Last updated: July 2026
Author: Rob Lambert
Editor at Arbtech, Rob is a content specialist who manages our ecology and arboriculture services copy to ensure it is accurate, up to date, and insightful for current and future clients.
With ancient woodland, developers need to ensure that the correct measures are taken to address ancient and veteran trees and hit their biodiversity net gain (BNG) targets.
Our helpful page explains how irreplaceable habitats are managed and how biodiversity units and the biodiversity metric are addressed to achieve BNG.
The introduction of mandatory biodiversity net gain (BNG) fundamentally changed how developers approach development sites containing or bordering old-growth habitats.
Under UK law, ancient woodland carries an irreplaceable status that completely shifts it out of the everyday market.
Centuries of intricate soil biology, complex underground fungal networks and unique flora cannot be engineered or recreated, making it impossible to mitigate impacts on such areas by simply purchasing offsets.
The BNG system insists on rigid restrictions when it comes to design, pushing that any proposed development needs to treat the relevant areas as absolute red lines from the beginning of the masterplanning process to avoid irreversible ecological damage.
Including an irreplaceable habitat within a standard BNG calculation is completely different from evaluating standard grasslands or hedges.
While you are legally required to enter any ancient woodland on your development site into your baseline data, the software will remove the standard 10% net gain requirement for that specific area.
Instead, if the tool detects any direct loss or deterioration of irreplaceable woodland, it blocks standard unit scoring and triggers an automatic red flag.
It will then alert the planning applicant that the woodland must be isolated from the main target calculations.
The boundary separating standard habitats from ancient woodland is governed by a combination of targeted environmental legislation and national planning policy.
Between the two, frameworks ensure that England’s most valuable habitats cannot be traded away or degraded for commercial gain.
Formal separation of ancient woodland from the standard marketplace is written into secondary legislation under The Biodiversity Gain Requirements (Irreplaceable Habitat) Regulations 2024.
To understand exactly how irreplaceable habitats are legally managed, developers are best consulting the statutory list of irreplaceable ecosystems.
The official register protects ancient woodland alongside other vulnerable environments, such as blanket bog, limestone pavements, lowland fens, coastal sand dunes, Mediterranean saltmarsh scrub and spartina saltmarsh swards.
By grouping various habitats together, the law removes them from standard trading rules, meaning you cannot destroy an ancient ecosystem and claim to offset it by creating lower-tier habitats elsewhere.
Before a developer can submit their final biodiversity gain plan for approval, they need to clear the planning constraints set by the national planning policy framework (NPPF).
Under the rules, the local planning authority is instructed to refuse planning permission for any project that leads to the loss or degradation of irreplaceable habitats.
Even managing to achieve a massive unit surplus elsewhere on your site will not bypass an NPPF refusal.
In simple terms, you need to clear the planning barrier before any net gain targets even come into play.
In specific scenarios, a development could end up producing exceptional circumstances that outweigh the loss of a habitat, such as in major infrastructure projects of national significance.
Whenever a planning project is approved under such rare conditions, the environmental obligations are managed entirely outside of the standard metric framework.
You cannot buy standard, off-the-shelf off-site biodiversity units to balance out ancient woodland damage.
Due to this, you need to instead directly negotiate a custom mitigation strategy.
Creating an appropriate compensation package for an irreplaceable ecosystem is incredibly difficult and carries immense financial costs.
As the habitats cannot be replicated, the compensation requirements are managed on a case-by-case basis by planning officers.
The packages usually need extensive native tree planting at high replacement ratios, complex topsoil translocations, and legally binding management funding that frequently extends far beyond the standard 30-year BNG window.
For major masterplans and mixed-use developments, the biodiversity metric will split the red line boundary into two distinct calculation zones to ensure that all irreplaceable ecosystems are safely isolated from standard development land.
The metric tool enforced a strict barrier between the two zones to ensure compliance:
The Irreplaceable Zone: Covered by ancient woodland, the irreplaceable zone is completely excluded from the quantitative 10% target, with any impacts being managed via bespoke negotiations.
The Standard Zone: Such as modified grasslands, hedges or scrub, any other non-irreplaceable habitat present on the site is covered by the standard zone, and the developer must achieve a mandatory 10% unit increase across it.
It is also worth noting that you cannot use habitat enhancements in the standard zone to mitigate woodland loss, and protecting the ancient woodland zone does not count towards the 10% gain required for your standard zone.
To verify if a woodland is officially protected, ecological consultants refer to the ancient woodland inventory – a statutory database designed to map the historic ecosystems located across England.
Under the regulations, all site assessments need to categorise the woodland into one of four sub-types, each carrying the same level of protection:
Woodlands that have developed naturally over centuries, composed predominantly of native trees that have regenerated naturally on the site.
According to the Woodland Trust, such sites are essential sanctuaries for threatened species that cannot survive in younger, secondary forests.
Historic ancient woodland sites that were clear-felled and replanted with commercial timber crops (typically non-native conifers).
While the visible tree canopy has been heavily modified, the irreplaceable ancient soil profile and dormant seed bank remain intact beneath the surface, waiting to be restored.
Historically managed and open-structured landscapes that combine mature trees with livestock grazing or historic game park management.
Such areas are vital for supporting rich species diversity, particularly regarding rare wood-boring insects, fungi and lichens.
Historic wood pastures where open grazing areas have naturally grown over with dense canopy trees due to a historical reduction in grazing pressure, changing the physical structure but retaining the irreplaceable underlying ecology.
On top of everything mentioned above, protection isn’t exclusively limited to vast forests.
Individual ancient trees and veteran specimens standing alone in old hedgerows or fields are also legally classified as irreplaceable habitats.
Each of them carries the exact same statutory weight under BNG law, triggers the same automatic metric blocks, and needs the same level of design isolation as a full ancient forest.
The safest and most cost-effective way to handle ancient woodland is to design your planning project entirely outside of the zone of influence.
Both Natural England and the Forestry Commission enforce strict standing advice surrounding physical separations.
A minimum 15-metre semi-natural buffer zone between the edge of the woodland boundary and any development activity needs to be maintained.
It should consist of low-impact and complementary habitats, such as rough grassland or native scrub.
No buildings, access roads, construction storage or sustainable drainage systems (SuDS) can be placed within this zone to prevent root compaction, hydrological changes and nutrient pollution.
For standalone veteran trees outside of a woodland block, the buffer zone must be calculated individually based on the size of the tree.
The protective radius must be at least 15 times the diameter of the tree trunk, five metres beyond the edge of the canopy’s drip line, or whichever calculation creates the larger protective circle around it.
While ancient woodland limits development footprints, it represents a substantial financial opportunity for rural estates and landowners looking to enter the off-site BNG market.
If your land holds a degraded PAWS site currently dominated by commercial conifers, you hold a premium ecological asset.
By systematically removing non-native conifers and introducing long-term ecological management to allow native broadleaf trees to return, you can generate significant biodiversity value within the metric tool.
As the underlying soil structure is already ancient, restoring such sites yields high ecological returns.
Provided the baseline woodland faces zero construction impacts from development, the targeted restoration work supports regional nature recovery and generates premium off-site units.
The units can be registered and sold to developers who are unable to meet their targets on-site or used as an alternative when purchasing expensive statutory biodiversity credits from the government.
With development sites that interfere with irreplaceable habitats, data-driven masterplanning from day one is vital.
It can take up significant time and investment, but as the alternative could be more expensive, more time-consuming and lead to planning refusal from your local planning authority, it is worth accounting for early into the process.
The team at Arbtech can help developers with successfully clearing such hurdles. We can cross-reference your boundaries against the present ancient woodland inventory and manage your baseline data based on the latest statutory biodiversity metric.
Using early-stage intervention, we can ensure that all ancient and veteran trees are identified and addressed, keeping your site layout compliant with local and national planning policy.
Our consultants specialise in offering tailored solutions to the obstacles preventing you from meeting the requirements of your local authority and getting planning consent approved.
From demonstrating nature recovery and getting a biodiversity gain strategy approved, Arbtech can do it all, guiding you throughout the process and answering any questions you have along the way.
For help on your site and project, request a free quote by messaging our team on social media, emailing us, calling us or filling out a quote form on the contact page of our website.

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