Thanks Spoon, I did think that was the case just can’t located the connection at this stage. It has 4 double sockets supplying basic equipment such as fridge etc. I guess 1.5mm would have been ok. I’ve heard the term “lollop circuit” used before but this would usually be the other way round i.e 4mm to 2.5.
Sounds like you've got the long and short of the situation.
The following is just a technical note.
The arrangement you describe in the house is fundamentally different from a lollipop circuit,* which is: 32A OCPD --> 4mm (or 6mm) --> 2.5mm ring - in terms of safety and risk of overload.
If it's OCPD --> 4mm --> 2.5mm ring then provided the usual rules for RFC are adhered to, such as spreading the loads around etc, it will not be overloaded. Other than potential confusion to future people carrying out inspection and testing - which can be mitigated by documentation, labelling, and making sure the top of the lollipop stick/the start of the ring is accessible for inspection and testing, it is no more dangerous than running the two ends of the ring back to the breaker/fuse.
However, the situation you describe - 32A OCPD --> 2.5mm ring --> 4mm spur --> several sockets - could lead to overloading, depending on where on the ring the 4mm spur is taken from. If it's on the middle of the ring (roughly equal resistances from the spur point back to the board) then no problem: the maximum current (32A) will be fine on the 4mm, and be split more or less equally down both legs of the 2.5mm ring. But if the 4mm spur is close to one end of the ring (i.e. relatively close to the DB), then the majority of the current will go down the short leg, overloading one leg of the 2.5mm ring.
While at the moment, and usually, there's not much draw on the sockets in the garage, you can't predict what might happen in the future. Perhaps one day somone will want a lot of heaters on in the garage (e.g. to help paint or varnish dry).
Next step find connection and if not in a FCU then either 1. Put one in or 2. Run 4mm back to CU on 20A OCPD.
Good man
* "Lollipop circuit" is not, as we all know, any sort of official or technical term, and as such some people frown on it. But we know what it means, and sometimes it's useful to use phrases that are not official and technical, as long as people can agree what they mean and understand them.