BNG Good practice in Local Plans, local policy and advice notes


Introduction

Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) is an approach to development that ensures that wildlife habitats are left in a measurably better state than they were before the development. In England, BNG became mandatory under Schedule 7A of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (as inserted by Schedule 14 of the Environment act 2021) in Spring 2024. 

PAS has been working with local planning authorities (LPAs) to support their implementation of BNG since 2021. LPAs are taking a variety of approaches to ensure they comply with the legal requirements and, in many cases, go above and beyond these to ensure BNG delivers wider benefits.  

This is one of a suite of guides prepared for PAS by Urban Design Learning that collate good practice across the following key areas of implementing BNG: 

Together these guides guide seek to:

  • Enable LPAs to adopt more effective approaches to BNG, leading to better decision-making and more efficient use of resources;  
  • Encourage consistency in implementing BNG across the country, contributing to improved relationships between applicants and LPAs;
  • Support applicants to make better quality planning applications in line with national planning policy.

Since the introduction of mandatory BNG in 2023, many LPAs preparing Local Plans have struggled to develop compatible local policies for BNG. Local Plan policies, Supplementary Planning Documents (SPDs) and advice notes to applicants should be consistent with the mandatory approach, including the BNG mitigation hierarchy, but not duplicate statutory provisions. Policy can support local implementation of BNG, including an approach for applications where BNG doesn't apply, and integrate BNG with other Local Plan policies on the natural environment. 

The move to a new local plan system and revised National Planning Policy Framework later this year provides an opportunity for clearer local policies about BNG which are compatible with the mandatory framework.  In the meantime, it is important LPAs working on plans can learn from emerging good practice.

This guide sets out lessons learnt to help improve Local Plan making and policy making to inform decision-making and better integrate BNG as ‘business-as-usual' for all those involved in the planning and implementation of BNG. 

Good Practice Approaches to Advice Notes

Well-drafted SPDs and advice notes and informal guidance can improve the quality of planning applications, provide applicants with clear expectations from the outset and speed up decision-making. LPA’s can develop guidance proactively, working with the available evidence while building a stronger evidence base required to support local planning policy. This flexibility enables LPA’s to be more responsive to evolving national policy. The following case studies offer useful lessons for other local authorities.

Good Practice Approaches to Local Policy and SPD

PAS note: The consultation draft National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) published in December 2025 sets out that SPDs will be replaced by Supplementary plans (plan-making framework policy PM4). In addition, it includes specific policy around local standards for BNG in Local Plans under N1: Identifying environmental opportunities and safeguards, Paragraph 2. LPAs should take this into account when drafting local plan policies and when considering SPDs, whilst we await publication of the final NPPF. Some of the policies and SPDs highlighted below may not be consistent with these new policies.

Key Contributors

Many thanks to the following for contributing towards this guidance document:

  • Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council  
  • Bracknell Forest Council                
  • Cornwall Council  
  • Dover District Council    
  • Durham County Council
  • East Devon District Council    
  • North Northamptonshire Council                        
  • Peterborough City Council    
  • Salford City Council
  • South Tyneside Council    
  • Wyre Forest District Council        

If you are part of a local authority and would like more information, contact PAS at [email protected] and sign up to the BNG Network.