Farm Solar UK. Turn Land Into Long-Term Income.

Stop relying entirely on agricultural margins. Generate stable, long-term income from land that can deliver predictable returns for decades.

Solar projects on rural land can generate £800 to £1,500 per acre per year under typical lease arrangements, secured against 20 to 40 year agreements with minimal operational involvement from the landowner.

For many landowners, this exceeds the return from the same land under traditional agricultural use.

  • Generate stable income from land with minimal ongoing input
  • Long-term agreements with predictable returns
  • Designed, developed, and managed by UK-based engineers

Fixed pricing. Engineered systems. UK-based team.

No obligation. No sales pressure. Site-based assessment only.

Every year without a project in place is a year of lost revenue from land that could already be producing income.

£800 to £1,500 Typical lease rent per acre / year
0 to 0 yr Typical lease duration
£0k to £0.5k Typical 25-acre annual lease income
0 to 0+ mo Common grid connection timeline
AORO farm solar installation on UK rural land
What Is

What Is Farm Solar?

Farm solar is a ground-mounted photovoltaic installation on agricultural or rural land, designed to generate electricity that is either exported to the grid under a power purchase agreement or used on-site where feasible. For the landowner, it is primarily a land monetisation decision, not a farming decision.

The electricity generated becomes a long-term revenue source, either as rental income under a lease model or as direct revenue under an ownership model. The land remains in the landowner’s ownership throughout. The project is typically decommissioned at end of life and the land returned to its previous condition.

Farm solar does not require replacing agricultural use entirely. Most commercial solar projects use only a portion of a landholding, leaving the balance available for continued farming. Increasingly, projects are designed for dual use: sheep grazing under and between panel rows, biodiversity integration including wildflower meadows and pollinator strips, and partial-site deployment so landowners can diversify income without committing the whole estate to one use.

For many landowners, farm solar is the most effective way to turn underperforming, lower-yield, or non-productive land into a long-term income-producing asset.

How You Save

Land Lease • Grid Export • Long-Term Income

The mechanism is straightforward: suitable land plus viable grid connection creates contracted income visibility for decades.

01

Assess land and grid

Project viability starts with site size, planning context, and DNO connection capacity. Grid determines both feasibility and achievable lease rates.

03

Lock in long-term returns

Typical lease rent is often in the £800 to £1,500 per acre range, secured against 20 to 40 year agreements, often index-linked.

Why Landowners

Why Landowners Are Moving Into Solar

Farm incomes are volatile, while solar income is contracted and predictable. For many holdings, solar provides long-term revenue visibility with minimal operational involvement.

01
Agricultural margins are under pressure

UK farm incomes remain volatile. Input costs have risen structurally since 2021, commodity prices swing based on factors outside the farmer’s control, and subsidy structures continue to evolve. Solar income is contracted and largely insulated from agricultural market cycles.

02
Solar provides long-term contracted revenue

Solar lease agreements typically run 20 to 40 years. Rent is fixed at signing, with many contracts including index-linked uplifts tied to CPI or RPI over the life of the agreement.

03
Operational involvement is minimal

Once commissioned, developers and operators manage maintenance, monitoring, insurance, and grid relationships. Sheep grazing and land management continue as normal around the installation.

04
Land value optimisation

Lower-yield fields, awkward parcels, and marginal land can become one of the highest-yielding uses in the holding without compromising the productivity of the remainder of the estate.

05
Strategic estate performance

Targeted solar deployment can measurably improve overall estate economics and long-term attractiveness to future buyers or investors.

Solar is no longer only an energy decision. For rural landowners, it is a long-term income and land optimisation strategy.
UK farmland with AORO ground-mounted solar installation
Farm Solar Income

How Much Can You Earn From Farm Solar?

Realistic UK figures for 2025. Solar projects on rural land can generate strong contracted income over 20 to 40 years.

Typical lease and ownership structures:

ArrangementTypical Income
Lease with index-linked uplifts Base rent + CPI/RPI indexation
Direct ownership (system-generated revenue per acre) Higher return; subject to capital and operational responsibility
Typical 25-acre lease project £20,000 to £37,500 / year

For a 25-acre project under a typical lease arrangement, annual rental income sits in the range of £20,000 to £37,500, contracted over 20 to 40 years, with index-linked adjustments in most modern agreements.

What affects achievable income: grid connection capacity and proximity, site size, location, planning feasibility, topography, and access. Grid is usually the single largest variable.

For many landowners, this represents a stable income stream significantly more predictable than traditional agricultural use, with contracted visibility extending decades ahead.

UK farm solar lease model on rural land Lease vs ownership on UK farmland
Income Model

Lease vs Ownership

Two distinct commercial models. The right choice depends on capital availability, risk appetite, and long-term objectives.

01

Leasing Your Land

A solar developer designs, builds, finances, and operates the system. The landowner grants a long-term lease in exchange for annual rental income.

Pros
  • No upfront capital required from the landowner in most cases
  • Predictable, contracted income from year one
  • Minimal operational involvement
  • Developer carries planning, grid, construction, and operational risk
Cons
  • Lower total return than ownership over the life of the project
  • Less control over site design and management decisions
  • Bound by lease terms for 20 to 40 years

The lease model is by far the most common arrangement in UK farm solar and suits the majority of landowners who want predictable income without operational complexity.

Site Suitability

What Land Is Suitable?

Not all land is suitable. Viability is driven by grid connection, planning context, and site characteristics. These are the factors we assess on every feasibility study.

01

Site size

Typically 5 acres minimum, with most viable projects between 10 and 100+ acres. Smaller parcels may be viable near strong grid connections.

03

Topography

Flat or gently sloping land is preferred. South-facing gentle slopes are ideal. Steep gradients or waterlogged ground reduce viability.

04

Shading

Land should be largely free from significant shading by trees, buildings, or terrain. Systematic shading usually cannot be designed around.

05

Planning context

Land outside National Parks, AONBs, and SSSIs is significantly easier to develop. Green Belt and sensitive designations require detailed analysis but are not always excluded.

06

Agricultural land classification

Grade 3b and below is typically preferred by planning authorities. Grade 1 and 2 land faces additional scrutiny but is not always excluded.

07

Access

Reasonable road access for construction equipment and ongoing maintenance is required for reliable project delivery and economics.

If you’re uncertain whether your land qualifies, a site-based feasibility assessment will confirm viability, probable income range, and any planning or grid constraints before any commitment is made.

Gatekeepers

Planning and Grid Connection

These are the two primary gatekeepers of any commercial solar project. Both require professional handling from project inception.

Planning Permission

Most commercial solar farms require planning permission through the local authority. The process typically involves:

  • Pre-application consultation with the local planning authority
  • Ecological, landscape, and heritage impact assessments
  • Community consultation for larger projects
  • Submission of a full planning application
  • Determination period, usually 13 to 16 weeks for major applications

Success rates for well-sited projects are high, but planning is never automatic. Site selection, design quality, and consultation approach materially affect outcome.

Grid Connection

For most projects, grid connection is the more challenging of the two. The process involves:

  • Formal application to the relevant Distribution Network Operator (DNO)
  • Assessment of available export capacity at the connection point
  • Quotation for connection costs, which can range from modest to prohibitive depending on network reinforcement required
  • Acceptance of connection offer and scheduled connection date

UK grid capacity is heavily constrained in many regions, with connection timelines extending from 6 months to 24+ months in some cases. For larger projects at transmission level, timelines can extend further.

AORO handles feasibility, grid applications, and planning support end-to-end. This is one of the reasons we operate as an engineering firm rather than a brokerage. Viable projects require detailed early-stage work before any commercial arrangement is confirmed.

Solar Farm Cost

How Much Does a
Solar Farm Cost?

Lease model: no upfront cost to the landowner in most cases. The developer finances construction, operation, and decommissioning. You receive rental income from project commencement.

Ownership model: capital costs vary significantly with scale. Every project requires full financial modelling before commitment — capital cost is only one variable among grid fees, planning, revenue, PPA structure, and operations.

  • Lease transparencyA small number of lease arrangements involve the landowner contributing land access costs or associated fees. These are transparent and agreed at the heads of terms stage.
  • Ownership capital rangeSmall systems (up to 250 kWp) from £100,000; mid-scale to £750,000; large projects to £3,500,000+; utility-scale priced on detailed feasibility.
  • Full investment caseGrid connection fees, planning costs, revenue modelling, PPA structure, and operational costs must all be factored into ownership decisions.
  • ROI modellingEvery ownership-model project requires full financial modelling before any commitment, including sensitivity analysis against electricity price scenarios.

AORO provides complete ROI modelling for any owned system, with obligations clearly identified before any commitment.

Project ScaleApproximate Capital Cost (Ownership Model)
Smallup to 250 kWp (approx. 1 to 2 acres) £0 to £0
Large1 MWp to 5 MWp (approx. 5 to 25 acres) £0 to £0+
Utility5 MWp+ Priced on survey
ROI and Long-Term Value

Income Visibility Across Decades

Few investments offer 20 to 40 years of contracted income visibility. Farm solar does, whether through lease income or direct ownership revenue.

Income visibility

Lease income is fixed or index-linked over 20 to 40 years. Ownership projects often use PPAs running 10 to 15 years, with merchant market exposure thereafter.

Inflation protection

Most modern solar lease agreements include CPI or RPI linkage. For ownership projects, rising electricity prices directly increase system revenue.

Asset-backed revenue

A solar installation is a tangible, measurable, income-generating asset secured against a specific parcel of land, strengthening overall holding value.

Impact on land value

Properly structured solar projects typically increase total land value. Contracted income is attractive to investors, pension funds, and yield-focused buyers.

End-of-life options

At end of lease or operational life, the system is decommissioned and land restored. Many landowners re-contract with updated hardware for a further generation.

Engineered for decades

AORO delivers feasibility, grid analysis, and planning support — structured for long-term land income, not short-term brokerage.

The AORO Difference

What Makes AORO Different

Farm solar projects succeed or fail on work done before construction begins. Most unviable projects fail on site selection, grid feasibility, or planning misjudgement. We operate as an engineering firm, not a brokerage.

01

Engineering-led site assessment

Detailed feasibility covering topography, grid proximity, planning context, and income potential. Not desk-only estimates.

03

Realistic feasibility

If the numbers do not work, we say so. Landowners lose more from unrealistic expectations than from no project.

04

Full lifecycle support

Feasibility, planning, grid, design, construction, commissioning, and long-term operations under one accountable team.

05

UK-based team

Designed, developed, and managed by an in-house UK engineering team with direct accountability.

06

Commercial flexibility

Advisory for lease, ownership, and hybrid models based on your land and objectives, not fee-driven recommendations.

07

Long-term accountability

Operational monitoring, maintenance oversight, and commercial management across the full project life.

Our Process

Step 01

Initial Land Assessment

Desk-based review and site visit covering size, topography, planning context, and preliminary grid proximity.

Feasibility starts here
Step 02

Grid Feasibility Check

Formal enquiry to the DNO establishing export capacity, likely connection costs, and timeline before major spend.

Viability gate
Step 04

Installation and Commissioning

Construction managed to industry standards, with full grid connection, commissioning, and performance testing.

Delivery to energisation
Step 05

Long-Term Management

Operational monitoring, maintenance, insurance, and commercial management across the life of the project.

Minimal landowner involvement
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Straight answers for UK landowners evaluating farm solar projects.

Commercial solar projects typically require a minimum of 5 acres, with most viable projects sitting between 10 and 100+ acres. Smaller parcels may be viable in specific circumstances, particularly where strong grid connection is available. A site-based assessment confirms viability for your specific land.

In most cases, yes. Sheep grazing under and between panel rows is standard and compatible with the majority of modern solar designs. Biodiversity integration including wildflower meadows and pollinator habitats is increasingly common and often strengthens planning applications.

From initial assessment to energised system typically takes 12 to 24 months, depending primarily on grid connection timelines and planning complexity. Feasibility and design work proceed in parallel with grid and planning applications.

The developer decommissions the system and restores the land to its prior condition, or to whatever condition the agreement specifies. Many landowners re-contract at end of lease with new equipment, extending income for a further generation. Some agreements include specific options for landowners to purchase the system at end of term.

Well-sited projects achieve high planning success rates, but planning is never automatic. Under a lease model, the developer absorbs planning costs and commercial risk. Under an ownership model, planning costs are part of the investment case and must be factored into decision-making. AORO only progresses projects where planning feasibility is credibly established.

Under a lease model, no upfront capital is required from the landowner in the large majority of cases. Under an ownership model, capital investment is substantial and is modelled in full before any commitment. We are explicit about which category your project falls into from the outset.

Generally positively. A landholding with contracted long-term income is typically more valuable than an equivalent holding generating only agricultural revenue. Inheritance tax treatment varies depending on structure and should be reviewed with your tax advisors. AORO is happy to coordinate with your existing advisors during project structuring.

Solar leases transfer with the land. The new owner inherits both the lease obligations and the rental income. Solar-leased land is typically attractive to buyers seeking long-term yield.

In many cases, yes. Solar projects can often coexist with existing farming, sporting rights, or other agreements, subject to specific arrangement. Dual-use designs including grazing and biodiversity are increasingly standard.

Free Assessment

Turn Your Land Into a Long-Term Income Stream

Most landowners continue treating land as a source of agricultural income alone. The ones developing solar turn a portion of it into contracted, predictable revenue for decades.

Before you commit your land to any developer, or dismiss it as unsuitable, get a clear, engineered assessment of what it can actually deliver. We will tell you honestly whether the site is viable, what the likely income range is, and what the realistic timeline looks like.

We’ll provide:

  • A full site-based feasibility assessment
  • A grid connection feasibility review
  • A planning context analysis
  • Indicative income ranges for lease and ownership models

No guesswork. No overselling. No obligation.

Site-based feasibility only — no sales pressure.

Secure your energy independence. Reduce grid reliance by up to 70%.

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