Tipperary County spans a large area including Clonmel, Thurles, Nenagh, and Cashel. Planning disputes commonly involve one-off rural housing, agricultural developments, and commercial proposals affecting the amenity of established towns and villages.
5 weeks from date the council received the application — check the planning portal for the exact registration date
Fee
€20 payable to Tipperary County Council (separate from PlanningLetter.ie fee)
Development Plan
Tipperary County Development Plan 2022–2028 — your generated letter references the relevant objectives automatically
Generate your Tipperary objection letter now
Your letter will cite Section 37(1) of the Planning and Development Act 2000 and the relevant objectives of the Tipperary County Development Plan 2022–2028. Free preview — €9.99 to download the clean, submission-ready PDF.
Section 37(1) of the Planning and Development Act 2000 gives any person the legal right to make a submission on any planning application to Tipperary County Council — regardless of whether you own property or live adjacent to the site.
Tipperary County Council is legally required under Section 34(2)(a) to consider your objection before making its decision. A properly referenced letter citing specific planning policies carries significantly more weight than a general complaint.
Every citation in your letter links directly to irishstatutebook.ie — the official Irish government legislation database.
Common Questions
Do I need to live near the development to object? +
No. Section 37(1) of the Planning and Development Act 2000 gives any person the right to object — not just neighbours or landowners. You do not need a solicitor.
What is the deadline to object to Tipperary County Council? +
5 weeks from the date Tipperary County Council received the application — stated in Section 37(4) of the Planning and Development Act 2000. Check the planning portal for the exact registration date using your reference number.
Is there a fee to submit an objection? +
Yes — Tipperary County Council charges a statutory €20 fee under Regulation 29 of the Planning and Development Regulations 2001. This is paid directly to the council, separate from the PlanningLetter.ie fee of €9.99.
What if the council approves despite my objection? +
If you made a valid submission, you can appeal the decision to An Bord Pleanála within 4 weeks of the decision under Section 179 of the Planning and Development Act 2000. The appeal fee is approximately €220.