Change description : 2026-05-28 11:13:00: 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.Grants 2026. You must read the Capital items:Grants 2026 guidanceforto applicantsunderstand the rules and agreementhow holdersto 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
£19.50 per square metre (m2).
How this item benefits the environment
Installing new drainage aprons and sumps for sheep dips, or replacing existing ones in a new location, can help reduce the risk of water pollution Pollution from sheep dips can cause damage to people and aquatic wildlife.
This item can help you protect, recover and improve biodiversity on your land.
Where you can use this item
You can only use this item in areas targeted for the reduction of water pollution from agriculture, with support from Catchment Sensitive Farming.Farming.
Catchment Sensitive Farming provides advice where there are water quality or flood risk issues linked to farming.
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.
You’ll need an environmental permit to discharge sheep dip to land. If you already have an environmental permit, you’ll need to vary it if the location of the discharge area changes.
Where to install drain pens
Locate new drainage pens, drainage aprons and sumps:
10m from watercourses (including streams, ditches, land drains and wetlands)
30m from watercourses that drain into protected conservation sites (such as SitesofSpecialScientificInterest(SSSIs))SSSIs)
50m from any spring, well or borehole
If there’s a risk of spillage draining to a watercourse, road or track, do not install the pens or dip baths:
on a slope
at the top of a slope
on land which is under drained
Protecting the historic environment
You should avoid using this item
close to a historic farmstead or listed building – you can get advice on listed building consent from your local authority
on sites of archaeological or historic importance as identified in your Historic Environment Farm Environment Record (HEFER) – you can get advice on scheduled monument consent from Historic England before using this item on such sites
You should also consider the character of the landscape when constructing new fencing lines. This particularly applies in designated landscapes or historic parkland.