EA Flood Risk Activity Permits Application & Supporting Assessment
Working in, over, under or near a main river or flood defence? We confirm whether you need a Flood Risk Activity Permit or exemption, then prepare and submit the full application to the Environment Agency.
Environment Agency Flood Risk Activity Permits
A Flood Risk Activity Permit (FRAP) is required under the Environmental Permitting (England and Wales) Regulations 2016 for many activities in, over, under or within 8 metres of a main river (16 metres for tidal main rivers), within 8 metres of a flood defence, or in the functional floodplain. If your scheme involves any of these, the Environment Agency’s permission is needed in addition to planning consent — and a planning permission alone does not authorise the works.
We assess your proposals against the EPR 2016 regime, confirm whether the activity is excluded, exempt (registration only) or requires a bespoke permit, and prepare the application with the supporting flood risk evidence the EA expects. We manage the process end to end so the permit does not become a programme risk on site.
What We Deliver
- ✓ Permit screening — a clear determination of whether an exemption, exclusion or bespoke permit applies to your activity
- ✓ Application preparation & submission — completed EA application, drawings and supporting statement, submitted on your behalf
- ✓ Supporting flood risk assessment — conveyance, flood flow and storage impacts assessed where required
- ✓ Floodplain compensation — level-for-level, volume-for-volume compensatory storage design where loss of floodplain occurs
- ✓ Hydraulic modelling — 1D/2D modelling using EA Product 4/6 data to demonstrate no increase in flood risk to third parties
- ✓ EA liaison — we handle technical queries and negotiate conditions through to determination
When Is a Flood Risk Activity Permit Needed?
Not sure whether your works are caught? Send us your site location and proposals and we’ll screen it for free.
Works Near a Main River
Building, excavating, or placing structures within 8m of a main river (16m tidal), or any works in the channel itself, typically need a permit. Check whether your watercourse is a main river — if it is an ordinary watercourse, you need S23 consent instead.
Outfalls & Discharges
New or altered outfalls discharging surface water to a main river usually require a permit, with the headwall, invert and discharge rate all assessed against flood risk and conveyance.
Culverting & Structures
Culverts, bridges, weirs, and any structure over or under a main river affect flood flow and almost always require a permit supported by hydraulic assessment.
Works on or Near Flood Defences
Activity within 8m of a raised flood defence, wall or embankment — including landscaping and foundations — needs EA permission to protect the integrity of the defence.
Building in the Floodplain
Placing material, raising ground levels or building within the functional floodplain reduces flood storage and requires compensation, assessed and agreed through the permit.
Temporary Construction Works
Temporary causeways, scaffolding, dewatering and cofferdams in or near a main river during construction are also permitted activities.
Frequently Asked Questions
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