Over my career, I’ve spent my days working directly alongside developers, contractors and local authorities, often in the messy middle between ambition, delivery, policy and client requirements. I’ve seen a real shift: social value has moved from being a ‘nice to have’ paragraph in a planning application statement to something more teams are trying to build into the way schemes are designed, procured and delivered.
Planning reform is reshaping how development is delivered across the UK. However, without clearer policy on social value in planning, outcomes will remain inconsistent, harder to measure and more difficult to scale across communities.
UK planning reform is evolving rapidly, with updates to the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) placing greater emphasis on design, placemaking and delivery.
Yet one key question remains: does planning policy provide enough clarity to ensure social value is delivered consistently?
In planning, social value refers to the wider benefits development creates — from jobs and skills to stronger local supply chains and improved community wellbeing. As its importance grows, clearer national policy will be essential to support consistent delivery.
Social value in planning focuses on delivering tangible, measurable outcomes for people and places, including:
Across the built environment, social value has evolved from a nice-to-have into a core part of sustainable development and placemaking.
With clear frameworks, it becomes easier to deliver, measure and scale - supporting long-term, place-based impact.
Despite growing recognition, social value is not always clearly defined in planning policy. It often sits within broader sustainability objectives, leaving interpretation to local authorities.
This creates practical challenges:
Without clearer national direction, delivery will remain uneven and difficult to scale.
Public sector procurement shows how social value can be embedded more consistently through clearer frameworks.
Established approaches provide:
These principles demonstrate how clearer policy can support more consistent and measurable outcomes.
To unlock the full potential of development, planning reform should:
The aim is not to add complexity, but to reduce ambiguity and support delivery.
The role of social value in future planning policy
Social value is central to creating resilient and sustainable places.
Giving it a clearer role within planning policy will help ensure more consistent delivery and stronger outcomes for communities, while increasing confidence across the sector.
To find out more about how Fusion21 delivers measurable social value, explore our social value services or contact our team.
Want to learn more?
This conversation will continue at UKREiiF 2026, where Lauren Mannix will chair a panel on: Beyond Faster Decisions: Planning Reform, Partnership and Social Value
Wednesday 20 May, 2:00–3:00pm