Planning-ready BNG assessments for Kent — verified baselines, Metric 4.0 scoring and proportionate uplift strategies for a predictable planning route.
Calls answered in 2 rings, emails replied to within the hour.
Clear guidance before you commit.
Working in partnership with clients to ensure planning approval first time
Industry Leading Standard
We stay with you from first call through to submission.
Most developments in Kent now require a mandatory 10% biodiversity net gain under the Environment Act 2021.
Local planning authorities expect clear baseline data, a defensible Metric 4.0 calculation and a proportionate uplift strategy before your application can progress. Kent’s long coastline, farmland plateaus, chalk grassland, woodland belts and river-valley systems shape how LPAs interpret BNG and assess planning risk. These factors strongly influence how LPAs interpret BNG.
Local landscape patterns affecting BNG expectations across Kent include:
These patterns influence how uplift proposals are evaluated during planning.
We support projects across:
Maidstone, Canterbury, Ashford, Medway, Tonbridge, Tunbridge Wells, Sevenoaks, Dover, Folkestone & Hythe, Thanet and surrounding villages.
Kent LPAs request BNG evidence early because habitat distinctiveness varies sharply across chalk downs, river corridors, agricultural land and ancient woodland boundaries. A minor design change can alter habitat condition scores — and therefore uplift requirements.
Early clarity prevents redesign loops, validation delays and uplift recalculation caused by late-stage habitat verification.
We produce planning-ready BNG Assessments aligned to Kent’s policy expectations.
For Kent schemes, every planning-ready BNG Assessment includes:
These deliverables are structured to satisfy Kent LPAs while keeping your BNG route proportionate to the scale of development.
Year-round, with optimal survey seasons
Completed once habitat data is verified.
Aligned with design progression and layout refinement.
Only if needed. PEA, EIA, and Protected Species surveys
Contact us and we’ll confirm exactly what your site requires and support a planning-ready, proportionate route forward.
A Biodiversity Net Gain assessment establishes the baseline ecological value of a site using the statutory Biodiversity Metric and models the proposed development to confirm whether at least 10 percent measurable uplift can be achieved in accordance with national legislation.
Chalk grassland habitats can carry higher distinctiveness values within the Biodiversity Metric. Accurate habitat classification and condition assessment are essential to ensure baseline units are correctly calculated before modelling development proposals.
Yes. Development near coastal marsh, grazing marsh or estuarine habitats must comply with statutory Biodiversity Net Gain legislation. The assessment must quantify baseline habitat units and model realistic enhancements.
Large scale housing and regeneration sites within the Thames Gateway require detailed baseline mapping and iterative modelling to ensure the masterplan can achieve at least 10 percent measurable uplift.
Not necessarily. While arable land may have lower baseline distinctiveness, realistic enhancement proposals and accurate condition assessment are essential to confirm compliant uplift.
Employment and logistics schemes near ports or transport corridors must quantify habitat losses and demonstrate measurable biodiversity uplift using the Biodiversity Metric.
Timescales depend on site size and complexity. Larger allocations and phased developments often require iterative modelling alongside evolving layouts.
If modelling identifies a biodiversity unit shortfall, developers may secure registered off site biodiversity units to meet statutory requirements.
Depending on site location, Biodiversity Net Gain assessments are reviewed by authorities such as Ashford Borough Council, Maidstone Borough Council, Canterbury City Council or Medway Council.
Planning guidance for Maidstone Borough Council can be accessed at:
https://www.maidstone.gov.uk/home/primary-services/planning-and-building
ProHort undertakes detailed habitat surveys and robust Biodiversity Metric modelling tailored to Kent’s chalk, coastal and strategic growth context. We provide early feasibility advice, accurate unit calculations and clear planning documentation to minimise biodiversity compliance risk.