Applicant's guide: Higher Tier Capital Grants 2026
Published 5 January 2026
Applies to England
1.ÌýImportant dates
The Higher Tier Capital Grants is open for applications all year from 5 January 2026.
You can also apply forÌýother capital grants.
Higher Tier Capital Grants are available to a wide range of farmers and land managers.
2.ÌýAbout Higher Tier Capital Grants
These grants are standalone capital grants that can also be used to support and complement:
-
Countryside Stewardship (CS) Higher Tier (last agreements issued 1 January 2024)
-
CS Mid Tier and Wildlife Offers (last agreements issued 1 January 2024)
-
CSHT (Countryside Stewardship Higher Tier agreements starting from 2025)
-
Environmental Stewardship (ES) Higher Level Stewardship
-
SFI agreements
You can also apply for Higher Tier Capital Grants on land not being managed in an agreement.
Higher Tier Capital Grants offer 3-year agreements for capital items. They provide additional environmental benefits without the need for ²¹ÌýCountryside Stewardship Higher Tier agreement.
You can apply for ²¹ÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants agreement any time after applications open on 5 January 2026.
You need to discuss your application with a Natural England adviser before you submit it. They will help you to apply for the capital items best suited to your needs. Please email enquiries@naturalengland.org.ukÌýand include ‘Standalone Higher Tier Capital Grants Query for Natural England’ in the email subject heading. A Natural England adviser will then call you or email you.
If you are applying for woodland-only Higher Tier capital items, the Forestry Commission will assess your initial application. If you pass the administrative checks, a Forestry Commission officer will work with you to complete a final version.
Historic England advisers may contact you to provide advice if you are applying for item HE1: Historic and archaeological feature protection.
If your application is successful, the Rural Payments Agency (RPA) will offer you an agreement. If you accept the offer, you will enter into an agreement with the RPA.
Applications will stay open until the funding is allocated.
New agreements cannot contain parcels that already have capital works that are incomplete or have not received their final payment.
2.1ÌýGrants that are available
This scheme offers specialist Higher Tier capital items to help support our most environmentally significant sites and woodlands.
2.2ÌýCapital items available
There are 54 capital items – 18 actual cost items and 36 fixed cost items. You can find more information in section 5.1 and 5.2. TheÌýCapital grant finderÌýgives a description and essential requirements for each capital item. This includes eligibility and evidence requirements.
2.3ÌýWhat the grant cannot pay for
You cannot use the grant to pay for:
- any capital works started (or materials purchased) before the agreement start date
- planning application fees or other transactional fees
- agent fees or other advisory fees
- meeting legal requirements, including planning conditions and tenancy agreements
- woodland creation for short rotation coppice or short rotation forestry
- in-kind contributions (this means the value of donated work or services) or gifted materials where you have not incurred a cost for them
3.ÌýWho can apply and what land is eligible
Higher Tier Capital Grants are open to land managers who are:
- an owner occupier
- a tenant
- a landlord
- a licensor if they have management control of the land and activities needed to meet the obligations of the grant for the full duration of the agreement
3.1ÌýLand that is eligible
To be eligible for ²¹ÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants agreement, land parcels must be entirely within England and you must have management control of the relevant parcels as set out in section 3.3.
The following land parcels may also be eligible:
- those included in a Forestry Commission approved woodland management plan or woodland creation plan
- those in ²¹Ìýsite of special scientific interest (SSSI)Ìýor with a scheduled monument, including the boundaries of these sites
- those already included in anotherÌýCSÌýagreement or in anÌýESÌýHigher Level Stewardship agreement, if the same item is not being funded twice, there is sufficient space in the parcel, and the options or actions and items are compatible with each other
- common land and shared grazing governed by an existing common land, shared grazing and commons association, for more information read annex C of the Countryside Stewardship Higher Tier (CSHT) applicant’s guide
3.2ÌýLand that is not eligible
You cannot use Higher Tier Capital Grants on:
- developed land and hard standing, including permanent caravan sites and areas used for permanent storage, except yards, tracks and farm buildings eligible for capital items
- land that is already included in certain other schemes or under obligation (read section 3.3.6)
3.3ÌýManagement control of land
Having management control means you’re the person actively farming the land and you’re either:
- the owner occupier
- a tenant
- in a group that farms on common land (including areas of shared grazing)
You must have management control of the land in an agreement for 5 years from the starting date of your agreement, or the countersignature of your landlord (see section 3.3.1).
This includes:
- all activities needed to meet the grant payment
- keeping all capital items funded through this scheme in the condition and to the specification set out in your agreement for the 5 years. This is known as the durability period
If you do not meet these requirements, you must get the written consent of all other parties who have management control.
3.3.1 Tenants
If you occupy land under a tenancy, you must have:
- a tenancy agreement for at least 3 years from the start of the Higher Tier Capital Grants agreement (however, see the requirements in relation to a rolling tenancy below)
- the agreement of your landlord before you apply
- a countersignature from your landlord if you do not have management control for 5 years (the durability period) from the start of your agreement
- control of all the activities over the land to meet the scheme requirements for the chosen capital items
It is your responsibility to check when you apply for Higher Tier Capital Grants that you do not breach the terms of your tenancy agreement.
If your tenancy is renewed each year on a rolling basis, you must be certain your tenancy will extend to the length of your Higher Tier Capital Grants agreement, or you must have a countersignature from your landlord. You must check this with your landlord before you apply.
If your landlord takes over ²¹ÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants agreement from you once your tenancy has ended, they must be eligible to do so. For example, they must not be an ineligible public body.
3.3.2 Landlords
If you are a landlord and can show that you have enough management control over the land and activities, you can apply for an agreement on land that has been let to a tenant.
As the Agreement Holder, you must give your tenant a copy of the Higher Tier Capital GrantsÌýagreement. We may ask you to provide evidence to show that you have done this. It is your responsibility to make sure that your tenant does not breach the terms of the agreement.
3.3.3 Partnerships
If you are in a business partnership, you can apply for Higher Tier Capital Grants. The person signing the application must have the appropriate permission levels in theÌýRural Payments service.
3.3.4 Licensors
If you are a licensor, you can apply for a Higher Tier Capital GrantsÌýagreement on the land in a licence arrangement. It is your responsibility to make sure that the licensee does not breach the terms of the agreement.
You must make sure that the licensee is aware of the requirements of the agreement, as relevant to the licence, and include these in the licence agreement.
3.3.5 Licensees
Licensees are usually not eligible for Higher Tier Capital GrantsÌýas a licence arrangement will not provide sufficient management control of the land to the licensee for the agreement period.
If in practice your licence agreement gives you wider land management responsibilities, this may mean you are a tenant and therefore may be eligible for Higher Tier Capital Grants. You must show that you have sufficient management control of the land and activities to be able to apply. See section 3.3.1 for more information aboutÌýHigher Tier Capital GrantsÌýfor tenants.
3.3.6 Land owned by public bodies
Land is not eligible if it is owned or managed by:
- Crown bodies (including all government departments, executive agencies and trading funds)
- non-departmental public bodies (NDPB)
See ²¹Ìýlist of all government departments, agencies and public bodiesÌýon °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï.
Land owned by some public bodies is eligible for Higher Tier Capital GrantsÌýprovided the work does not form part of their obligations as a public body.
This includes land owned by:
- local authorities
- national park authorities
- public corporations
Parish councils and former college farms are not considered to be public bodies and so are eligible to apply for Higher Tier Capital Grants.
3.3.7 Tenants of land owned by public bodies
If you are a tenant of a public body, you will need to check if the land is eligible forÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants with your landlord. If it is, you must get the public body to countersign your application if you do not have a tenancy agreement for the full term of a Higher Tier Capital Grants agreement.
If you do have a tenancy agreement for the full term of a Higher Tier Capital Grant agreement, you are eligible to apply as a tenant with management control of the land. See section 3.3.1.
You cannot apply for a Higher Tier Capital Grant for any work that is a requirement of your tenancy or any other legally binding obligation.
3.4ÌýLand receiving other funding
You cannot use Higher Tier Capital GrantsÌýto pay for any environmental management if you are already receiving:
- payment from Exchequer funds
- grant aid from any other public body
You cannot use a Higher TierÌýCapital Grants agreement to fund capital works that you:
- are required to carry out under other legally binding obligations
- are currently receiving funding from other sources
- have previously received funding
You may be able to apply for a Higher Tier capital grants agreement in addition to an existingÌýCSÌý´Ç°ùÌýESÌýagreement, if you follow the rules set out in section 3.4.1 (Environmental Stewardship) or 3.4.2 (Countryside Stewardship).
We will carry out checks to make sure that capital works are not funded twice from public money.
You must make sure that any work proposed for this grant does not breach the conditions of any other agreement.
3.4.1 Environmental Stewardship
Land parcels in Higher Level Stewardship are eligible for Higher Tier Capital Grants.
If you intend to apply for ²¹ÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants agreement on land parcels in an existingÌýESÌýagreement, you must make sure:
- there is sufficient space in the parcel
- the same capital works are not being funded twice
- the actions required in your existing agreement and your new Higher Tier Capital Grants agreement are compatible with each other
- any capital works on the same land parcel are complete and you have received your final payment
3.4.2 Countryside Stewardship
You may have an existing agreement for any of the following schemes:
-
CSHT (Countryside Stewardship Higher Tier agreements starting from 2025)
-
Countryside Stewardship (CS) Higher Tier (last agreements issued 1 January 2024)
-
CS Mid Tier (last agreements issued 1 January 2024)
You can enter the land parcels from your existing agreement into a Higher Tier Capital Grants agreement. If you want to do this, you must make sure that:
- any capital works on the same land parcel are complete, and you have received your final payment
- there is sufficient space in the parcel
- the same capital works are not being funded twice
- the actions required in your existing agreement and your new Higher Tier Capital Grants agreement are compatible
- any capital works on the same land parcel are complete and you have received your final payment
You can apply for ²¹ÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants agreement on land parcels which are not in your existingÌýCSHT, CSÌýHigher Tier or Mid Tier agreement, if the new capital works do not conflict with your existing agreement.
Wildlife Offers and otherÌýcapital grants
You may have ²¹ÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants agreement alongside any of the followingÌýagreements:
- Capital Grants
- Higher Tier Capital Grants
- Protection and Infrastructure grant
- Woodland Tree Health
- Woodland management plan
- Wildlife Offer
You can apply for ²¹ÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants agreement on the same land parcels as your existingÌýcapital grants or Wildlife Offer agreement if:
- there is sufficient space in the parcel
- the same capital works are not being funded twice
- the actions required in your existing agreement and your newÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants agreement are compatible with each other
You can apply for ²¹ÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants agreement on land parcels which are not in your existingÌýcapital grants or Wildlife Offer agreement if the new capital works do not conflict with your existing agreement.
3.4.3 Environmental Land Management schemes
Sustainable Farming Incentive
You can apply for a Higher Tier Capital Grants offer on land parcels in an:
- SFI 2023 agreement
- SFI 2024 agreement
The actions in your SFI agreement must be compatible with the works in your new Higher Tier Capital Grants agreement.
Landscape Recovery
Customers with ²¹ÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants agreement can also apply for a Landscape Recovery agreement if the same item isn’t being funded twice, there is sufficient space in the parcel, and the items are compatible with each other.
3.4.4 English Woodland Schemes
You can apply forÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants on land parcels covered by an English Woodland Grant Scheme (EWGS) Woodland Planning Grant and certain capital grants (for example, WD2: Woodland improvement grant), if both of the following apply:
- this does not result in you being paid twice for the same items or activities
- theÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants do not conflict with any ongoingÌýEWGSÌýrequirements
You cannot apply forÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants on land parcels covered by a multi-annualÌýEWGSÌýagreement, EWGS Farm Woodland Payment, Farm Woodland Premium Scheme or Farm Woodland Scheme.
3.4.5 Inheritance Tax or Capital Gains Tax exemption
Land that’s conditionally exempt from Inheritance Tax (or the object of a maintenance fund) may not be eligible for capital items if they:
- are not compatible with the exemption
- duplicate an activity within the exemption
¸é±ð²¹»åÌýEligible funding on land conditionally exempt from Inheritance TaxÌýfor more information and to see which capital items are eligible or not.
3.4.6ÌýOther schemes or grants
Higher Tier Capital GrantsÌýcannot fund works that form part of:
- Countryside Productivity
- Growth Programme
- LEADER
- Water Environment Grant
- Farming in Protected Landscapes
- Woodland Carbon Fund
- HS2 Woodland Fund
- Farming Investment Fund
- England Woodland Creation Offer
This is not an exhaustive list.
4.ÌýHow to apply for Higher Tier Capital Grants
Find out how to apply for Higher Tier Capital Grants and the evidence and consents you’ll need.
4.1 Check you and your land are registered
To apply for Higher Tier Capital Grants you need to register or be registered on the Rural Payments service. Use the guidance on registering and updating your details at Rural Payments service to help you.
All land parcels listed on your application must be registered in the Rural Payments service and have a parcel reference number (in the format AA1234 5678). Check the Rural Payments service to find out if your land parcels are registered and up to date.
If your land parcels are not registered, you must submit a rural land change request to register the land.
4.1.1 Authorise an agent
You can authorise an agent to fill in and submit your application for you. This also applies to payment claim forms for Agreement Holders.
For an agent to act for you, you must give them the appropriate permission levels in theÌýRural Payments service. This applies even if you have previously authorised the agent using the paper agent authorisation form.
¸é±ð²¹»åÌýGive someone else permission to act on your behalfÌý for more information on the different levels of permission. You should also read the information in the Permission levels screen in the Rural Payments service. This lists what is permitted at each level. You are responsible for ensuring that permissions assigned on the Rural Payments service are made correctly and that all contact details are correct.
4.2ÌýWays to apply
Submit your application toÌýRPAÌýby email or by post using theÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants application form. Use theÌýhow to complete your Higher Tier Capital Grant application by email or post guidance to help you.
You must email Natural England enquiries@naturalengland.org.uk to discuss your Higher Tier Capital Grants application before you submit it. Natural England’s advisors will help you to apply for the capital items best suited to your needs.
Historic England advisers may contact applicants to provide advice on some Higher Tier Capital Grants applications for the Historic and archaeological feature protection (HE1) item. Where an application is made for HE1 and other items available through the Higher Tier Capital Grants offer, applicants may be contacted by advisers from Historic England as well as Natural England and/or the Forestry Commission.
The Forestry Commission assess woodland-only applications. If you pass the administration checks, your woodland officer will work with you to complete a final version.
4.3ÌýPrepare a map to support your application
You must submit a map or maps in support of your application.
Use the how to complete your Higher Tier Capital Grants application by email or post to help prepare your map.
4.4ÌýBusiness viability test
RPA will check all applications against an insolvency register. If your application is not financially viable, they may not offer you an agreement.
If the value of your application is more than £50,000 in total, you must submit a statement from a registered accountant (for example, a chartered accountant or certified accountant). This is to confirm that the business or single business identifierÌý(SBI)Ìýhas the resources from trading profits, reserves or loans to carry out the work in the proposed agreement schedule.
The accountant will need to provide a letter on headed paper which confirms:
- they are a registered chartered accountant
- they act as the accountant for the applicant or have been contracted to act on behalf of the applicant
- you as the applicant have sufficient finances to complete the capital works in your application and how these funds will be sourced (for example, savings or loan)
- their understanding of the total value of the capital works in the application
If the value of your application is more than £500,000 of capital items, we will also review 3 years of your relevant business accounts or other evidence. This is to confirm that you have the administrative, financial and operational capacity to meet the agreement requirements.
4.5ÌýCheck if you need consent to carry out capital works
You must check each capital item you are applying for to see if any consents are needed.
You will not be paid for any capital works without the necessary consents and permissions being in place before you begin any work.
You are responsible for arranging all relevant consents, permissions, exemptions, and written advice needed for your application.
In some cases, you will not be offered an agreement if these are not in place.
4.5.1 Planning consent
Your local planning authority can give you informal advice on whether a proposal needs planning consent. Read the generalÌýguidance on planning permission for farms and general planning practice guidance.
You do not need to provide evidence of whether planning permission or consent is needed with your application. However, if required, you will need to have permission or consent in place before you carry out any work, and you will need to submit this evidence when you make a claim for this work.
4.5.2 SSSIs
You must get consent from Natural England if your application includes works on land in a SSSI.
4.5.3 Scheduled monuments
Your local Historic England officer can provide advice on any management or changes needed to maintain or bring the monument into favourable condition. You will also need from Historic England for some of the chosen work (such as fencing and gateways).
In these situations, you must to see whether consent is needed, or to get advice on how to go about works to avoid or reduce negative effects on the scheduled monument.
Historic England can advise if proposals affecting registered parks and gardens, or registered battlefields are likely to be accepted.
4.5.4 Other consents
You may need to apply for other consents or licences if work affects:
- protected species (as defined by the Wildlife & Countryside Act 1981)
- a watercourse or highway
If you have protected species on your land, you must meet the requirements for their protection before carrying out any activities. For more information, read Managing wildlife on your land. If you have consent for work that affects protected species, you may need to plan around seasonal activity.
It’s important you arrange the consents well in advance.
If the work affects priority habitats (which may not beÌýSSSI), you should consider the effect on these even if you do not need consent. To find out more about how to avoid harming protected area and species read Construction near protected areas and wildlife.
4.5.5 Work on trees and hedges
You may need permission for work on trees that are under ²¹ÌýTree Preservation Order (TPO). If this applies to you, contact your Local Authority or National Park Authority. Find out when you may need a Forestry Commission tree felling licence.
You can fell up to 5m3Ìýand sell up to 2m3Ìýof timber without a felling licence each calendar quarter. If you plan to fell or sell more, you must get a felling licence before your agreement offer can be issued.
You do not need to provide evidence of anyÌýTPOÌýpermission or a felling licence with your application. If required, you will need to have the consent before you carry out any work. You will need to submit this when you make a claim for this work.
4.5.6 Other considerations
When you carry out work under the agreement, you must not:
- break byelaws
- obstruct public rights of way
- block or restrict access to ‘open access’ land
- affect oil or gas pipelines
If required, you will need to have permission or consent in place before you carry out any work. You will need to submit this evidence when you make a claim for this work.
4.6ÌýSubmit your application and supporting documents
Submit your application by email or post. A complete application is made up of:
- an application form
- an application map
- ²¹Ìýland ownership and control form, if applicable
- any other supporting documents we ask for
Use the guidance onÌýhow to complete your Higher Tier Capital Grant application by email or post to help you submit your application.
4.7ÌýHow we check your application
We will check that your application:
- meets the eligibility requirements
- is complete
- includes necessary evidence, annotated maps, photographs and any consents that need to be sent with the application as detailed on the Capital Grant finder
If your application is successful, we will send you an agreement offer letter.
If you want to accept the agreement offer you must sign and return the declaration by post within 20 working days. If you do not accept your offer in time, it will be withdrawn.
You can withdraw an application at any point after submission, prior to an agreement offer being made. Once an agreement offer has been made, you cannot withdraw your application, but you can reject your agreement offer.
You can find more information about entering into an agreement at section 6.1 of theÌýHigher Tier Capital Grants agreement holder’s guide.
If your application is unsuccessful, we will let you know why we rejected it. You will have the right to appeal, as set out in section 7.10 of theÌýagreement holder’s guide.
5.ÌýChoosingÌýcapital items
This scheme offers a selection of specialist Higher Tier capital items to help support our most environmentally significant sites and woodlands.
There are 54 capital items – 18 actual cost items and 36 fixed cost items.
Use theÌýCapital grant finderÌýto read a description and requirements for each capital item. This includes eligibility and evidence requirements.
For an actual cost item, you will need to ask suppliers for quotations. We will then pay you either the full amount or a proportion of that. For fixed cost items, we pay a specific rate to help support the cost of each item. More details are provided in sections 5.1 to 5.3.
5.1ÌýActual cost capital items
You need a minimum of 3 quotations in writing for actual cost capital items. You must submit these quotations with your application.
In exceptional circumstances where the work is specialised,ÌýRPAÌýmay accept fewer than 3 quotations. This must be agreed in writing before you apply for an agreement.
A Natural England adviser, Historic England adviser or Forestry Commission officer (depending on the type of application) will discuss the contribution towards the costs of the work with you and will confirm this in writing. They will tailor each capital item to the requirements of the feature. For woodland only applications the Forestry Commission will discuss the specifications which may include:
- technical design drawings to illustrate the extent of the work or schedule of works to provide an itemised list of the component parts and process for implementation
- the standard of work you must meet in each
5.2ÌýActual cost items
| Code | Capital item name | Capital item percentage of cost |
|---|---|---|
| AC1 | Access capital items | Up to 100% of actual costs |
| FM1 | Management of geodiversity features | Up to 100% of actual costs |
| FM2 | Carry out customised capital works to manage specific sites or species | Up to 100% of actual costs |
| FY4 | Create 2-zone rides in woodland | Up to 40% of actual costs |
| FY5 | Create 3-zone rides in woodland | Up to 40% of actual costs |
| FY6 | Restore coppicing in woodland | Up to 80% of actual costs |
| HE1 | Historic and archaeological feature protection | Up to 100% of actual costs |
| LV2 | Livestock handling facilities | Up to 80% of costs |
| RP8 | Constructed wetlands for the treatment of pollution | 50% of costs |
| SB2 | Scrub control difficult sites | Up to 80% of costs |
| SM1 | Training to control and manage deer | Up to 100% of costs |
| SM2 | Training to control and manage American mink | Up to 100% of costs |
| SM3 | Training to control and manage non-native plants | Up to 100% of costs |
| SM4 | Traps for American mink | Up to 100% of costs |
| SM5 | Traps for edible dormouse | Up to 100% of costs |
| SM6 | Use monitoring equipment to manage invasive species | Up to 100% of costs |
| WN7 | Restoration of large water bodies | Up to 100% of actual costs |
| WN10 | Construction of water penning structures | Up to 100% of actual costs |
5.3ÌýFixed cost items
| Code | Capital item name | Capital item payment rate |
|---|---|---|
| FG5 | Fencing supplement – difficult sites (this item can only be applied for with FG7, FG8 and FG9) | £3.98 per metre |
| FG7 | Anti-predator combination fencing | £13.76 per metre |
| FG8 | Anti-predator temporary electric fencing | £2.84 per metre |
| FG9 | Deer fencing | £10.27 per metre |
| FG10 | Temporary deer fencing | £8.09 per metre |
| FG11 | Deer exclosure plot | £212.56 per unit |
| FG16 | Deer pedestrian gate | £475.44 per gate |
| FG17 | Deer vehicle gate | £749.63 per gate |
| FY1 | Deer high seat | £265 per unit |
| FY8 | Supplement for a freestanding deer high seat (FY1) | £180 supplement for free standing seat |
| GR1 | Create or restore grassland habitat | £186.02 per hectare |
| GR2 | Standard seed mix for grassland habitat | £203 per hectare |
| GR3 | Floristically enhanced seed mix for grassland habitat | £890.02 per hectare |
| LV1 | Cattle grid | £2,878.80 per item |
| SB1 | Scrub control and felling diseased trees | Between £375 and £2,424 per hectare depending on method of removal, stem diameter and % ground cover. See item guide for more information |
| SB3 | Tree removal | £155.17 per tree |
| SB4 | Chemical bracken control | £270.90 per hectare |
| SB5 | Mechanical bracken control | £190.90 per hectare |
| SB6 | Rhododendron control | £3,500 per hectare to £5,500 per hectare depending on slope of site and height of plant |
| TE2 | Planting standard parkland tree | £123.94 per tree |
| TE9 | Parkland tree guard - welded steel | £402.73 per tree |
| TE12 | Stump grinding | £96 per stump |
| TE13 | Creation of dead wood habitat on trees | £285.58 per tree |
| TE14 | Identification of orchard fruit tree varieties | £20 per variety |
| TE15 | Plant groups of trees in large guards | £572.78 per large guard |
| TE16 | Use tree surgery to ‘hinge’ a tree into a watercourse | £95.26 per tree |
| TE17 | Tree surgery for veteran trees | £488 for each intervention – |
| TE18 | Pruning to restore veteran fruit trees | £146 per tree |
| WN1 | Grip blocking drainage channels | £19.06 per block |
| WN2 | Creation of scrapes and gutters | £5.64 per square metre |
| WN3 | Ditch, dyke and rhine restoration | £5.72 per metre |
| WN4 | Ditch, dyke and rhine creation | £13.63 per metre |
| WN8 | Timber sluice | £451.50 per sluice |
| WN9 | Brick, stone or concrete sluice | £2,901.40 per sluice |
| WN11 | Install temporary water storage features | £7.36 per square metre (m2) |
| WN13 | Manage wetland cutting supplement | £1,346 per hectare |
Annex 1: Terms and Conditions
See theÌýCapital grants agreements:ÌýTerms and Conditions 2026.
Annex 2: Contact details
ContactÌýRural Payments Agency (RPA)
If you have any questions, contactÌýRPAÌý²ú²â:Ìý
- ±ð³¾²¹¾±±ô:Ìýruralpayments@defra.gov.ukÌý– include name of scheme and yourÌýSBI in the subject header
- telephone: 03000 200 301 - Monday to Friday, 8.30am to 5pm, except bank holidays
- post: PO Box 324, Worksop, S95 1DF
To request pre-populated applications forms for Higher Tier:
- use theÌýRural Payments service
- email or call the RPA
Please quote your single business identifier (SBI) and agreement number in all enquiries.
Contact the Forestry CommissionÌý
You can contact the Forestry Commission by email, phone or post.Ìý
Go to contact Forestry Commission for more details.
Contact Natural EnglandÌý
You can contact Natural England by:
- ±ð³¾²¹¾±±ô: enquiries@naturalengland.org.ukÌý
- telephone: 0300 060 3900ÌýMarch to September: Monday to Friday, 10am to 4pm, except bank holidaysÌýOctober to February: Monday to Friday, 10am to 3pm, except bank holidaysÌýFind out about call chargesÌý
- post: Natural England, County Hall, Spetchley Road, Worcester, WR5 2NP
Contact other organisations
You may also need to contact: