay where you are |
| Garden & neighbours | You leave both behind | ✓ Both stay exactly as they are |
| Footprint impact | New land, new build | ✓ Uses existing roof void — zero footprint change |
| Value added (typical) | 0% (you spent it all on moving) | ✓ 15–25% uplift on resale |
| Disruption | Total upheaval of family life | Contained — most clients stay in the property throughout |
| Best for | Wanting a totally different area, much larger plot, or moving for schools | ✓ Adding 1–2 bedrooms + bathroom in the home you already love |
Wolsten vs a cheap installer vs national chain
| What you get | Cheap installer | National chain | Wolsten |
|---|---|---|---|
| Building Regs handled end-to-end | × Often "your problem" | ✓ | ✓ Included & signed off |
| One crew, same faces, start to finish | × Subbed to multiple trades | × Crew rotates per phase | ✓ Liam, Ryan, Paul on site |
| Founder on site every day | × | × Sales rep visits, not founders | ✓ |
| Fixed written quote in 1 working day | Rare — "estimate" | 5–10 days, often with high-pressure tactics | ✓ |
| No deposit required | × Usually 25–50% | × Deposit + stage payments | ✓ Pay on milestones |
| £2M public liability insurance | Varies | ✓ | ✓ |
| Direct line to the people doing the work | Mostly | × Goes through site manager | ✓ Liam answers his own phone |
| 2-year aftercare from the same crew | Rarely | Call-centre based, slow | ✓ |
Simple. Transparent. Done properly.
Same five-step playbook on every job — whether it's a £14k rooflight conversion or a £75k mansard. See the full Wolsten Way →
Free survey
On-site visit, head-height check at the ridge, honest read on which conversion type fits.
Written quote
Within 1 working day. Itemised, fixed, in writing. Drawings included.
Schedule & plan
Building Regs & planning submitted. Start date locked in. Week-by-week plan handed to you.
Hands-on build
One of the three of us on site every day. No subcontractors.
Walkthrough
We sweep up, walk you through, hand over sign-off and aftercare docs.
From bare roof void to king-sized bedroom.
Warrington, Cheshire — a totally unconverted Victorian-era attic with exposed brick gable and bare rafters, transformed into a fully insulated, plastered, carpeted master bedroom.




Rooflight Loft Conversion · Warrington
The homeowner — Amanda and Graham — needed a proper king-sized bedroom upstairs but didn't want to lose any of their garden space to an extension. The existing attic was completely raw: exposed brick gable wall, bare rafters, old loose insulation, no floor worth standing on. Total transformation, full structural rebuild and fit-out.
The four shots above walk you through the whole journey — from the raw "before" (the Victorian attic void as we found it), through the structural stage (first-fix carpentry, new stud walls, floor framed), into fresh-plaster progress (warm pink plaster with the Velux installed and natural light streaming in for the first time), to the finished bedroom Amanda and Graham now sleep in. We show the build because that's where the quality is — anyone can fake the after shot.
- Project
- Raw attic → king-sized rooflight bedroom
- Location
- Warrington, Cheshire
- Type
- Rooflight / Velux conversion
- Spec
- Velux skylights + full insulation + new staircase
The staircase is the bit most quotes underestimate.
It's the most technically demanding part of any loft conversion — and the part cheap installers cut corners on first.
Why staircases make or break a loft conversion
Building Regs are unforgiving on stair specs — minimum 2m headroom over every tread, exact rise/going ratios, balustrade height, fire-rated routing. On older terraces and semis, fitting a regs-compliant staircase into an existing landing footprint takes real craft, not a kit drop-in.
Paul leads every Wolsten staircase installation personally. Master joiner, thirty years on the tools — every cut, every riser, every newel post is done on site to fit the property's exact dimensions, not pulled off a shelf.
"Would recommend. Very happy with the loft; the guys were always on time, polite and never left mess. The double winder staircase was a challenge with the space and access but Paul fit it with incredible skill! Thanks." — Liam Farrell, Google Review
Loft conversions across the North West.
The three of us on every job.
You won't deal with a sales rep or a call centre. Liam, Ryan or Paul is on site every day of your build.

Liam
Runs the surveys, writes the quotes, project-manages every loft from drawings to handover. Qualified electrician — handles every electrical first-fix and second-fix personally.

Ryan
Time-served bricklayer specialising in dormer construction and gable rebuilds. Handles all external brickwork, blockwork and rendering on every conversion.

Paul
Master joiner with thirty years on the tools. Leads every staircase installation, eaves storage build and bespoke finished joinery on every Wolsten loft.
Covering Greater Manchester, Lancashire & Cheshire.
Based in Westhoughton, Bolton. Most jobs within a 45-minute drive — close enough to know the local planning quirks and to pop back after handover if anything ever needs a second look.
Manchester & Salford M1–M9, M11–M28, M30–M46, M50
Wigan & Leigh WN1–WN8
Oldham & Rochdale OL1–OL12, OL15, OL16
Stockport SK1–SK8, SK14–SK16
Preston & Chorley PR1, PR2, PR5–PR7, PR25, PR26
Warrington WA1–WA5, WA12–WA14
What our loft customers say.
"Would recommend. Very happy with the loft; the guys were always on time, polite and never left mess. The double winder staircase was a challenge with the space and access but Paul fit it with incredible skill! Thanks."
"We are so happy with the new king-sized room we have. We should have done it sooner, but kept getting let down until we found Wolsten, and Liam. From the initial visit, and then the drawings they produced — the price also stayed the same, an actual fixed price! Would highly recommend."
Every review we've ever had on Google has been five stars. See them all and read the full feedback from past loft, garage, refurbishment and landscaping clients.
Read all reviews →Straight answers to what people actually ask.
How much does a loft conversion cost in the North West?
It depends entirely on which conversion type your loft suits. A rooflight (Velux-only) conversion starts at £14k and typically runs up to £35k. A standard rear dormer is £20k–£55k. Hip-to-gable conversions £45k–£60k. Full mansards £55k–£75k. Every Wolsten quote is fixed in writing after a free on-site survey — the price you see is the price you pay.
How long does a loft conversion take?
A rooflight conversion typically takes 3–6 weeks on site. A standard dormer: 6–9 weeks. Hip-to-gable: 8–11 weeks. Full mansard: 10–12 weeks. Building Regs sign-off happens at the end and is usually within a week of completion. Planning permission (where required) adds 8–10 weeks before any work starts on site.
Do I have enough head height for a loft conversion?
The rule of thumb: you need at least 2.2m head height at the ridge (peak) for a rooflight conversion to work without modification. Below that, you're looking at a dormer (which adds head height in a portion of the loft), or a full hip-to-gable / mansard which rebuilds the roof structure. We measure at the free survey and give you a straight answer on which conversion type fits before quoting.
Rooflight vs dormer vs hip-to-gable vs mansard — what's the difference?
Rooflight: Velux skylights cut into the existing roof slope. No external roof changes. Cheapest, fastest — works where head height is already good.
Dormer: a "box" structure built out from the rear roof slope, with vertical walls and a flat roof. Adds substantial floor area and gives proper head height throughout the loft. The most popular conversion type by far.
Hip-to-gable: the side "hipped" portion of the roof is rebuilt into a vertical gable wall, adding floor area at the side. Often paired with a rear dormer for a master suite.
Mansard: the entire roof structure is rebuilt with near-vertical sides, effectively adding a new top storey. Maximum floor area and head height. Premium spec, planning required.
Do I need planning permission?
Rooflight conversions and most standard rear dormers are permitted development — no planning needed. Hip-to-gable and mansards almost always require full planning permission. Conservation areas, listed buildings and properties with restrictive Article 4 directions remove permitted development rights, meaning planning is required for all loft work. We'll flag any planning requirement at the free survey and handle the submission for you.
Do I need Building Regulations approval?
Yes — always, without exception, for any habitable loft conversion. Building Regs cover structural integrity, insulation, fire safety (interlinked smoke alarms, FD30 doors, escape routing), staircase compliance, ventilation and electrics. Wolsten handles the full submission, inspections and sign-off — that's included in your fixed quote, no separate Council fees to manage.
Will a loft conversion add value to my house?
Yes, typically. A well-built loft conversion adding a double bedroom + ensuite adds 15–25% to a typical North West home's value — usually significantly more than the cost of the conversion itself. The biggest value uplift comes from converting a two-bed house to three-bed, or three-bed to four-bed, where the next bracket up matters most to the local market.
What's actually in a Building-Regs-compliant loft staircase?
Building Regs (Part K) require: minimum 2m headroom above every tread, rise no greater than 220mm, going no less than 220mm, total pitch no steeper than 42°, balustrade 900mm high (1.1m at landings), gaps no greater than 100mm. On older terraces and semis, fitting a compliant staircase into the existing landing footprint is genuinely the most technical part of the whole job. Paul leads every Wolsten staircase install personally — built on site to fit, not pulled off a shelf.
Can I add an ensuite to my loft conversion?
Yes, on almost any loft type. Plumbing extends from the existing bathroom or kitchen stack below; soil-pipe routing usually runs through a stud wall in the loft or down through an eaves cupboard. Cost typically adds £4k–£10k depending on spec (basic shower room vs full-tiled ensuite with vanity). We design the layout at the quote stage so the bathroom sits over a load-bearing wall and minimises pipe runs.
What about insulation, soundproofing and heating?
A proper Wolsten loft includes full insulation to current Building Regs U-values — typically 100mm PIR between rafters + 50mm under-rafter for the roof slopes, 100mm in stud walls, and acoustic underlay under the floor deck for sound separation from below. Heating extends from the existing system — usually one or two new radiators sized to the room. The end result feels exactly like any other room in the house: warm, dry, properly built.
Will my existing roof need replacing?
For a rooflight or dormer conversion, no — we work with the existing roof structure. For hip-to-gable or mansard, we're rebuilding the roof anyway as part of the conversion. If your existing roof is at end-of-life (heavy moss, slipped tiles, sagging timbers), it's worth budgeting a re-roof alongside the conversion rather than converting under a tired roof — we'll flag this at the survey if relevant.
What about party walls if I'm in a semi or terrace?
If your conversion involves any work on the shared wall (cutting in steel beams, raising the gable, building a dormer that touches the party line), you'll need to serve a Party Wall Notice to the neighbour at least two months before work starts. Wolsten drafts the notices for you and includes them in your quote process. Most neighbours sign immediately. If they dissent, a party wall surveyor is appointed — typically £600–£1,200 extra, paid by you.
How disruptive is the build day-to-day?
Less than you'd think. Most of the noisy structural work happens in the first 1–2 weeks (opening up the roof, fitting steels). After that it's largely contained to the loft itself — first-fix, insulation, plasterboard, plastering. The dustiest day is when we cut through the ceiling for the new staircase opening (we sheet everything below). Most clients stay in the property throughout — we work around school runs and bedtimes where it matters.
How much value does an ensuite add vs a plain bedroom loft?
By resale value, a bedroom + ensuite typically adds significantly more than a plain bedroom — often £15k–£30k more in a typical North West market for the same conversion type. The ensuite costs £4k–£10k extra to build. So if you're already converting, the ensuite is almost always worth doing.
What the loft quote actually means.
Every loft quote is full of terms that sound technical for the sake of it. Here's what they mean in plain English — so when you compare three quotes side by side, you can tell which one's actually specifying quality.
Rooflight / Velux
A window cut into the existing roof slope. "Velux" is technically a brand name but has become the generic term. Quickest and cheapest way to add light to a loft conversion — no external structural change.
Dormer
A "box" structure built out from the existing roof slope with vertical walls and a flat or pitched roof. Hugely increases head height and floor area. Most common loft conversion type in the North West.
Hip-to-Gable
The sloping "hipped" side of a roof is rebuilt vertically into a gable wall (a flat wall going up to the ridge). Adds substantial floor area at the side of the loft.
Mansard
The entire roof is rebuilt with near-vertical sides and a flat top, creating maximum floor area and head height. Effectively adds a full new storey. Planning required.
Purlin
A horizontal timber beam running the length of the roof that supports the rafters. Often needs reinforcing or replacing with steel during a loft conversion to free up usable space.
Ridge beam
The horizontal timber or steel beam that runs along the peak of the roof, supporting the tops of the rafters. May need upgrading during conversion depending on the new load.
Steel beam (RSJ)
Structural steel beams are almost always required in loft conversions — replacing existing ceiling joists (now your floor joists), supporting new dormers, or carrying purlin loads. Properly sized by a structural engineer, not eyeballed.
Trimmer
A short joist or beam that frames around an opening — most commonly around the new staircase hole or the new dormer opening. Spreads the load that would otherwise have run through the joists you cut.
Headroom (2m / 2.2m)
Building Regs require minimum 2m headroom over every staircase tread and at the head of the stairs. Most rooflight conversions want at least 2.2m head height at the ridge to work without dormer alterations.
Balustrade
The handrail-and-spindle barrier along the side of the staircase and the landing edge. Building Regs require it to be at least 900mm high, with gaps no greater than 100mm.
FD30 fire door
A 30-minute fire-rated door. Required by Building Regs on every door opening into the new loft room and on every existing door off the stairwell hall on the floors below — fire-safe escape route.
Interlinked smoke alarms
Mains-powered smoke alarms that talk to each other — one going off sets all of them off. Required on every floor of the house once a loft conversion is signed off (Building Regs Part B fire safety).
U-value
The measure of how well a wall, roof or floor holds heat. Lower = better insulation. Current Building Regs require U-values of 0.16–0.18 W/m²K for loft roofs and walls. Wolsten always meets or exceeds.
Party Wall Notice
A formal written notice served to your neighbour at least two months before any structural work on a shared wall. Required for almost all dormer / hip-to-gable / mansard conversions in semi-detached or terraced properties.
Loft conversions in your town.
Looking for details specific to your area? Jump to the local page for pricing examples, recent jobs and team notes.
Ready to turn your loft into the room you need?
Free survey, fixed written quote in 1 working day, no deposit, no pressure. If you're not sure which conversion type your loft suits, we'll measure at the survey and tell you straight — no obligation.




