Log Cabins

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Garden cabins turn a corner of the lawn into a proper second room. We list a curated selection here from Robert Dyas, The Range, Buy Sheds Direct and other UK retailers. read more…

44 Log Cabins from 4 UK Retailers in May ’26

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Garden cabins turn a corner of the lawn into a proper second room. We list a curated selection here from Robert Dyas, The Range, Buy Sheds Direct and other UK retailers.

What to look for

Our garden cabins listing covers the £150 to £19,749 bracket. The cladding spec is what decides longevity: 12mm overlap is the entry tier, 12-22mm tongue-and-groove is the practical mid-range, 28mm-plus is the Premium log-cabin spec. Pressure-treated timber outlasts dipped or brush-applied alternatives by years. Most British households want pressure-treated 12-22mm T&G as the right answer.

Brands to know in this category

The brands that show up most often in our garden cabins listing are Palmako, Forest Garden and Traditional.

The retailers we list

Buy Sheds Direct stocks the deepest selection in this category, with around 40 listings. Robert Dyas covers around 10 listings. Other retailers worth filtering by include The Range (6) and Cherry Lane Garden Centres (1).

Filter the grid above by colour, material or price to narrow things down. Prices update daily.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need planning permission for a garden log cabin?
Most domestic garden cabins under 2.5m total height (sitting under 2m from the boundary) fall under Permitted Development rules in England and do not need full planning permission. Larger or taller cabins, anything closer to the boundary, and any cabin in a conservation area, listed-building grounds or AONB do need to apply. Always check with the local planning office before ordering.
What base does a log cabin need?
A level concrete slab, 100mm thick on a 100mm sub-base of compacted hardcore, is the universal answer for cabins up to 4m by 3m. Paving slabs on a sand bed work for smaller cabins (under 3m by 2m) on solid ground. The base must extend 50mm past the cabin footprint on every side and sit dead level, within 5mm corner-to-corner.
Can you use a garden log cabin year-round?
For an office or hobby room, yes, with 28mm-plus tongue-and-groove cladding, insulated floor and roof, double-glazed windows and a damp-proof course under the base. Standard 19mm to 22mm cabins are summer-only; without insulation they sit at outdoor temperature in winter. Permanent residential use is a separate planning question, usually a no in a garden.
How long does a garden log cabin last?
Pressure-treated 28mm cabins from Palmako, Forest Garden and similar tier brands carry 10 to 15-year structural guarantees and typically last 20-plus years with annual re-coating. Thinner 12mm to 19mm dipped-treatment cabins run 10 to 12 years. The roof felt is the first thing to fail; budget for re-felting every 7 to 10 years.
Can you put electrics in a garden log cabin?
Yes, but the supply must be installed by a Part P registered electrician. Most retailers do not pre-wire cabins because the cable run from the house is a site-specific job. Budget £400 to £900 for a basic circuit (sockets and lighting). Heating loads like an electric heater or heat pump need a dedicated circuit and may need a consumer-unit upgrade.