Discharges to surface water and groundwater: environmental permits
When you need an environmental permit to discharge liquid effluent or waste water to surface water or the ground, and how to apply.
Applies to England
You may need an environmental permit if you discharge liquid effluent or waste water:
- into surface waters, for example, rivers, streams, estuaries, lakes, canals or coastal waters – known as ‘water discharge activities’
- into or on the ground, such as spreading waste sheep dip, or discharging treated sewage effluent to ground through an infiltration system – known as ‘groundwater activities’
Waste water includes:
- poisonous, noxious or polluting matter
- polluting substances
- waste matter
- trade or sewage effluent
If your water discharge or groundwater discharge is part of a waste operation, installation or mining waste operation, you can make the discharge part of your installation permit or waste or mining waste permit.
You’re breaking the law if you operate without a permit when you should have one.
Check if the waste water is domestic sewage or trade effluent
As part of your permit application, or to know whether your activity qualifies for an exemption, you must classify your waste water. Read more about when your waste water is classed as domestic sewage.
When you do not need a permit
You do not need a permit:
- to discharge uncontaminated water, such as clean rainwater from roofs (as explained in groundwater protection position statement G12) or from small areas of hardstanding to surface water
- to discharge uncontaminated water collected from public roads and small parking areas (that’s been through a properly maintained oil separator) to surface water
- for certain low risk groundwater activities, known as groundwater activity exclusions
You do not need a permit to discharge to an enclosed lake or pond. This means a lake or pond in which all of the following apply:
- it contains water throughout the year, other than in extreme weather conditions
- it does not have an outfall that connects it to a watercourse, or has an outfall that only discharges in extreme weather conditions
- it is sealed or lined to prevent water draining into the ground or soaking into the surrounding soil
You must use appropriate pollution prevention measures to make sure your discharge does not cause pollution.
For discharges of uncontaminated water (such as rainwater) from excavations, you do not currently need an environmental permit if you meet the requirements of the temporary dewatering from excavations to surface water regulatory position statement.
The Environment Agency’s approach to groundwater protection is explained in its groundwater protection position statements.
Exempt water discharge and groundwater activities
You will not need an environmental permit for the following activities if you meet certain conditions. Check if you’re exempted from requiring an environmental permit:
- to discharge domestic sewage if you meet the general binding rules for discharges to a surface water or the general binding rules for discharges to ground
- for discharging substances as part of a groundwater tracer test or remediation scheme
- for cutting vegetation in or near inland freshwaters
Check the guidance for open-loop heat pump systems to find out if you:
- can meet the exemption conditions
- can meet the conditions in the regulatory position statement
- need an environmental permit to run the system
Check the guidance for closed loop ground source heating and cooling systems to find out if you:
- can meet the exemption conditions
- can meet the conditions in the regulatory position statement ‘Discharge of heat to ground from a single closed loop ground source heating and cooling system supplying residential premises: RPS 307’
- need an environmental permit to run the system
Discharges in sewered areas
You should discharge your waste water to the public foul sewer whenever it’s reasonable to do so. You do not need an environmental permit to do this.
To find out if there is a public foul sewer near your property, contact your local water company. You may also need to ask your neighbours if their properties are connected to the public foul sewer, as water companies’ maps may not show all their sewers near you.
You must check with your sewerage undertaker (usually your local water company) before you:
- make a new connection to the public sewer
- discharge anything other than domestic sewage
Permits in sewered areas
The Environment Agency will not give you a permit for a private sewage treatment system if it’s reasonable for you to connect to the public sewer.
Their assessment of what is reasonable takes into account:
- the comparative costs of connecting to public sewer and installing a private sewage treatment system
- any physical barriers that would prevent you connecting to the public sewer
- any environmental benefits that would arise from installing a private sewage treatment system such as the reuse of treated effluent
They also consider how close you are to a public foul sewer. It’s likely that they will consider it reasonable for you to connect to a public foul sewer in the following scenarios.
For a single domestic property
If any boundary of the premises that your system serves is within 30 metres of the public foul sewer.
If you’re building a development of more than one property
If the distance from the boundary (of the premises that your system serves) to the nearest public foul sewer is less than the number of houses multiplied by 30 metres.
Example If there are 3 properties then it’s if the distance is less than 90 metres (3 × 30 metres).
In some cases, the Environment Agency may ask you to consider connecting to the public foul sewer if it’s further away.
If some or all of your discharge is from anything other than domestic properties
If there are any public foul sewers within the distance from the boundary of the premises that your system serves, calculated using the following method.
Divide the maximum volume in cubic metres that you want to discharge from those other premises by 0.75 (1 cubic metre is 1000 litres). Multiply the result by 30 metres. This will give you a result in metres.
Example A discharge of 1.2 cubic metres divided by 0.75 gives 1.6, which multiplied by 30 gives a result of 48 metres. So, in this example, it’s if there is a public foul sewer within 48 meters.
If you cannot connect to a public foul sewer
If there is a good reason why you cannot connect to the public foul sewer (for example, if there is a river or a railway line in the way) then you must apply for a permit. You must provide evidence to justify this when you apply - this is explained in the guidance for part B6 of the application form.
The Environment Agency will decide whether to allow you to use a private sewerage system or whether you should connect to the public foul sewer instead.
Trade effluent discharges
For trade effluent discharges, you must either:
- get consent for trade effluent from your sewerage undertaker
- set up a trade effluent agreement with your sewerage undertaker
If you do this you do not need to apply for an environmental permit for the discharge.
If your sewerage undertaker has refused to grant consent for trade effluent to sewer, you must provide details of the reasons when you apply for a permit to discharge to the environment.
Planning new developments
If you’re planning a new development, plan your foul sewerage at an early stage and consult with the local council and sewerage undertaker. If you got planning permission on the basis that the development will be connected to the public foul sewer, this indicates it’s likely to be reasonable to do so.
The Environment Agency will not normally give you a permit for use of a private sewage treatment system based on the nearest public foul sewer not having enough capacity. If necessary, you should agree improvements to the sewerage network with the sewerage undertaker so you can connect to it. These improvements must be put in place before the development is occupied. This reflects planning practice guidance and building regulations.
Building and paying for a new sewer
Your sewerage undertaker may have a legal duty to build and pay for a new sewer for you to connect to (known as a ‘first time sewerage’) if:
- your current sewerage system is causing or is likely to cause an adverse effect on the environment or amenity, and this cannot be solved by repair or maintenance
- more than one property needs to replace or upgrade their sewerage system, and the new system will serve more than one property
- providing a public sewer is the most appropriate solution
Contact your sewerage undertaker to find out how to apply.
If you’ve applied to the sewerage undertaker but are unhappy with their decision, you can contact the Environment Agency to appeal.
Check that you’re the ‘legal operator’
You must be the ‘legal operator’ of the water discharge or groundwater activity that you want a permit for.
This means you must have sufficient control of the activity. For example, you:
- have day to day control of the activity, including the manner and rate of operation
- make sure that permit conditions are complied with
- decide who holds important staff positions and have incompetent staff removed if required
- make investment and financial decisions that affect the performance or how the activity is carried out
- make sure that regulated activities are controlled in an emergency
You can have contractors carry out activities at your site and remain the operator, provided you have sufficient control of the activity. But sometimes a contractor may become the legal operator based on the tests previously described. A remote holding company is unlikely to have sufficient control.
If you’re no longer the operator you must formally transfer the permit to the person who is the operator. If you continue to operate an activity when you’re no longer the legal operator, the Environment Agency may take enforcement action against you or revoke the permit.
You must apply as a ‘legal entity’ that can be legally responsible for the permit and can accept liability. For example, as:
- an individual
- a public limited company
- a private limited company
- a government body (for example, local councils, NHS Trusts, Food Standards Agency)
- a limited liability partnership
As the operator you’re legally responsible for the activity whether or not it’s in operation.
Your application can be refused if the Environment Agency does not consider you to be the operator or a legal entity.
Joint operators of one activity
If your activity has more than one operator acting together, you should make one joint application for all the operators. For example if several people jointly operate a treatment plant then they would all be named on the permit.
If an operator dies
The permit should be transferred to someone else. The transfer application should be sent to the Environment Agency within 6 months of the date of death. Otherwise, the permit will not be valid after that date.
Fees and charges for permits
You must pay a fee to apply for a permit.
The application charges are listed in table 1.3 of the environmental permits and abstraction licences: tables of charges.
You must send payment with your application.
If your application is successful, the Environment Agency will charge you an annual ‘subsistence’ fee while you have a permit. This fee depends on your activity and the type of permit you have.
You can contact the Environment Agency if you need help working out how much to pay.
Apply for a standard rules permit
You may be able to apply for a standard rules permit if you operate a small sewage treatment plant for secondary treatment of domestic sewage discharging to surface water.
Your small sewage treatment plant must discharge between 5 and 20 cubic metres of domestic treated sewage to surface water a day. (For example, your plant treats sewage from a small hotel or bed and breakfast, not a single household.)
If your domestic sewage discharge to surface water is less than 5 cubic metres a day and you meet all the relevant general binding rules, you do not need a permit.
Your operation must meet the description and rules, but:
- you cannot change (vary) the rules and you have no right of appeal against them
- if you want to change your operations and so will not meet the criteria of the standard permit anymore, you’ll have to apply to make it a bespoke permit instead
- if there’s a change in your local environment after your permit has been issued (for example, a change in the definition of a groundwater source protection zone), you may need to apply to change your permit
- if the standard rules change, you must make sure you can still comply with them – you must apply for a bespoke permit if you cannot
If there’s a public foul sewer within 800 metres of any boundary of the premises the treatment system serves, you cannot meet the conditions for a standard rules permit.
If you do not meet the conditions for a standard rules permit you must apply for a bespoke permit.
Before you apply for a standard rules permit
You must:
- read the permit conditions to make sure you can comply with them
- read the instructions in the application form and form guidance
- contact the pre-application advice service to request a heritage and nature conservation screening – so the Environment Agency can check if any conservation sites, protected species or habitats could be affected by your activity
- read the generic risk assessment so you can understand the potential risks and make sure you manage them effectively
- check you meet the legal operator requirements
- develop a management system – a written set of procedures that identifies and minimises the risks of pollution
Standard rules permits: application forms
Download and fill in forms:
Send your completed forms and payment to PSC-WaterQuality@environment-agency.gov.uk.
Or post them to:
Environment Agency Permitting and Support Centre
Environmental Permitting Team
Quadrant 2
99 Parkway Avenue
Parkway Business Park
Sheffield
S9 4WF
Apply for a bespoke permit
You must apply for a bespoke permit if your activity does not meet the conditions for:
- an exemption
- a standard rules permit
Before you apply for a bespoke permit
You must:
- develop a management system (a written set of procedures that identify and minimise the risks of pollution)
- check whether you need to complete a risk assessment
- plan how you’ll control and monitor emissions
- identify and get other permissions from the Environment Agency or others that may be required for your activities
An environmental permit does not give you any right or permission to discharge where you do not own the land where you intend to discharge. If necessary, you must:
- negotiate arrangements, such as wayleaves and easements, to use or cross another person’s land
- identify and negotiate any requirement for downstream improvement works with the riparian owners (the owners of the land by the edge of the watercourse) – not doing this could lead to a riparian owner taking legal action against you
If you’re a statutory sewerage undertaker, or are applying to Ofwat to be appointed as one, you must follow the guidance relevant to:
- waste water treatment works: treatment, monitoring and compliance limits
- water companies: water treatment works discharge limits for environmental permits
- water companies: chemical dosing at waste water treatment works
- water companies: operator self monitoring environmental permits
- water companies: environmental permits for storm overflows and emergency overflows
You can ask the Environment Agency if you can submit application information in stages if your proposal is either or both:
- complex
- a novel technology
Check if your application is suitable and how to request a staged application – see the guidance on how to send environmental permit application information in stages.
Specific substances assessment
When you apply for a bespoke permit you must tell the Environment Agency if your discharge will contain specific substances. If it does, your risk assessment must include a specific substances assessment.
Check the list of surface water specific substances in the surface water pollution risk assessment guide.
For discharges to groundwater, a specific substances assessment is needed for hazardous substances and non-hazardous pollutants. This does not include discharges that only contain or are only likely to contain ammoniacal nitrogen, ammonium and suspended solids. Check the Water Framework Directive UKTAG website’s list of hazardous substances and non-hazardous pollutants for groundwater.
Bespoke permits: application forms
Standalone water discharge and groundwater activity permit (not open-loop heat pump systems)
Download and fill in forms:
- part A: about you
- part B2: general new bespoke permit
- part B6: new bespoke water discharge and groundwater activity
- part B6.5: discharge up to 15m3 a day into ground or up to 20m3 a day to surface water
- part B6.6: existing small sewage discharges to ground within a source protection zone 1
- part F1: charges and declarations
Open-loop heat pump systems
Download and fill in forms:
- part A: about you
- part B8: apply for an environmental permit and full abstraction licence
- part F1: charges and declarations
Standalone groundwater discharges with spreading activities permit
Download and fill in forms:
- part A: about you
- part B2: general new bespoke permit
- part B7: waste sheep dip, waste pesticide washings or other waste
- part F1: charges and declarations
Send your application
When you send your application you must include:
- the relevant forms
- the summary of your management system (except when you are sending a B6.5 application form)
- your risk assessment, if you’ve been required to do one
- any other supporting documents mentioned in the form guidance, such as site maps and plans
- your payment
Send your application and payment to PSC-WaterQuality@environment-agency.gov.uk.
Or post them to:
Environment Agency Permitting and Support Centre
Environmental Permitting Team
Quadrant 2
99 Parkway Avenue
Parkway Business Park
Sheffield
S9 4WF
Consultations on permit applications
The Environment Agency consults on:
- bespoke permit applications
- other permit applications where it’s appropriate or in the public interest to do so
The Environment Agency will publish a notice of your application online and instructions for how other people can see and comment on it.
Members of the public and anyone interested in the application have 20 working days to comment.
The Environment Agency may also consult other public bodies, for example local councils, Public Health England, water companies and Natural England.
If the Environment Agency considers your application to be of high public interest, they may:
- take longer to give you a decision
- carry out an extra consultation on the draft decision
- advertise the application more widely
Keep sensitive information confidential
When the Environment Agency consults on your permit application they will let people see the information in your application.
You can ask the Environment Agency not to make public any information that is commercially sensitive for your business (for example, financial information). You can do this by including a letter with your application that gives your reasons why you do not want this information made public.
The Environment Agency will email or write to you within 20 days if they agree to your request. They will tell you if they need more time to decide. If they do not agree to your request they will tell you how to:
- appeal against their decision
- withdraw your application
After you apply
The Environment Agency may send back your application if, for example, you have:
- not used the right forms
- forgotten to include payment, or sent the wrong payment
- not provided important information
Examples of insufficient information include:
- incomplete data on whether a discharge contains hazardous substances
- not providing enough justification for why you cannot connect the discharge to a public foul sewer
The information required is explained in the application form guidance. It depends on the type of application you are making. The Environment Agency will check that you’ve sent this information and the correct payment. If you have not, they will contact you and you will need to send this within 5 working days.
Once the Environment Agency is satisfied they have the information and payment required to start assessing your application, they will contact you to tell you that your application is ‘duly made’. This means they are starting the assessment process.
If the Environment Agency needs any more information from you before your application can be duly made, they will either:
- contact you to request it if it seems you could provide the information within 5 working days
- return your application with a list of missing information to help you reapply
If the Environment Agency cannot progress your application past the duly made stage, they will return it to you. They may keep part of your application charge if they have spent time reviewing your application. This is explained in the environmental permitting charges guidance.
After an application is duly made, if the Environment Agency needs any more information from you, they will contact you to tell you what information you need to send.
Decisions about your permit
The Environment Agency will write to you to tell you their decision. The time this takes depends on:
- the complexity of the application
- whether they need to consult
- whether they need to ask you for more information so they can complete their assessment
- the number of applications they are dealing with
They usually make decisions on applications within:
- 4 months if you are applying for a new permit
- 3 months if you want to change a permit or cancel it
- 2 months if you want to transfer a permit
They will tell you if your application will take longer.
The Environment Agency will publish the decision on the public register.
Appeal a decision
You can appeal if the Environment Agency refuses your application.
Examples of why they may refuse an application are:
- unacceptable environmental risk or damage to habitats or species
- significant pollution
- inadequate management plans
- the Environment Agency considering it is reasonable to connect the discharge to a public foul sewer
- requests for information not being responded to
You can also appeal if you applied for a bespoke permit and you’re not happy with the conditions.
The decision letter will explain how you can appeal.
When you get a permit
You must comply with your permit’s conditions. Find out how the Environment Agency will regulate you when you start operating.
If you need to you can:
- change (vary) the details on your permit
- transfer your permit to someone else
- cancel (surrender) your permit
Find out how to change, transfer or cancel your permit.
If you need help
You should get advice from a competent service engineer if you need help understanding what treatment system you have. British Water provides a list of accredited service engineers. There may be other competent service engineers.
If you are sure you need a permit you can ask the Environment Agency for advice before you apply.
Updates to this page
Last updated 30 September 2024 + show all updates
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Updated the 'Exempt water discharge and groundwater activities' section to refer to the regulatory position statement ‘Discharge of heat to ground from a single closed loop ground source heating and cooling system supplying residential premises: RPS 307’.
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Updated the 'After you apply' section to clarify what happens if the Environment Agency needs more information before an application can be 'duly made'.
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Section 'Apply for a bespoke permit' added guidance about sending application information in stages if your proposal is complex or a novel technology.
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Section 'When you do not need a permit' removed bullet 'for a closed loop heat exchanger'. Sub section 'Exempt water discharge and groundwater activities' added guidance for closed loop ground source heating and cooling systems'.
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Updated the 'After you apply' section. If the Environment Agency needs any more information when they're assessing your application, they will contact you to tell you what information you need to send. You will need to send this within 5 working days.
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Updated the 'After you apply' section to clarify what the Environment Agency needs to complete an assessment. Added examples of the kinds of information that may be missing from an application, plus examples of why we may refuse an application. Added where you can find the application fees listed in the tables of charges. Updated the 'How to get help' section to link to the pre-application advice service.
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Clarified definition of enclosed lake or pond in the 'When you do not need a permit' section.
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Updated the 'Get help with your application' to link to the new guidance on the pre-application advice service. Removed two sentences about not getting post, as we are now receiving it.
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Grouped information on the activities that people may not need a permit for (and indicated where this is dependent on meeting certain conditions). Added section on getting help from a competent service engineer. Explained what arrangements to put in place for a trade effluent discharge. Explained what to do if an operator dies. Added more information on how to find out if there is a public foul sewer near a property. Added more information on when it's likely to be reasonable to connect to a public foul sewer. Explained that someone cannot meet the conditions for a standard rules permit if there’s a public foul sewer within 800 metres of any boundary of the premises the treatment system serves. Added more information on what to do before applying for a bespoke permit, such as negotiating arrangements with landowners.
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Explained how we are managing postal applications during the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak.
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The 'Decisions about your permit' section has been updated to: 'You will normally get a decision on your application within 4 months.' This is because 4 months is the statutory determination period in the Environmental Permitting Regulations 2016.
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We added guidance for 'discharges in sewered areas'. You should discharge your waste water to the public foul sewer whenever it’s reasonable to do so. We added links to new content for domestic sewage and technical guides for waste water treatment works and water companies. This new content replaces our withdrawn water technical guidance note.
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Added information about the new pre-application advice service that you can use if you need help with your permit application.
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Added content to this guide to explain what specific substances are. When you apply for a permit you need to tell the Environment Agency if your discharge will contain specific substances. Removed form F2 from this guide – you now need to complete form F1 for all water discharge or point source groundwater discharge activity permit applications.
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New link to the Environment Agency's groundwater protection position statements.
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First published.