Change description : 2026-05-28 11:01:00: Updated links to guidance for Capital Grants and Agreement holder’s guide from 2025 to 2026. [Guidance and regulation]
This item is part of Capital Grants 2025.2026. You must read the Capital Grants 20252026 guidance to understand the rules and how to apply.
If you’re applying for this item as part of a Countryside Stewardship Higher Tier (CSHT) application, you must read the CSHT applicant’s guide to understand the rules and how to apply.
How much you’ll be paid
£55.91 per box.
How this item benefits the environment
Installing a medium wildlife box provides artificial nesting, roosting and hibernation sites for specific mammals and birds. This includes tree sparrow and targeted bat species.
Where you can use this item
You can use this item to provide a wildlife box either:
for the target species dormouse, tree sparrows, targeted bat species or invertebrate pollinators
for other target species with the support of a Natural England, Buglife or the Royal Society for Protection of Birds (RSPB) adviser
where there’s summer and winter foraging habitat available all year for the target species on or near your land
What you must do to use this item
You must:
place each box in an appropriate location
clean out the boxes in the autumn, unless it’s being used by hibernating or roosting bats
Evidence you must keep
You must keep photographs of the completed work and provide them with your claim.
You must also keep and provide on request:
any consents or permissions connected with the work
receipted invoices or bank statements where a receipted invoice is unavailable
photographs of the proposed site for each box
a record of the date you clean out the boxes (unless they’re used by bats or invertebrates)
If you’re applying for this item as part of a Countryside Stewardship Higher Tier (CSHT) application, read the record keeping and site visit requirements in the CSHT agreement holder’s guide.
Advice to help you use this item
Locating boxes for different species
Boxes for all species should be kept in their original location if they’re being used. If they are not being used after year 3, ask Natural England for relocation advice.
Strap Boxesboxes should be strapped to trees with wire and hose or rubber to prevent tree damage.
Dormice boxes
Boxes should be:
in ancient woodlands or large hedgerows – avoid isolated trees
in batches of at least 10 (ideally over 50), spaced 10 metres (m) to 20m with around 30 boxes per hectare
1.5m to 2m above the ground (over 3m if the public have access)
sheltered from strong winds and sun for at least part of day
close to a hedgerow or tree line
placed with the boxes facing in different directions to offer a range of temperature conditions
Protected species
Bats and their roosts are protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. It’s an offence to disturb, handle or kill bats. A licence from Natural England is needed to inspect bat boxes that have been or are being used by bats.
Increase in payment rate from £27.91 to £55.91 per box.
3 February 2025
General improvement for clarity.
7 November 2023
Removal of text confirming WB2 Medium wildlife box availability under Countryside Stewardship Capital Grants (SFI pilot), as the SFI Capital offer is no longer available.
8 March 2023
The 'Where to use this item' and 'Requirements' sections of this item have been updated.
1 February 2022
'Where to use this item' section updated to include detail on SFI pilot.