Change description : 2025-05-22 10:35:00: Added a link to ‘tree planting and woodland creation resources’ in the Useful guides for woodland management section. [Guidance and regulation]
The first step to managing your woodland sustainably is to establish what your objectives are. Do you want to focus on timber production, nature conservation or climate change adaptation? Perhaps you want to manage your woodland for all of these and more.
A woodland management plan provides a structured way to plan and organise the sustainable management of woodland to a common industry standard.
Funding for woodland maintenance
There are a number of grants and incentives to support the maintenance of established woodlands and the creation of management plans.
The woodland management plan grant (Countryside Stewardship) offers funds to farmers and land managers to produce a woodland management plan that meets the UK Forestry StandardsStandard.
Managing semi-natural woodland in England (PDF, 934 KB, 36 pages) includes information on the need for management, harvesting, weeding, tending and thinning, tree regeneration, grazing and pest control.
Managing woodlands in a climate emergency
Managing England’s woodlands in a climate emergency will help you plan, plant and manage your woodlands appropriately for both current, and future climates. The guide supports foresters, farmers and landowners to adapt their woodlands to the impacts of our changing climate.
Visit Forest Research’s Climate Change Hub for information and guidance on protecting our woodlands and forests from the impacts and risks due to the changing climate.
Diverse forests and woodlands contribute to the sustainability of the wider landscape. The conservation of biodiversity is therefore an essential part of sustainable forest management.
Woodlands provide space for recreation and improve people’s health and wellbeing. Access to woodlands gives people a chance to learn about forests and woodland management, and recreation can provide opportunities for business diversification.
If you have legal rights of public access to your woodland, you must manage these appropriately. By maintaining paths, tracks, and signage, you can also help people to access your woodland in a way that supports other management objectives, such as habitat and species protection, and timber harvesting.
The Woodland Condition Assessment (WCA) app
You can download the Woodland Condition Assessment app to get results on the ecological condition of your woodland. This will help you assess your woodland’s condition in a standardised way, and it incorporates new rules on Biodiversity Net Gain, and other legislation.