Filmshoot / Permits
UK film
permit guides
Council-by-council rules for filming in public. Who issues the permit, what it costs, and how much notice to give. 87 guides covering England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
73
Councils
14
National bodies
9
Regions
UK-Wide Bodies
The Canal & River Trust manages over 2,000 miles of waterways across England and Wales, offering filming permits for towpaths, lock structures, and canal heritage.
Forestry England manages over 250,000 hectares of public woodland across England, offering filming permits for forest interiors, clearings, and heritage woodland infrastructure.
The National Trust manages over 500 historic houses, coastline, and countryside across England, Wales, and Northern Ireland — each property handles its own filming bookings.
London & South East England
Film London coordinates permits across all 32 London boroughs and the City of London through the London Filming Partnership, routing productions to the right borough officer.
Historic Royal Palaces manages location hire and filming across six royal sites including the Tower of London, Hampton Court Palace, and Kensington Palace.
The South Downs National Park Authority manages filming on NPA land across 100 miles of chalk downland; Arundel Castle, Seven Sisters, and town centres involve separate authorities.
The Royal Parks manages ten parks across London — including Hyde Park and Richmond Park — each requiring a separate filming permit from the Royal Parks commercial team.
Berkshire has no single unitary film office — filming is administered by each of the six unitary authorities (Bracknell Forest, Reading, Slough, West Berkshire, Windsor and Maidenhead, Wokingham). Windsor and Maidenhead covers the most filming activity, including Windsor Great Park and the riverside.
Brighton & Hove manages filming permits across the seafront, the Lanes, North Laine, and the South Downs coastal edge.
Buckinghamshire Council manages filming on public highways and council land; Waddesdon Manor, Cliveden, and Stowe are National Trust sites with separate permit processes.
East Suffolk Council manages filming on council land across the district, covering Southwold, Lowestoft, Aldeburgh, and the Suffolk coast — a popular stretch for period and coastal drama.
Hertfordshire County Council manages county highway filming; Hatfield House, Knebworth House, Elstree, and Leavesden Studios all have independent access arrangements.
Kent County Council handles filming on public highways and council land, with major heritage sites managed independently by English Heritage, National Trust, and private estates.
Camden covers Bloomsbury, Kings Cross, Camden Town, and Hampstead with standard London Filming Partnership processes.
Hackney covers Shoreditch, Dalston, Hackney, and Stoke Newington — popular for contemporary urban productions with accessible support for independent and student shoots.
Islington covers Angel, Highbury, Finsbury Park, and Clerkenwell — Georgian terraces and contemporary mixed-use streets close to production facilities.
Lambeth covers Brixton, Stockwell, Clapham, and Kennington with Brockwell Park as a flagship filming location.
Richmond upon Thames covers Twickenham, Richmond town, and the Thames riverside — popular for period productions in well-maintained green environments.
Southwark covers Borough Market, Bermondsey, Peckham, and Dulwich with a range of settings from Victorian railway arches to council estate exteriors.
Tower Hamlets covers Whitechapel, Bethnal Green, Bow, and Limehouse with diverse period and contemporary settings.
Wandsworth covers Clapham Junction, Battersea, Balham, and Putney, with Battersea Park as the borough's flagship filming location.
Luton Borough Council coordinates filming on council land across the town, including Luton Hoo estate approaches, the town centre, and Wardown Park.
Oxford City Council covers public streets and open spaces; University of Oxford colleges manage their own filming permissions independently.
Oxfordshire County Council manages county highway filming; Oxford's colleges each have independent protocols, and Blenheim Palace handles commercial filming separately.
Greenwich covers the historic maritime town, Woolwich, Blackheath, and Eltham with a mix of heritage and suburban settings.
Surrey Film Office manages highway filming permits and location support across Surrey, with a well-resourced dedicated service and published lead times.
Swale Borough Council handles filming permits for council land across the borough, covering Faversham, Sittingbourne, the Isle of Sheppey, and the North Kent Marshes — a growing area for coastal and period filming.
Wealden District Council manages filming across the East Sussex district, coordinating access from Ashdown Forest to Herstmonceux Castle and the Pevensey Levels.
Westminster covers central London's most-requested streets and public spaces with fixed fee schedules and a 24-hour filming enquiry service.
North West England
The Lake District National Park Authority manages filming on NPA land within the World Heritage Site; National Trust, United Utilities, and private landowners hold much of the key filming landscape.
Cheshire East Council manages filming permits on county highways and land, including direct management of Tatton Park as a separate events attraction.
Cheshire West and Chester Council manages filming on public highways and land; Chester Cathedral and the city's Roman walls involve separate heritage permissions.
Cumberland Council manages filming across the new unitary authority area, covering Carlisle's Border city centre and Whitehaven's Georgian harbour on the Cumbrian coast.
Lancaster City Council manages filming across the district, covering Lancaster's historic castle quarter and Morecambe's seafront promenade and Art Deco heritage.
Liverpool Film Office, Europe's first film office (est. 1989), manages all filming permissions on Liverpool City Council land and public highways.
Screen Manchester is Manchester's production-facing film office, coordinating location permissions, council liaison, road closures, traffic management, crew links, and facilities support.
North East England
City of York Council manages filming permits in the historic walled city, coordinating with York Minster, the Museums Trust, and English Heritage.
Durham County Council manages county highway and public land filming; Durham Cathedral, Beamish Museum, and Raby Castle are independently managed.
Leeds City Council's filming service covers streets, parks, and civic spaces with support from Screen Yorkshire for larger regional productions.
Film Newcastle supports productions on public land and streets, with unique Town Moor governance requiring Freemen of Newcastle consent for certain areas.
North Yorkshire Council manages filming permits across England's largest county, covering public highways, parks, and civic buildings.
Northumberland County Council handles filming permits for public land and highways across England's most northerly county, with major heritage sites independently managed.
Sheffield City Council supports production with competitive rates, covering the steel city's streets, parks, and civic buildings.
Midlands
The Peak District National Park Authority manages filming on NPA land; most land in the Park is privately owned and requires landowner permission in addition to NPA approval.
Birmingham Film Office facilitates filming across the UK's second largest city including its extensive canal network, civic buildings, and diverse residential streets.
Coventry offers distinctive post-war modernist architecture and wide public squares, managed through the council's filming service.
Derbyshire County Council handles filming on county highways and land; Chatsworth, Hardwick Hall, and Peak District moorland are separately managed.
Gloucestershire County Council manages filming on county highways and land, while Gloucester Cathedral, Woodchester Mansion, and the Cotswolds each fall under their own management.
Herefordshire Council manages filming across the county, from Hereford's Cathedral city centre to Eastnor Castle and the rural Marches landscape.
High Peak Borough Council manages filming across the district, from Chapel-en-le-Frith's medieval streets to Old Glossop's stone-built village at the edge of the Peak District.
Leicester City Council covers a diverse city centre, New Walk, and council parks — one of England's most culturally diverse filming environments.
Lincolnshire County Council manages filming on county highways and directly operates Lincoln Castle; Lincoln Cathedral and Stamford town centre require separate permissions.
North Northamptonshire Council manages filming permits for public highways and council land across Corby, Kettering, Wellingborough, and East Northamptonshire.
Nottingham City Council covers the Lace Market, Castle Quarter, and civic spaces — note the city's tram network requires early coordination for road closures.
Shropshire Council manages filming permits for county highways and public land, with Ironbridge Gorge and major heritage sites under independent management.
South West England
Bath & North East Somerset Council manages permits in the UNESCO World Heritage city, with complex heritage landowner structures and premium fees.
Bristol Film Office is Bristol City Council's production-facing service for filming permits, locations, parking suspensions, and council-managed locations.
Cornwall Council's Film Office manages filming across the county, from Charlestown's historic harbour to St Buryan and the Penwith coast, coordinating permits for council land, highways, and beaches.
Dorset Council manages filming across the unitary authority area, from the Jurassic Coast and West Bay to Athelhampton House and Hardy country.
Exeter City Council manages filming in city parks and public spaces; Exeter Cathedral Close requires a separate permit from the Dean and Chapter.
North Devon District Council manages filming on council land and public spaces across the district, coordinating access to Woolacombe Beach, Appledore, and the Heddon Valley on Exmoor's northern edge.
Plymouth City Council covers the Barbican, the Hoe, and the naval city's waterfront, with the Royal Citadel and Naval Base each requiring separate MOD permissions.
South Hams District Council manages filming across the South Devon coast and estuary country, covering Salcombe, Dartmouth, Burgh Island, and the South Devon AONB.
Wiltshire Council manages filming on county highways and land; Stonehenge, Lacock, Avebury, and Longleat all require separate permissions from English Heritage, the National Trust, or private owners.
Winchester City Council manages filming in city public spaces; Winchester Cathedral, Winchester College, and county highways require separate permissions.
East of England
Cambridge City Council covers public streets and open spaces; University of Cambridge colleges manage their own filming permissions for college buildings and The Backs.
Norfolk County Council manages county highway filming; the Broads Authority covers waterway locations, and Norwich city streets go through Norwich City Council.
Suffolk County Council manages filming on county highways and land; Ipswich, Aldeburgh, Lavenham, and Suffolk's heritage sites each fall under district councils or independent management.
Scotland
Loch Lomond and The Trossachs NPA manages filming via a direct online application form; no payment required until permission is confirmed.
Screen Scotland connects productions to councils, local film offices, NatureScot, Historic Environment Scotland, and other national partners for filming anywhere in Scotland.
Aberdeen City Council manages filming across Scotland's third city, covering granite streets, Union Street, and Marischal College.
Film Edinburgh is the production-facing office for Edinburgh, East Lothian, Midlothian, and the Scottish Borders, with current 2026 guidance and 2026-27 forms.
Dundee City Council supports production across Scotland's fourth city, including the regenerated V&A waterfront and the city's distinctive hillside streets.
Glasgow City Council's filming office supports productions on council-owned land, streets, and parks with competitive fees and supportive logistics.
The Highland Film Office manages filming permits across the UK's largest council area, co-ordinating road, planning, and civic permissions for productions in the Highlands.
Wales
Creative Wales connects productions to Welsh locations support, crew and facilities, studios, local authorities, Cadw, Natural Resources Wales, and other permission holders.
Eryri National Park Authority manages filming on NPA land in Snowdonia; most upland and mountain terrain is on private agricultural or Natural Resources Wales land requiring separate permissions.
Cardiff Film Office provides single-point contact for productions filming in the Welsh capital, covering council streets, parks, and civic buildings.
Gwynedd Council manages filming on county highways and land; Caernarfon Castle is Cadw-managed, and the Eryri (Snowdonia) National Park has a separate permit authority.
Pembrokeshire County Council manages filming on county highways and land; most coastal locations fall within the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, which has a separate permit process.
Swansea Council manages filming permits for Wales's second city, covering the waterfront, Gower access points, and city centre.
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland Screen coordinates filming support across NI, where public roads are managed by DfI Roads rather than individual councils.
Belfast City Council grants commercial filming permissions in its parks and open spaces with published hourly fee rates.
Missing a council?
These guides are updated regularly. If you need a permit for a council not yet covered, start with Film London for London boroughs or Screen Scotland for Scotland.