1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
Planning Woodland Projects is a grant from the UK Government that funds farmers and land managers in England to develop woodland creation design plans through the Woodland Creation Planning Grant (WCPG).
The program operates in two stages: Stage 1 provides £1,500 for a desk-based assessment of site constraints and opportunities, while Stage 2 covers costs of preparing a full woodland creation design plan compliant with the UK Forestry Standard. Eligible applicants include landowners, land managers, and public bodies in England (excluding Forestry England) who plan to create woodland of at least 5 hectares.
Projects may receive up to £30,500 per project depending on site size and design complexity.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “UK Government” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →Extracted from the official opportunity page/RFP to help you evaluate fit faster.
Woodland Creation Planning Grant - GOV.UK Woodland Creation Planning Grant Find out how to apply for the Woodland Creation Planning Grant (WCPG) to support your development of a proposal to create woodland. Get emails about this page Guidance for Northern Ireland The Woodland Creation Planning Grant ( WCPG ) provides funding to prepare a woodland creation design plan.
Landowners, land managers and public bodies (other than Forestry England) can apply. You can apply for £1,500 to complete Stage 1 of the WCPG application. This is for a desk-based exercise to identify the constraints and opportunities affecting the proposed planting.
If the site has potential for woodland creation, you will be offered a Stage 2 payment. Stage 2 payments help cover the costs for preparing: a draft woodland creation design plan compliant with the UK Forestry Standard ( UKFS ) Important update: 11 December 2024 The WCPG process now includes consultation and Environmental Impact Assessment ( EIA ) screening.
These changes apply to new applications received from 11 December 2024 and will not be applied retrospectively to applications already in progress.
consultation and EIA screening will take place on the final design for all WCPG applications at Stage 2 WCPG applications will be published on the Consultation Public Register for a period of 21 days a County Archaeologist will be engaged on WCPG final proposals we will not repeat consultation or EIA screening for a subsequent EWCO application, neither will a standalone EIA screening enquiry for afforestation be required, unless there is a significant change to the proposal, or our EIA decision expires You must ensure you use the latest version of the WCPG application and plan, and declaration form before submitting your application.
Find out more in our blog post How we’re improving the woodland creation planning grant . Find out if you’re eligible You must plan to create woodland that is: a minimum of 5 hectares or more in total If the proposed woodland is split into different blocks, each block must meet the definition of woodland set out by the National Forest Inventory: a minimum area of 0. 5ha and a minimum width of 20 metres.
If you intend to get funding to plant the woodland, you should consider the minimum areas required to apply for grants for woodland creation when planning your proposal. You’ll need the landowner’s consent and signature if you don’t own the land. We may ask to see your tenancy agreement to confirm your land management responsibilities.
Landscape-scale applications that span multiple land holdings may be accepted. You do not need to own or control the land, but you will need a letter confirming that the landowner supports the application. If your proposed site spans a border, we will only make a Stage 2 payment of £150 per hectare on the land that is in England.
You are not eligible to apply for a WCPG on the proposed site if you’ve already applied for: the England Woodland Creation Offer an EIA enquiry form to plant a new woodland The funding will help you gather and analyse the information you need to make sure your proposal considers: local stakeholders: please use the letter to request stakeholder input ( MS Word Document , 95 KB ) , which explains how their response will be used You’ll have to develop a UK Forestry Standard -compliant plan for woodland creation that shows any constraints and opportunities, and how these are accounted for.
Completing the WCPG application and plan will help you do this. If your land is already under an existing grant agreement, your woodland creation design plan must cover the impact of tree planting on that agreement. WCPG leaflet ( PDF , 1.
34 MB , 4 pages ) for an overview of the scheme. You’ll receive payment in 2 stages as you complete the application process. £1,500 will be paid to assist with desk-based data gathering to identify any constraints on the site.
This will determine whether there is a potential scheme eligible for Stage 2. Stage 2 (standard payment) Funding will only be offered where the Stage 1 process has confirmed that there is potential for a UKFS -compliant woodland scheme on the site. Stage 2 offers funding at a rate of £150 per hectare, minus the £1,500 paid at Stage 1, to complete Stage 2 of the WCPG application.
You will never be paid less than £1,500 for approved Stage 1 work, and a minimum of £500 for approved Stage 2 work. The total amount of funding you can receive is capped at £30,500 per project. We make Stage 1 and Stage 2 payments on approval of the relevant completed sections in the WCPG application and plan.
The parts of the WCPG application and plan that relate to stages 1 and 2 will become available for editing when an offer is made. You may get supplementary payments for specialist survey work, if a need for them is identified by a Forestry Commission technical expert.
If the information you collect during Stage 1 indicates that a more detailed assessment is needed (such as a peat depth survey, or an archaeological survey) you can apply for a supplementary payment. Where appropriate, the work required under the supplementary payment will need to follow the approach set out in the appropriate standard brief(s).
The current standard brief(s) are: archaeology – analytical survey archaeology – geophysical survey To request a copy of a ‘standard brief for archaeology’, email WCPG @forestrycommission. gov.uk . To apply for a supplementary payment, complete the supplementary payments application form .
You should submit this with Stage 1 of the WCPG application and plan or when directed by your Woodland Creation Officer. In exceptional circumstances you can apply for supplementary payments before you have been offered Stage 1 funding at our discretion and approval. Creating a woodland creation design plan You need to complete the WCPG application in 2 stages.
Stage 1 requires you to complete a desk-based exercise, identifying constraints and opportunities for your site. You will compile your data in the Stage 1 tabs of the WCPG application and plan and give supporting documents, including at least a landscape context plan. Do not start work on Stage 1 of the WCPG application and plan until you have a signed agreement from the Forestry Commission.
If Stage 1 of the WCPG application indicates that there is potential for woodland at the site, you will be offered Stage 2 funding. This includes supplementary payments, where relevant. If you’re already in receipt of a WCPG Stage 1 agreement offer, you may request the addition of new blocks of proposed woodland over 0.
5 hectares. If we agree to these additions, any future Stage 2 offer will include these areas. To bring new blocks into their agreement, Stage 1 agreement holders need to submit a revised WCPG application and plan with Stage 1 tabs amended to account for the expanded project area.
No additional Stage 1 payment will be made. In most instances we retrospectively add new areas to agreements already subject to an existing Stage 2 offer. This is to ensure new areas are suitably assessed for sensitivities and constraints through the Stage 1 process.
If you are an agreement holder at Stage 2 and would like to extend the project area you will need written agreement from your Woodland Creation Officer to add new areas. The decision to allow this is at our discretion and you might need to submit a new application for the new areas.
Biodiversity, habitats and environment Existing native, semi-natural habitats are likely to have a high value for biodiversity, and for landscape and visual interest. This will need to be compared with the value of new woodland. We do not support the conversion of priority habitats, such as deep peat or active raised bogs.
Where the proposed planting is in semi-natural habitat, the presumption is that the planting will be restricted to native broadleaved species, or the semi-natural habitat will be retained as open ground within the woodland’s design. Find out more about protecting woodland wildlife and the government’s principles for afforestation on or near to priority habitats .
You get a Stage 2 payment for producing a UK Forestry Standard compliant woodland creation design plan by completing the Stage 2 tabs of the application and plan. See the example maps and plans to understand what we need to complete Stage 1 and 2. These include: a design concept plan and final design plan Do not start work on Stage 2 of the WCPG application and plan until you have a Stage 2 offer from the Forestry Commission.
The WCPG application and plan and supporting documents will show a design process: from a survey of the site’s main features to analysis of how they will affect the proposed woodland’s design. This will create an informed design for the woodland.
You may include more than 20% of designed open space in your plan if the constraints of your site make this necessary, but the total Stage 2 payment will be limited to the net planting area plus 20% (of the gross area). This means that any designed open space in your plan over and above 20% of the total project area will not receive funding. All elements of your woodland creation design plan should be clearly referred to.
This should include: how those elements of survey and analysis were brought together to produce a UK Forestry Standard -compliant plan for your site any special reports and surveys funded through a supplementary payment If you submitted your application on or after 11 December 2024, we will provide a regulatory decision on your woodland planting proposal when approving your final woodland creation design plan at Stage 2.
It won’t be subject to further EIA or consultation if your project remains the same and is planted within the date specified in the EIA decision letter. If you wish to make changes to the final design or the EIA decision has expired, contact us before planting.
If you want to plant the woodland, and you submitted your application before 11 December 2024, it will still be subject to the Environmental Impact Assessment (Forestry) (England and Wales) Regulations 1999 (as amended) and consultation. Find out more about EIAs . Forestry Commission approval of your woodland creation design plan does not provide approval to plant.
Find out if you’re eligible by reading the grant terms and conditions . You can also talk to your Woodland Creation Officer . Apply using the forms on WCPG forms and guidance .
You can start work on your woodland design plan once your application is approved, and you have accepted a Stage 1 agreement offer. You can apply all year round. We aim to respond to your application within 20 working days (4 weeks).
It may take longer if your application includes untrialled tree species or is in a sensitive location. You must have a signed agreement in place before you start work. Make sure you use the latest WCPG forms and guidance as they are updated regularly.
Give consent if you appoint an agent You can appoint an agent to apply for funding on your behalf. You need to complete a Forestry Commission agent authority form to give your consent. You can use your approved woodland creation design plan to apply for the England Woodland Creation Offer .
Find out how to appeal against a Forestry Commission decision . Contact the WCPG national team for more information WCPG @forestrycommission. gov.uk or your local Woodland Creation Officer .
Last updated 11 February 2026 data-module="ga4-event-tracker" data-ga4-event='{"event_name":"select_content","type":"content history","section":"Footer"}' data-ga4-expandable> + show all updates Updated eligibility criteria to remove Countryside Stewardship, Woodland Carbon Fund and HS2 Woodland Fund from the list of previous applications that would make applicants ineligible for a WCPG on the proposed site.
Links to 3 of the current standard briefs (peat depth survey, breeding birds and vegetation / habitats) now go direct to relevant paragraphs. Added an updated version of the WCPG leaflet. Updated details on the changes that come into force 11 December 2024.
This relates to the need for consultation and Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) screening. Updated the notice around adding consultation and EIA screening to the WCPG process from 11 December 2024, to reflect the updated application and plan, and declaration form are now available. Added an 'important update' about consultation and EIA screening changes that come into effect December 2024.
Added links to Example Woodland Creation Planning Grant (WCPG) application and plan . Updated to reflect uplift to Stage 1 payment to £1,500 and application cap to £30,500. Addition of a new Deer Impact Assessment option under the Supplementary Payment and standardised cost option for ecological surveys.
Added: Woodland Creation Planning Grant - terms and conditions. Woodland Creation Design Plan Template updated Information added for new Natural environment survey and assessment instructions Added the Woodland Creation Planning Grant leaflet. Updated information on supplementary payments.
The 'Archaeology' standard brief has been added to this page. Updates to the grant rules and eligibility. Get emails about this page No this page is not useful Thank you for your feedback Report a problem with this page Do not include personal or financial information like your National Insurance number or credit card details.
This field is for robots only. Please leave blank To help us improve GOV.UK, we’d like to know more about your visit today. Please fill in this survey (opens in a new tab ) .
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Farmers and land managers in England. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Up to £30,500 per project Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
Patagonia Corporate Grant Program is sponsored by Patagonia. Patagonia supports innovative work that addresses the root causes of the environmental crisis and seeks to protect both the environment and affected communities. The program focuses on local battles to protect specific natural areas, indigenous wild species, or communities from environmental exploitation. It encourages work that brings underrepresented communities to the forefront of the environmental movement and defends communities whose health and livelihoods are threatened by environmental exploitation. The funding is for grassroots activist organizations with direct-action agendas and campaigns for environmental protection over the long term.
EPA is seeking insightful, expert, and cost-effective applications from eligible applicants to provide the Chesapeake Bay Program’s non-federal partners with technical analysis and programmatic evaluation support related to water quality modeling and monitoring and spatial systems to manage, analyze, and map environmental data. The project assists the partners in meeting their restoration and protection goals and in increasing the transfer of scientific understanding to the Chesapeake Bay Program modeling, monitoring, and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) activities. The recipient will support modeling, monitoring, and GIS programs needed to explain and communicate the health of and changes in the Chesapeake Bay ecosystem. Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-R3-CBP-23-18. Assistance Listing: 66.466. Funding Instrument: CA. Category: ENV. Award Amount: Up to $5.3M per award.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program Phase I is sponsored by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The EPA SBIR Phase I Solicitation invites small businesses to submit proposals for projects addressing critical environmental challenges. Awards are for six months to demonstrate proof of concept. Key focus areas include Clean and Safe Water, Air Quality and Climate, Homeland Security, Circular Economy/Sustainable Materials, and Safer Chemicals.