Where a tank can go, when you need a bunded tank, fire-separation distances and what Building Regulations actually require — explained without the jargon.
Oil tank rules exist for two reasons: fire safety and pollution prevention. Getting them wrong can mean a failed installation, an invalid insurance policy, or liability for cleaning up contaminated ground. This guide covers the key points for domestic tanks in England & Wales. Regulations are summarised here for guidance — a site survey confirms exactly what your specific site needs.
A bunded (double-skinned) tank is required if an site risk assessment identifies a pollution risk — and for most properties it does. You'll typically need bunded if:
To reduce fire risk, an oil tank must be a minimum distance from buildings and boundaries — or be protected by a fire barrier. The key distances are:
| From… | Minimum distance |
|---|---|
| A non-fire-rated building (e.g. timber) | 1.8 m |
| Eaves of a building | 1.8 m (below) / 0.6 m (above) |
| A non-fire-rated boundary (e.g. fence) | 1.8 m |
| Openings in a fire-rated building (doors/windows) | 1.8 m |
| Liquid fuel appliance flue terminals | 0.6 m |
If those distances can't be met, a 30-minute fire-rated barrier (e.g. a masonry wall or fire-rated tank) allows the tank to sit closer. We work this out for you on the survey.
Installing a new oil tank is notifiable under Building Regulations (Approved Document J). The simplest route is to use a registered competent installer, who can self-certify the work and notify Building Control on your behalf — no separate application, and you get a completion certificate for your records and insurer.
The core framework — industry technical guidance, Building Regulations Part J and the risk-assessment approach to bunding — has been in place for years and is periodically updated. The practical upshot today is that bunded tanks and proper fire separation are the norm, and DIY or uncertified installs can cause insurance and resale problems.
You can screen a tank for appearance (fencing, trellis, planting), but screening must not block ventilation, access for filling and inspection, or compromise fire separation. See our notes on tidy, compliant installation.
You need bunded if a risk assessment shows a spill could reach a watercourse, drain, borehole or hard surface, or if the tank holds over 2,500 litres. Most modern domestic installs require bunded.
Normally at least 1.8 m from non-fire-rated buildings and boundaries, otherwise a fire-rated barrier is required. A survey confirms the exact distances for your site.
Yes — it's notifiable. A registered competent installer can self-certify the work, avoiding a separate Building Control application.
Our engineers handle the regulations for you. Drop us a message and someone will come back to you as soon as possible.
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