Dover

South East

In 2025/26, Dover received £579.87 in Section 106 developer contributions, spent £0, and held £11.8 million in unspent balances.

S106 Received

£579.87

2025/26

S106 Spent

£0

S106 Held

£11.8 million

% Spent

N/A

CIL Received

£0

CIL Spent

£0

CIL Held

£0

Breakdown by Purpose (2025/26)

PurposeReceivedSpentHeld
Health£0£0£0
Open Space & Recreation£17,115.13£0£0
Other£472£0£0

Trend Over Time

YearReceivedSpentHeld
2025/26£579.87£0£11.8 million
2024/25£902,339.12£993,040.99£11.8 million
2023/24£1.3 million£0£11.9 million
2022/23£1.3 million£458,022.96£10.6 million
2021/22£3.9 million£0£9.7 million
2020/21£2.1 million£0£5.8 million
2019/20£1.7 million£131,986£3.6 million
2018/19£434,493.17£0£2.1 million
2017/18£1.2 million£0£1.6 million
2016/17£169,986.24£0£410,906.79
2015/16£96,621.44£0£240,920.55
2014/15£10,422.62£0£144,299.11
2013/14£99,763.99£0£133,876.49
2012/13£34,112£0£34,112.5
2011/12£0.5£0£0.5

What is Section 106?

Under Section 106 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, developers pay contributions to local councils to offset the impact of new developments. This money funds affordable housing, schools, roads, parks, and health facilities. Read our complete guide.

Source: Dover Infrastructure Funding Statement

Frequently Asked Questions

How much Section 106 money has Dover collected?

In 2025/26, Dover received £579.87 in Section 106 contributions.

Does Dover charge CIL?

Based on our data, Dover does not currently charge the Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL).

Where does Dover publish its Infrastructure Funding Statement?

Dover's IFS is published on their website. You can view it directly or use our data above for a clearer summary.