Once you get past price and planning, the biggest decision in a garden room build is how the walls, roof and floor are actually made. The choice usually comes down to SIPs vs timber frame, the two systems almost every UK supplier uses. Both make a warm, durable room, but they get there differently, and the right pick depends on your budget, how you plan to use the room and how much you care about squeezing out every last degree of warmth. This guide compares them on thermal performance, cost, speed, space and longevity so you can brief a supplier with confidence.
What each construction method is
A timber frame garden room is built like a modern house wall: a skeleton of timber studs, usually 90mm to 140mm deep, with insulation fitted between and often over the studs, then sheathed, clad outside and lined inside. It is the traditional, flexible approach and the one most local builders know. A structural insulated panel, or SIP, is a factory-made sandwich: two rigid boards, typically oriented strand board, bonded either side of a solid insulating core. The panel is both structure and insulation in one, so the wall is continuous rather than a frame with gaps to fill. SIPs arrive cut to size and go up fast, while timber frame is more often built and insulated on site.
Thermal performance and airtightness
This is where SIPs have historically had the edge. Because the insulation is a solid, continuous core with very few gaps, a SIP wall suffers less thermal bridging, where heat escapes through the timber studs, and it is naturally more airtight. SIP panels commonly reach airtightness levels two to three times better than a standard timber frame, which means less draught and heat loss and a room that holds its temperature longer once warm. Modern timber frame has closed much of that gap: with high-performance insulation boards, a proper breather membrane and taped joints, a well-detailed timber frame room can hit excellent U-values too. The difference is consistency. SIPs deliver strong performance almost by default, whereas timber frame depends heavily on how carefully it is insulated and sealed on site.
Cost, speed and space
Timber frame is usually the cheaper of the two up front, because the materials are standard and widely available and most builders can work with it. SIPs carry a higher material cost and often need a specialist supplier, though the factory-cut panels go up quickly, and a SIP shell can be weathertight in a day or two, which can trim labour. There is also a space argument. Because a SIP wall achieves a given insulation value in a thinner build-up, it can gain you a little more internal floor area for the same external footprint, which matters on a small plot or when you are working to a permitted-development size limit. Over the life of the room, the better airtightness of SIPs can also mean slightly lower heating bills, so part of the higher price can come back over time.
Durability and everyday use
Both systems last for decades when built and maintained properly. A quality timber frame room with good insulation, a sound membrane and decent cladding will serve for 20 years or more. SIPs are rigid and strong, resist racking and sagging well, and the continuous core leaves fewer voids for cold spots. The one thing every garden room lives or dies by, whatever the walls are made of, is keeping water out and moisture under control: a good roof, proper detailing and ventilation matter more to longevity than the panel choice. For how the whole build fits together from the ground up, see our guide to how a garden room is built.
Which should you choose?
Choose timber frame if budget is the priority, you want to use a trusted local builder, or you are happy that careful on-site insulation and sealing will get you the performance you need. Choose SIPs if year-round warmth and low running costs are near the top of your list, you want the room up quickly, or you need to claw back a little extra internal space on a tight plot. For a garden office you will use every day through a British winter, the airtightness of SIPs is a genuine benefit; for an occasional studio or a build where cost rules, a well-made timber frame room is hard to beat on value. Whichever you pick, the quality of the detailing and the installer matters more than the badge on the panel.
A quick word on building regulations
Construction method does not change the planning and building-control rules, but they are worth knowing before you build. A garden room used as ancillary space is normally exempt from building regulations if its internal floor area is under 15 square metres. Between 15 and 30 square metres it is usually still exempt provided it sits at least one metre from any boundary or is built substantially from non-combustible materials. Over 30 square metres, or if anyone will sleep in it, building regulations apply. The official position on outbuildings and permitted development is set out on the Planning Portal, and it is sensible to confirm your specific case before committing to a size or a spec.
Frequently asked questions
Are SIPs better than timber frame for a garden room?
SIPs generally offer better airtightness and more consistent insulation with less thermal bridging, so they excel for year-round, everyday use. Timber frame is cheaper and more flexible and, when carefully insulated and sealed, can perform very well too. Neither is universally better; it depends on your priorities.
Are SIP garden rooms more expensive?
Usually yes, up front. SIP panels cost more than standard timber-frame materials and often need a specialist supplier. The gap can narrow over time through faster build times and lower heating bills, but timber frame is typically the cheaper starting point.
Do SIPs make a warmer garden room?
They tend to, because the continuous insulated core reduces heat loss through gaps and studwork and is more airtight, so the room holds its warmth longer. A well-detailed timber frame room with high-performance insulation can achieve similar warmth, but it relies more on the quality of the on-site work.
Which method is quicker to build?
SIPs are usually faster to erect because the panels are cut to size in a factory and a shell can be weathertight in a day or two. Timber frame is more often built and insulated on site, which can take a little longer, though overall timescales depend on the supplier and the finish.
Does the construction method affect planning permission?
No. Planning permission and permitted-development rules depend on the size, height and position of the room, not whether it is SIPs or timber frame. Building regulations can be affected by size and use, so check the thresholds and your boundary distances before you build.
For more on choosing, costing and planning a garden building, explore the guides on the Best Garden Room home page.
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