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FY6

Restore coppicing in woodland

info Summary

This Higher Tier Capital Grant item supports the restoration of neglected coppice woodland by cutting overstood coppice stools, enhancing temporary open spaces, and increasing biodiversity. It requires a woodland management plan and specific cutting and protection measures.

format_list_bulleted What to do

  • Provide at least 3 written quotations for the work with your application
  • Agree the selected quotation with the Forestry Commission
  • Coppice trees between September and the end of March
  • Cut trees at an agreed height above ground level
  • Protect cut stools from livestock, deer, and rabbits to allow re-growth

schedule When to do

  • Coppice trees between September and the end of March

checklist How to do and evidence required

You must keep and provide with your claim:

  • receipted invoices or bank statements where a receipted invoice is not available
  • photographs of the completed work
  • detailed specification document
  • copies of any planning or other permission
  • any consents or permissions connected with the works
  • a felling licence from the Forestry Commission (if applicable)

You must also keep and provide on request:

  • a copy of the Forestry Commission advice
  • a Forestry Commission approved woodland management plan
  • photographs of site before works start
  • photographs of the completed work

Read the record keeping and site visit requirements in the Agreement holder’s guide: Capital Grants, Higher Tier capital grants and Protection and Infrastructure grants for more information.

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.

tips_and_updates Additional Advice

  • Control injurious weeds by spot treatment or weed wiping if herbicide is needed.
  • Use for overstood coppice blocks or to bring trees into a coppicing programme.
  • Consider visual impact when deciding coppice percentage.
  • Angle cuts away from the stool centre for water run-off.
  • Dispose of cut material by stacking, removing, or burning; avoid stacking against cut trees or disposing on sensitive habitats.
  • Ensure fire sites are a minimum of 10m from tree canopies.

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info Additional Information

FY6: Restore coppicing in woodland

This item is part of Higher Tier Capital Grants 2025. You must read the Higher Tier capital grants 2025 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

Up to 80% of actual costs

How this item benefits the environment

Using this item to cut areas of neglected coppice stools (one tree with several shoots) which have not been actively managed will restore coppice management. Overstood coppice is where the coppice shoots have been left uncut to grow into tall muti-stemmed trees. This enhances temporary open spaces which will increase biodiversity.

Where you can use this item

You can use this item in woodlands where you have agreed with the Forestry Commission that coppicing is appropriate. You’ll need a woodland management plan.

You can also use it alongside these Countryside Stewardship Higher Tier actions and supplements:

What you must do to use this item

You must:

  • provide at least 3 written quotations for completion of the work with your application, identifying associated costs
  • agree the selected quotation with the Forestry Commission
  • coppice trees between September and the end of March
  • cut trees at an agreed height above ground level
  • protect cut stools from livestock, deer and rabbits (if needed) to allow re-growth

Evidence you must keep

You must keep and provide with your claim:

  • receipted invoices or bank statements where a receipted invoice is not available
  • photographs of the completed work
  • detailed specification document
  • copies of any planning or other permission
  • any consents or permissions connected with the works
  • a felling licence from the Forestry Commission (if applicable)

You must also keep and provide on request:

  • a copy of the Forestry Commission advice
  • a Forestry Commission approved woodland management plan
  • photographs of site before works start
  • photographs of the completed work

Read the record keeping and site visit requirements in the Agreement holder’s guide: Capital Grants, Higher Tier capital grants and Protection and Infrastructure grants for more information.

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.

Other items you can use with this item

You can use this item with:

FG1: Fencing

FG2: Sheep netting

FG4: Rabbit fencing supplement

FG9: Deer fencing

FG12: Wooden field gate

FG16: Deer pedestrian gate

FG17: Deer vehicle gate

FY1: Deer high seat

FY8: Supplement for a freestanding deer high seat

Advice to help you use this item

The following advice may help you to use this item, but you do not have to follow it to get paid. It’s not part of this item’s requirements.

Controlling injurious weeds

You should control the growth of nettle, thistle, dock, ragwort and other weed species. If you need to apply herbicide, do this by spot treatment or weed wiping only.

Picking the right location

You can use this item for blocks of trees that were previously in a coppice rotation but are now overstood.

You can also use it either:

  • to bring trees into a coppicing programme
  • for the selection of single stems to grow on to become mature trees

Consider the short-term visual impact on the landscape when deciding what percentage of trees you’ll coppice.

Managing the coppice

Angle cuts away from the centre of the stool when coppicing to allow water to run off.

You can use cut material to create dead hedging around cut stools or dispose of it by either:

  • stacking in piles on site
  • removing it from the site
  • burning

Leave material in as large pieces as possible and do not stack against the trees that have been cut.

You can burn small branches and twigs (under 10cm in diameter) on site providing trees are not damaged. Avoid disposal on sensitive habitats or historic features.

Fire sites should be a minimum of 10m from the canopy of any tree.

Simple coppice

An even-aged, single-storey crop generally grown for fuelwood and medium or small sized produce (or just one of these).

Coppice with standards

In many coppice woodlands, a proportion of trees are grown to timber size with the coppice as a layer of vegetation below (understory). Alternatively, you could use a different species to the coppice crop that you encourage to grow to a high forest tree.

Such trees are called ‘standards’ and can occupy a small or large amount of the stand. They often occupy around 30% to 40% of the area. The standards are widely spaced so their crowns are not touching, allowing plenty of light to the coppice crop below. The standards can be of various ages and should consist of 3 to 6 different age classes. They can be of a different species (for example, a coppice storey of hazel with standards of oak). [CSHT]: Countryside Stewardship Higher Tier [PAWS]: plantations on ancient woodland sites *[ASNW]: ancient semi-natural woodlands

Questions about FY6?

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