Ammon News - The competition had more entries than ever before, with 331 people putting their outbuilding up for the title.
A cocktail bar has beaten hundreds of entries - including a bra-fitting boutique and a fairytale castle - to win Shed Of The Year.
Social media influencer Danielle Zarb-Cousin's 1970s-inspired cocktail bar was chosen over 331 entries - the highest number of entries the competition has seen.
Named the Creme de Menthe, the shed is painted mint green and is complete with a retro bar area, seating and a bright orange interior.
The 29-year-old from Southend-on-Sea in Essex transformed her old rundown brown shed after splitting with her fiance, former Love Island star Jonny Mitchell last year.
She said the project "became a focus in a time of chaos" and the shed became a place she could "go and write and not be disturbed" after moving back in with her parents during lockdown.
The esteemed title comes with a £1,000 prize.
The contest included seven other categories, including the best cabin/summerhouse award, a budget category, and the nature's haven award.
Joanna van Blommestein from Faversham in Kent won the cabin/summerhouse category for her bra-fitting boutique, which she uses to help women who have undergone surgery.
The 33-year-old said: "Lots of people don't really enjoy bra fittings... it can be quite overwhelming or quite daunting. I just wanted to make it a lovely, relaxing, stress-free place."
A special lockdown prize was won by Mark Campbell from Wingerworth, Derbyshire, for the fairytale-inspired castle he created for his granddaughter.
The 60-year old said of the two-storey, 12ft pine creation: "It's amazing what you can do with a bit of enthusiasm".
Topping the unique category was John Williams' pop-up pub in his back garden in Plymouth, and a bird-watching sanctuary created by Rosie Hoult from Shrewsbury won the nature's haven prize.
Ally Scott, 48, produced the best workshop after turning her shed into a space to pursue her dream of becoming an artist and signwriter after the death of her mother last year.
"This shed has changed my life... I was a mess after my mother died, but this has given me back a buzz," she said.
The Peculiar Pear is decorated with lots of colourful nik-naks including garden gnomes, mushrooms, and Doctor Who's cybermen helmets.
The budget prize went to Les Rowe from New Brighton on the Wirral for his seven-side refuge, created using mostly second-hand materials, including stained glass windows recovered from a synagogue.
*SKY