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Highway licensing - advertising boards, shop displays, and tables and chairs
Apply for a licence to display advertising or have tables and chairs outside your business.
Items on the public highway such as advertising boards, shop displays, tables and chairs, planters and pots are licensed or monitored by the Highway Enforcement Team.
The team is working with disabled people, traders' associations, access groups and others to achieve a compromise between all users of the highway. This allows certain items to be placed on the street while still protecting access rights and improving safety.
Where we do it
The Highway Enforcement Team only has jurisdiction over the public highway. It has no authority over the very many patches of private or council property that adjoin the highway. It has no say in advertising or billboards on private land.
For control purposes, all tables and chairs placed on the public highway in the city need to have a pavement licence. For advertising boards and shop displays, we only enforce the licensing of items on the highway in the main shopping or busiest areas of the city and some side roads running off these. This includes, but is not limited to:
Church Road, Hove
George Street, Hove
Kings Road, Brighton
London Road shopping area to Preston Circus
North Laine area
North Street
Palmeira Square
Preston Street
Queens Road
Rottingdean Village Centre
Seven Dials area
St James’s Street area of Kemptown
The Lanes
West Street
Western Road
York Place
All traders in these areas who want to put things on the public highway need to have written permission (a licence). These licences specify where items can be placed and the maximum area that can be taken up..
On some sites metal studs or markings in paint/tape help to show the limits of licensed areas or the positions of boards. The positions are based upon the best possible compromise between the needs and rights of all highway users.
Regular visits by the council's Highway Enforcement Officers take place in all these areas to check that traders have a licence and are operating under its conditions.
The licensed highway
Items placed on the public highway outside of these areas do not normally require a formal licence, however the placement and quantity of items should follow the principles of the licensing conditions. In other words, we would not allow tables and chairs to restrict the footway to less than 1.5m.
Because of the topography and history of the city, many public pavements are narrow. However, we will not license items on the public highway if there is less than 1.5m remaining. This measurement should leave a safe clear width of pavement for a wheelchair or double-buggy.
Please note that the Highway Enforcement Team has no authority over licences for buskers, street traders or pedlars. Street traders' licences and other permissions (for stalls not associated with shops, burger vans, charity collections and so on) are dealt with by the Environmental Health and licensing team. More information can be found on our Street Trading page.