Developing in Somerset?
Don’t let badgers slow you down, our expert surveys give you compliant reports for smooth planning consent.
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Somerset’s landscape of rolling farmland, hedgerows, river corridors, woodlands, and pasture field edges provides ideal habitat for badger setts and movement routes. The mosaic of meadows, embankments, and rural plots creates connected corridors that badgers commonly use for foraging and dispersal.
A badger survey assesses whether badgers are present and how development might affect them. Ecologists record sett locations, foraging signs, and movement patterns, sometimes using motion cameras or tracking methods. The survey results inform mitigation strategies to ensure construction or land changes avoid disturbing badgers and comply with planning requirements.
A badger survey in Somerset may be required for:
Excavation, trenching, or groundwork near hedgerows, small woodlands, or river corridors in areas such as Taunton, Yeovil, or Frome
Residential developments, barn conversions, or farm expansions in rural locations like Bridgwater, Street, or Glastonbury
Clearance of scrub, embankments, or greenfield edges around Wells or Shepton Mallet
Works along field margins, drainage ditches, or other rural corridors in surrounding countryside
A Preliminary Ecological Appraisal (PEA) highlighting potential badger activity
A postcode check can confirm whether the local planning authority is likely to request a survey.
Surveys can be conducted across Somerset, covering major towns, suburban fringe areas, and surrounding villages such as Burnham-on-Sea, Chard, and Cheddar.
Somerset planning authorities require badger survey evidence where setts or suitable habitat are present to ensure development complies with the Protection of Badgers Act 1992 and national planning policy. Without early, proportionate surveys, applications are frequently delayed by validation queries, additional planning conditions, or seasonal restrictions, which can stall site programmes or even necessitate redesign.
Our specialist ecology team carries out a Badger Survey to identify setts, activity, and potential risk. You receive a clear, LPA-ready report detailing any required mitigation and timing measures, helping your project stay on schedule and compliant.
Clear, proportionate, planning-aligned services:Â
Full badger sett surveys
Activity and territory mapping
Inspection of woodland edges, slopes, quarries, and hedgerows
Proportionate mitigation and avoidance strategies
LPA- and National Park–aligned reporting
Licensing guidance if required
Practical next steps for design teams, landowners, and contractors
We keep guidance realistic, grounded and aligned with rural development needs.Â
Send your site details and programme. We confirm the correct level of survey.
Walkovers, sett assess-ments, camera deployment and activity checks.
Planning-ready reports with impact assessment, mitigation options and timelines for site teams.
Only if needed. PEA, EIA, and Protected Species surveysÂ
Need a badger survey in Somerset? Let’s confirm your site’s requirements and keep your project on track.Â
Badger surveys may be required where proposed works could affect badgers, their setts, foraging areas or movement routes. In Somerset, this is often relevant for sites near woodland, hedgerows, pasture, orchards, river corridors, rural lanes, railway embankments and undeveloped land.
Somerset Council may request a badger survey where a site contains suitable habitat or where ecological records suggest badgers could be present nearby. The survey helps demonstrate that protected species have been considered before planning permission is determined.
An ecologist will look for sett entrances, spoil heaps, bedding material, footprints, hair, latrines, feeding signs, scratching posts and well used paths. These signs help confirm whether badgers are using the site and whether development could cause disturbance, obstruction or damage.
Rural homes, barn conversions, agricultural buildings, equestrian facilities and farm diversification projects may need badger surveys where suitable habitat is present. Badgers often use field margins, hedgerows, banks and woodland edges, so early ecological assessment can help reduce planning risk.
Development can often proceed if a badger sett is found, but the impacts must be properly assessed and managed. Depending on the sett location and activity level, mitigation may include protective buffers, revised layouts, timing controls, exclusion fencing, a method statement or licensed works.
Orchards, smallholdings and rural edge sites may require badger surveys where there are hedgerows, banks, unmanaged vegetation, woodland links or suitable foraging habitat. These features can support badger movement and sett creation, particularly where sites connect to wider countryside.
Badger surveys can usually be completed throughout the year, although signs are often easier to see when vegetation is lower. If dense vegetation, steep banks or restricted access affect visibility, further checks may be recommended before planning or construction progresses.
Badger survey requirements depend on the site, habitat and proposed works. Somerset Council may request badger survey information where protected species could be affected by development proposals. Somerset Council Planning: https://www.somerset.gov.uk/planning-buildings-and-land/
A badger survey provides clear evidence that protected species legislation has been considered. The report identifies ecological constraints, assesses potential impacts and recommends mitigation, helping planning officers understand how the development can proceed lawfully and responsibly.
A Somerset badger survey report usually includes survey methods, site context, habitat features, evidence of badger activity, photographs, plans, impact assessment and recommendations. Where required, it may also include mitigation measures, working methods or advice on further survey requirements.