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Getting started with farm woodlands

Scotland's farmers and crofters aim to create high-quality food. They also want to tackle climate change, support nature, and boost their business resilience. Planting and maintaining trees on your farm, croft, or estate can support any or all of those outcomes.

Published: 22 Feb 2025

Topic: Planting trees

How trees can help your business

Integrating trees into your farm or croft could help your business to grow and become more resilient. That comes from positive impacts they can have on your farm business, such as:

  • shelter and shade for livestock

  • supporting biodiversity

  • generating income from timber and carbon credits

  • getting value from less productive land

  • supporting your soil

  • flood prevention and improved water quality

For more information on how trees can support your farm business, read our 'Why Trees?' guide.

Why Trees? The benefits for your business, your community and the environment.
Planting trees
A line of cows on the Adamson family farm.

Integrating Trees Network

The Integrating Trees Network is an award-winning initiative led by farmers. It aims to encourage more farmers and crofters to plant trees through various events and case studies.
Explore how farmers use trees on their farms

Available funding and support

Scottish Forestry’s Forestry Grant Scheme (FGS) offers many funding options.

These can help you plant trees on your farm and ensure they are well protected and maintained. 

The FGS is open to applications all year, and land planted under FGS remains eligible for Basic Payment for the length of the contract. 

How we can help


Small Woodland Loan Scheme

The Small Woodland Loan Scheme can help cover initial costs before you receive your FGS payment. Land managers can also receive support to help identify opportunities to plant trees. 

The Small Woodland Loan Scheme can help cover initial costs before you receive your FGS payment.

What are the potential costs of farm woodlands?


Support from the Farm Advisory Service (FAS)

The Farm Advisory Service also offers up to £1,600 for a specialist adviser to provide support with:

  • woodland creation
  • management
  • conservation support

Specialist advice (Farm Advisory Service website)

Free Farm Woodland Assessments in Central Scotland!

Scottish Forestry offers a limited number of free woodland assessments for farms interested in tree planting within central Scotland.

Agroforestry options in the Forestry Grant Scheme

The Forestry Grant Scheme supports integrated approaches to land management, where trees and agriculture co-exist to provide multiple benefits. 

You can create agroforestry systems on grazing and arable land in several ways. 

These systems help produce:

  • trees for timber
  • biodiversity
  • fruit and nuts

You can do this while still raising your livestock or growing crops.

Agroforestry options in the Forestry Grant Scheme (FGS)

Sheep and Trees

The Sheep and Trees initiative aids upland livestock farmers in Scotland. 

It brings together grants for creating woodlands and building forest infrastructure. 

You can graze the woodland once the trees are mature enough to avoid browsing damage.

Read about the sheep and trees initiative

Planting trees on tenant farms

We want to encourage tenant farmers to consider tree planting. 

To that end, we worked with our partners and produced a case study showing different options.

The study used a real tenant farm to show the financial aspects of various woodland creation options.

Read about our Ruthven farm case study

Planting trees on crofts

The Croft Woodlands Project (CWP) offers free help to:

  • crofters

  • common grazings committees

  • smallholders in the crofting counties

Advisers can help with:

  • site assessments

  • technical advice

  • access to funding

Advice mainly covers new woodland planting but also includes managing existing woodlands. The CWP also offers training events and knowledge transfer sessions. 

Find out more about the Croft Woodlands Project (Woodland Trust Scotland website)

Woodland Expansion Advisory Group

The Woodland Expansion Advisory Group (WEAG) provides advice on the types of land that are best for tree planting in Scotland, whilst considering other land uses.

When planning your woodland creation, you may need to provide an assessment of the potential impacts from your activities, including any proposed mitigation. For example, if your woodland creation proposal is likely to:

  • have a significant impact on agricultural land
  • affect the local land use balance with agriculture
Find out about the Woodland Expansion Advisory Group (WEAG)

Have a question about woodland creation?

We can offer you support and guidance for your project throughout the woodland creation application process.

Contact your local Scottish Forestry office to discuss your plans.

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