Scottish Farmers — Specialist advice grants are one of the under-used pieces of the Scottish farm support architecture. £1,600 of funded biodiversity audit isn’t transformative on its own, but layered onto the Whole Farm Plan obligations now in force it becomes a genuinely useful piece of the compliance jigsaw. The 1 April 2026 reopening of the SAG scheme is the practical moment.
The detail Scottish farmers should register is the 15 May 2026 deadline for confirming completed actions on the Single Application Form. Two actions minimum. Missing the deadline disrupts support payments, and the disruption isn’t proportionate to the administrative slip.
For working farms that haven’t engaged with the Farm Advisory Service before, the practical move is to call before booking the audit. Adviser availability tightens as the deadline approaches, and the firms producing useful audits get booked first. If you’ve already booked an audit, confirm what evidence the adviser will produce and how it supports both the SAG claim and the WFP record-keeping. The same audit can do double duty if structured correctly. Done badly, it’s two pieces of paperwork doing the work of one.
SAG scheme reopens with biodiversity audit funding — Scottish Farmers
Scottish farmers have a window of opportunity to claim up to £1,600 for biodiversity audits as the Specialist Advice Grants (SAG) scheme reopened on 1 April 2026. The funding, administered through the Farm Advisory Service, covers tailored advice on business performance, environmental management and succession planning. With the Whole Farm Plan now mandatory, farmers must confirm completion of at least two actions on their Single Application Form by 15 May 2026 or risk disruption to support payments.
Hamish Dunbar-Nasmith, a farming consultant with Strutt & Parker’s rural team, said the timing could not be more critical. “The basic premise of the scheme, which is run by the Farm Advisory Service, is that it funds tailored and specialist advice from a farm advisor of your choice,” he explained. His message is straightforward: those who have not yet engaged with the scheme face a tight turnaround.
The Whole Farm Plan, introduced in 2025, requires farmers to complete a suite of audits covering biodiversity, carbon, soil and water. By 2028 at the latest, all applicable plans must be in place and kept current, with biodiversity and carbon audits requiring renewal every five years to remain valid. For many farms, this represents a significant shift in compliance requirements.
What This Means for Farmers
The scrapping of standalone carbon audit funding will ruffle feathers. Farmers who budgeted for that stream have been left short-changed. Dunbar-Nasmith was candid about the change: “Standalone carbon audit funding has been scrapped for 2026.” However, he pointed to a lifeline, a grant for carbon audit action plans remains available, helping businesses that have already undergone a carbon audit implement recommendations. This is useful but limited; those expecting direct carbon audit funding will need to rethink their approach.
The real value here lies in the biodiversity audit funding. £1,600 is a meaningful sum for a task many farmers would otherwise defer due to cost. Combined with advice on habitat management and business efficiency, the package offers genuine return on investment for those willing to act quickly. The danger is that many will delay until the pressure mounts, and by then, advisors’ diaries will be full.
What’s becoming clear is that Whole Farm Plan compliance is not optional. The 2028 deadline for full implementation looms large, and the five-year audit renewal cycle means farmers cannot afford to treat this as a one-off exercise. Those who use the current SAG window to get ahead will find themselves in a far stronger position than those who leave it until the last minute. With support payments potentially at stake, there is real financial risk in dragging heels.
What to Do Next
Farmers should assess their current Whole Farm Plan status immediately. Identify which audits are outstanding and determine whether biodiversity or carbon audit action plans fall within the funding scope. The Farm Advisory Service can clarify which audits apply to individual businesses, this varies by farm type and location.
Engaging an advisor now is the next critical step. Dunbar-Nasmith’s advice is blunt: “Now is the time for farmers to assess how the support could benefit their business.” Advisors’ schedules will fill rapidly as the 15 May deadline approaches, and early applicants will have greater flexibility on timing. The application itself is straightforward, but securing an advisor’s involvement requires lead time.
Finally, farmers should plan for the longer term. With audits requiring renewal every five years, this is the start of an ongoing compliance cycle rather than a one-time requirement. Those who build audit renewals into their business planning from the outset will avoid the scramble that always accompanies deadline-driven compliance. The funding window is open, what farmers do in the next few weeks will determine whether they make the most of it.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding is available for biodiversity audits under the SAG scheme?
Scottish farmers can claim up to £1,600 for a biodiversity audit through the Specialist Advice Grants scheme, which reopened on 1 April 2026.
What is the deadline for Whole Farm Plan compliance?
Farmers must confirm at least two completed actions on their Single Application Form by 15 May 2026. However, all applicable audits and plans must be in place by 2028 at the latest.
Is standalone carbon audit funding still available?
No, standalone carbon audit funding has been scrapped for 2026. However, a grant for carbon audit action plans remains available for businesses that have already received a carbon audit.
How often do audits need to be renewed?
Biodiversity and carbon audits require renewal every five years to remain valid under the Whole Farm Plan requirements.
Who administers the Specialist Advice Grants scheme?
The scheme is run by the Farm Advisory Service and provides funding for tailored specialist advice from a farm advisor of the farmer’s choosing.
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