We regularly conduct GCN assessments across Stafford, Stone, Eccleshall, Gnosall, and Hixon, as well as Cannock, Rugeley, and Hednesford.
Need planning-ready GCN surveys in Staffordshire?
We offer focused surveys and eDNA testing for Great Crested Newts, providing clear, actionable reports that support planning applications and help keep your project on schedule.
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With Staffordshire’s mix of farmland, pond clusters, woodland edges, and redeveloping industrial land, GCN requirements arise frequently — even where ponds aren’t obvious.
A GCN assessment identifies potential newt habitat, evaluates the risk to your project, and determines whether eDNA testing or full presence/absence surveys are needed, helping keep your development on track and avoiding seasonal delays.
You may need a GCN survey in Staffordshire if your project is:
within 250 m of a pond, as often seen around Stafford and Stone
on land with historic or mapped ponds, typical of Lichfield
near woodland belts, wet grassland, or marshy ground, such as Cannock Chase
flagged in a PEA as moderate or high GCN risk
affecting ditches, waterbodies, or older landscaping features, commonly found in Stoke-on-Trent
scheduled during restricted survey windows
Checking your site postcode or location early helps confirm whether a survey is required and keeps your project moving smoothly.
We regularly conduct GCN assessments across Stafford, Stone, Eccleshall, Gnosall, and Hixon, as well as Cannock, Rugeley, and Hednesford.
In Staffordshire, local planning authorities may request Great Crested Newt (GCN) survey evidence where suitable habitats—such as ponds, marshy grassland, wet ditches, woodland edges, rough grassland, and other connected terrestrial areas—are present, to ensure development proposals comply with wildlife legislation and national planning policy. Without timely and proportionate survey work, planning applications can be delayed due to validation queries, additional planning conditions, or seasonal restrictions linked to key GCN activity periods. These delays can disrupt project timelines and may lead to avoidable redesigns, highlighting the importance of early, targeted GCN assessments.
We provide practical, proportionate GCN assessments, from habitat appraisals and eDNA or full surveys to clear, planning-ready reports with mitigation, timing guidance, and actionable next steps to keep projects on track.
We provide clear, planning-ready GCN evidence and practical steps for your team in Staffordshire, including:
Natural England-approved eDNA testing
Full presence/absence surveys if required
Terrestrial habitat assessments
Proportionate reporting to support LPA validation
We keep it simple: the right method at the right time, with realistic, actionable advice aligned to your programme.
Share your site details and programme, and we’ll identify whether an eDNA or full survey is required.
We conduct walkovers, eDNA tests, or full GCN surveys based on site potential and season.
You receive planning-ready reports with impacts, mitigation, licensing, and clear timelines.
Require a GCN assessment in Staffordshire? Check your site’s needs early to keep your project moving.
Possibly. If it’s within 250m, LPAs may request evidence.
If timed correctly (mid-April to end June), yes — a negative result is usually accepted.
Yes, if there are ponds, ditches, or suitable terrestrial habitats nearby, LPAs may request a survey even on previously developed sites.
We’ll advise whether evidence can still be provided or whether surveys must wait.
Not if the right approach is taken early. Most delays occur when the window is missed.
For planning requirements and ecological validation:
If GCNs are present, mitigation, licensing, and timing measures are required, but early surveys allow these to be planned without delaying the overall project.