Land ownership in the United Kingdom explained

Land ownership in the United Kingdom is distributed in a Pareto-like distribution, with a relatively small number of organisations and estates, and to a lesser extent people, owning large amounts, whether by area or value, and much larger numbers owning small amounts or no land at all.

Large land owners by area

Land ownership by area does not correspond to land ownership by value. The value of land varies widely, depending on location but also condition, contaminated land might constitute a liability. The value of land being eroded by the sea or other natural processes declines rapidly. Land in the centre of large cities may be very valuable, for example £7.2 million per hectare was cited for central London in 2016,[1] compared with around £2500 per hectare for grouse moors in Scotland.[2]

The government (together with its QUANGOs) is the biggest land owner by area, the Forestry Commission owning some 2200000acres, the MoD 1101851acres, the Crown Estate 678420acres, DEFRA 116309acres and Homes England 19349acres.[3] Other large central government landowners include the Environment Agency and National Highways, apart from extensive local government holdings. Merton College, Oxford University owns 14707acres, and other colleges and universities have varying land holdings, from campus, playing fields and accommodation to significant endowments in town and country.

Charities, trusts and the Church of England are also significant land owners. The National Trust and the National Trust for Scotland own 589748acres, the RSPB 332000acres, the Duke of Atholl's Trusts 145000acres, the Church of England 105000acres and the Honourable Artillery Company 14209acres.

Common land

An amount of land is common land, which refers to rights to the land which are in common. This land may be owned but the rights are still held in common, for example a right to roam.

Notes and References

  1. November 2016 . Economic Evidence Base for London 2016. GLA Economics . 136 . 19 September 2023 . 978-1-84781-630-6.
  2. News: Tighe . Chris . Grouse moors: the rewards and challenges of buying an estate . 19 September 2023 . Financial Times . 23 September 2016 . https://archive.today/20220428172608/https://www.ft.com/content/ea766d1a-7b54-11e6-ae24-f193b105145e . 28 April 2022. live. subscription.
  3. Web site: Hemming . Peter . The UK's Largest Landowners Revealed . ABC Finance . 19 September 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230919180112/https://abcfinance.co.uk/blog/who-owns-the-uk/ . 19 September 2023 . 3 December 2021 . live.