Gill is our Editor, with a background that combines journalism with land and estate management. Gill is a farmer’s daughter, an associate member of the RICS and has an interest in all things to do with agriculture and the countryside. Her free time is spent on the tennis court, walking and improving her cooking skills.
Biodiversity Net Gain for Landowners Quick Summary
Mandatory biodiversity net gain legislation has created a significant new income stream for landowners across England. By registering land as a habitat bank, you can sell biodiversity units to developers who need to offset the ecological impact of their projects, generating long-term revenue from land that may currently be under-utilised.
At a glance:
Sell habitat units directly to developers
Agreements secured for a minimum of 30 years
BNG applies to major and minor development in England
Income potential from agricultural and marginal land
Habitat banks registered on the national BNG register
Arbtech manages the entire process for you
What Does Biodiversity Net Gain Mean for Landowners?
Since February 2024, every applicable development project in England, whether residential, commercial or infrastructure, must demonstrate a measurable net improvement in biodiversity value before planning permission is granted. That requirement does not disappear when a developer has limited scope to improve habitats on their own site. Instead, they must look elsewhere.
That is where landowners come in. When a developer cannot fully meet their biodiversity net gain obligation on-site, they are required to purchase off-site biodiversity units from registered habitat banks. If your land holds ecological value, or has the potential for habitat creation and enhancement, you can register it as a habitat bank, sell units to developers, and generate a stable revenue stream for up to 30 years.
Key point: Landowners or land managers do not need to be involved in development to participate in BNG. You simply agree to manage your existing land in a way that increases its ecological value, have this independently verified, and sell the resulting biodiversity units through the national register.
An ecology consultant inspects the biodiversity on a site.
How the BNG Market Works
Biodiversity net gain operates through a structured marketplace underpinned by government legislation. The value of any piece of land, before and after habitat enhancement, is calculated using the statutory DEFRA biodiversity metric. The statutory biodiversity metric converts habitat quality and condition data into a numerical figure known as biodiversity units.
Developers need to acquire enough units to meet their planning obligations. If they cannot produce all of those units on their own development site, they must buy them from a habitat bank operator or habitat banks listed on the biodiversity gain sites register. Landowners interested in creating habitats and nature recovery can register their land, allowing them to sell units directly to developers or through brokers and land agents who operate in this growing market.
On-Site vs Off-Site BNG
The planning system operates a preference hierarchy when it comes to delivering biodiversity net gain bng. The biodiversity gain hierarchy requires developers to first seek on-site habitat enhancement, then off-site habitat bank units, and only as a last resort option, statutory biodiversity credits. Statutory biodiversity credits must be purchased from the government. This means demand for genuine off-site habitat bank land – your land – will remain strong.
Biodiversity-rich vegetation.
Which Landowners Can Participate?
A wide range of landowners can potentially benefit from the BNG market, including farmers, rural estate managers, private landowners with surplus land, and organisations managing ecological or conservation land. The key factors are the ecological baseline of the land, its potential for measurable improvement via environmental schemes and the landowner’s willingness to maintain agreed habitats for at least 30 years.
Land types that often perform well in the BNG market include:
Lowland agricultural land that can be converted to species-rich grassland or wetland
Field margins, hedgerows, and scrub areas with existing ecological interest
Riparian corridors, ponds, and floodplain habitats
Woodland and woodland edge habitats
Brownfield sites with pioneer species and open ground habitats
Marginal farmland with low agricultural productivity
Even existing land with relatively low biodiversity can generate significant unit values if there is a clear and credible plan for nature recovery. The greater the uplift in condition or area, the more units can be sold.
The Biodiversity Unit Income Opportunity
The price of biodiversity units is not fixed by government; it is determined by supply and demand in the open market. However, as BNG becomes embedded in the planning system and demand from developers increases, unit values are expected to remain substantial.
The table below provides an approximate overview of factors that influence unit pricing and income potential. Exact figures will depend on habitat type, location, baseline condition and agreement terms.
Habitat Type
Approximate Unit Value
Agreement Term
Notes
Lowland meadow creation
Higher value
30+ years
High demand; significant baseline uplift achievable
Hedgerow enhancement
Moderate value
30+ years
Common across agricultural land; lower management cost
Wetland / pond creation
Higher value
30+ years
Scarce habitat type; strong developer demand
Woodland creation
Variable value
30+ years
Can overlap with other woodland grants and schemes
Species-rich grassland
Moderate to high
30+ years
Value depends on starting condition and location
Note: Unit pricing varies significantly based on local authority area, the proximity of your land to the development requiring offset, habitat type, and market conditions. Arbtech can assess your land and provide a realistic income estimate before you commit to anything.
The Process: How to Register Land as a Habitat Bank
Registering land as a BNG habitat bank involves several clearly defined steps. Arbtech can guide you through each stage, from the initial ecological assessment through to legal agreements and ongoing monitoring.
Step 1: Ecological Baseline Assessment
An ecologist visits your land to record all existing habitats, species and ecological features to calculate how many biodiversity units are present. This establishes the pre-enhancement biodiversity value using the DEFRA biodiversity metric: the starting point from which any uplift will be calculated and sold.
Step 2: Habitat Management Plan
A Habitat Management and Monitoring Plan (HMMP) is produced. This sets out exactly how the land will be managed over the 30-year period to achieve and sustain the agreed biodiversity improvements. It forms the technical backbone of any sale agreement.
Step 3: Registration on the BNG Register
The land is registered on the national biodiversity gain sites register, administered by Natural England. This makes it visible to developers and their consultants who are actively searching for off-site habitat units in your area.
Step 4: Conservation Covenant or Section 106 Agreement
Once a developer wishes to purchase units from your land, a legally binding covenant or Section 106 agreement is drawn up. This secures the habitat management obligations for the full 30-year term and protects both parties. The covenant is recorded against the land title at the Land Registry.
Step 5: Ongoing Monitoring
Regular monitoring reports must be produced throughout the agreement period to confirm that the habitat management and habitat enhancement is on track and the ecological targets are being met.
Conservation Covenants: Protecting Your Interests
A conservation covenant is a private, voluntary legal agreement between a landowner and a responsible body such as a local planning authority, the Environment Agency, or an approved conservation organisation. Introduced by the Environment Act 2021, conservation covenants allow landowners to commit to managing their land for ecological benefit over a defined period, with that commitment binding on future owners of the land too.
For the BNG market, conservation covenants serve a critical function: they provide developers with the legally secured evidence they need to satisfy their local planning authority that off-site biodiversity net gain will be maintained for the required 30-year minimum. Without a legally binding agreement in place, the biodiversity units cannot be counted towards a developer’s obligation.
It is essential to take independent legal advice before entering into a conservation covenant. The covenant will bind any future sale of the land, so buyers and mortgage lenders will need to be made aware of it. Understanding the full implications, including management obligations, permitted uses, and enforcement, is important before signing.
A consultant and landowner discuss a biodiversity gain plan on a site.
BNG and Other Land Income Schemes
Biodiversity net gain does not exist in isolation. Many landowners are already participating in or considering other environmental schemes, or local nature recovery strategies and it is important to understand how BNG interacts with these and other environmental payments.
Farming in Protected Landscapes and the Sustainable Farming Incentive
DEFRA’s Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI) and Countryside Stewardship schemes pay farmers to deliver environmental outcomes including habitat creation, water quality improvements and biodiversity enhancements. In principle, BNG and agri-environment schemes can complement each other, but there is a risk of double-counting on the same land: claiming payment for the same ecological outcome through more than one funding source.
Natural England guidance makes clear that BNG units can only be generated from ecological improvements that are additional to what is already required or funded under another scheme. If a habitat improvement is already being funded through SFI or Countryside Stewardship, the same improvement generally cannot also be sold as a BNG unit. Careful planning at the outset, ideally with specialist ecological and financial advice, is essential to maximise the combined value of your land.
Woodland Carbon Code
The Woodland Carbon Code provides verified carbon credits for new woodland creation. Like SFI, it is possible in principle to establish woodland that delivers both BNG units and carbon credits, but the additionality requirements of both schemes must be met separately. Specialist advice is needed to structure agreements that allow both revenue streams to coexist legitimately.
Nutrient Neutrality Credits
In catchment areas with water quality issues, particularly those affected by phosphate or nitrate pollution, landowners can also sell nutrient neutrality credits to developers. Nutrient credits is a related but entirely separate market from BNG units. Some land management interventions, such as creating wetland buffer strips, can deliver both ecological and nutrient reduction benefits, creating multiple income opportunities from a single land management change.
Key Legal and Practical Considerations for Landowners
Before committing to a BNG habitat bank arrangement, landowners should fully understand what’s involved and be aware of the following:
Long-term commitment: Habitat management agreements last for at least 30 years and are binding on successors in title. Any future sale or inheritance of the land will carry the obligations with it.
Permitted land use restrictions: During the agreement term, certain agricultural activities may be restricted or prohibited to protect the habitats being managed. This could affect farming operations, grazing regimes, or use of agrochemicals.
Land Registry entry: Conservation covenants will be noted on the title deeds, which may affect the land’s saleability or its use as security for borrowing.
Mortgage lender consent: If the land is subject to a mortgage, lender consent may be required before entering into a conservation covenant.
Tax implications: Income from selling biodiversity units may be subject to income tax or capital gains tax. Landowners should seek independent financial and tax advice specific to their circumstances.
Management costs: Delivering the habitat improvements specified in the HMMP will involve ongoing management costs. These should be factored into any unit pricing negotiation from the outset to achieve an accurate predictable income.
Monitoring compliance: Regular ecological monitoring reports are required throughout the agreement term, with failure to comply potentially triggering enforcement action by the responsible body.
Why Work with Arbtech?
Arbtech is one of the UK’s leading ecological consultancies, with over 20 years of experience and a team of more than 150 professional ecologists and arboriculturalists working across England. We have been involved in biodiversity net gain since it was first announced, supporting both developers and landowners through every stage of the process.
BNG has created an opportunity for landowners and we offer a complete end-to-end service to help, including:
An initial land assessment to determine BNG potential and likely unit values
Ecological baseline surveys and DEFRA metric calculations
Preparation of Habitat Management and Monitoring Plans
Support with registration on the national biodiversity gain sites register
Liaison with developers, responsible bodies, and solicitors
Ongoing monitoring and reporting throughout the agreement period
Our ecologists are situated across England, meaning we can attend your site promptly and provide locally relevant advice. Whether you own a small parcel of farmland or a large rural estate, we can assess the BNG potential of your land, work out how best to create or enhance what’s there and help you understand what income you could realistically generate.
Our contact details are at the top of this page: you can call us, email us, or complete the quote form to arrange a free initial consultation about your specific development. We will take all the details required to review your land, provide a realistic assessment of unit potential, and outline the next steps with no obligation to proceed.
Not necessarily. Your land is assessed at its current ecological baseline, and a habitat management plan then sets out what improvements will be made during the agreement term. The biodiversity units are based on the uplift from baseline to improved condition, so the starting state of the land matters less than its potential for improvement. An ecological baseline survey from Arbtech will tell you exactly where your land stands.
This depends on the specific habitat management requirements set out in your HMMP. In many cases, certain low-intensity farming activities, such as light grazing, are compatible with habitat enhancement goals and may even be beneficial. However, not all land use will be permitted: intensive arable cultivation for food production, use of certain pesticides and fertilisers, or significant land use changes may be restricted. The HMMP is tailored to your land, and Arbtech will work with you to find a balance that delivers the required ecological outcomes while allowing viable continued land use where possible.
A conservation covenant is registered against the land title and is binding on future owners. If you sell your land, the buyer takes on the habitat management obligations along with it. This must be disclosed to prospective buyers and their solicitors, and it may affect the land's value or marketability. It is important to obtain independent legal and financial advice before entering any agreement, particularly if you anticipate selling the land in the near future.
Biodiversity unit prices are set by the open market and negotiated directly between the landowner (or their agent) and the developer purchasing the units. Prices vary based on habitat type, local demand, the proximity of your land to the development it is offsetting, and the quality of the ecological management plan. Arbtech can advise on realistic pricing for your land type and location and can connect you with developers or habitat unit brokers who are actively seeking to fulfil their bng requirements in your area.
It may be possible to sell BNG units from land already in an agri-environment scheme, but only for ecological improvements that are genuinely additional to what is already being funded or required under that scheme. You cannot double-count the same habitat improvement. Arbtech can advise you on which areas of your land may be eligible to generate BNG units separately from any existing scheme obligations.
There is no formal minimum land area, but the ecological and legal costs of registering a habitat bank mean that very small sites may not be economically viable on their own. It is possible for neighbouring landowners to pool land under a single habitat bank arrangement, and Arbtech can advise on potential opportunities from a collaborative approach.
The biodiversity gain sites register is a national database maintained by Natural England that records all land that has been registered to provide off-site BNG units. Developers and their ecological consultants use the register to locate available habitat banks in the areas where they need to source units. Registration is a prerequisite for selling off-site biodiversity units, and Arbtech can manage the registration process on your behalf.
The HMMP will specify the monitoring intervals and reporting requirements, which typically involve annual or biennial ecological visits to assess habitat condition. Reports are submitted to the responsible body overseeing the conservation covenant. Arbtech can provide the ongoing ecological monitoring and reporting as part of a long-term management arrangement, giving you confidence that the agreement requirements are being met without placing an undue burden on you.
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