Tax incentive
Tax incentiveAny stageHMRC

Land Remediation Relief

HMRC corporation tax relief on qualifying costs of cleaning up contaminated or long-term derelict land in the UK.

Advisor reviewed· Last reviewed

Read end-to-end by a FundingAtlas editor against the official source.

Quick answer

Land Remediation Relief gives a UK company an enhanced corporation tax deduction (and a payable credit if loss-making) on qualifying costs of remediating contaminated or long-term derelict land it acquired in a contaminated or derelict state. It applies to both owner-occupiers and developers. Claims are made through the company's Corporation Tax return with detailed cost evidence.

Funding amount

Varies

Region

United Kingdom

Stage

Any stage

Provider

HMRC

Frequently asked questions

Who is Land Remediation Relief for?
UK companies subject to corporation tax that have incurred qualifying remediation costs on land acquired in a contaminated or derelict state, meeting HMRC's polluter-pays and other rules.
How much funding is available through Land Remediation Relief?
Funding is variable by call and project scope. Exact amounts depend on project scope, eligibility, and the live call. Always confirm current figures on the official provider page before applying.
How long does the Land Remediation Relief application take?
Timelines vary by call. Plan for several weeks between starting the application and a funding decision, and longer where panel review, due diligence, or subsidy-control checks apply.
What are the main alternatives to Land Remediation Relief?
Consider other HMRC programmes, options on the R&D Tax & Reliefs Pathway, and adjacent routes discussed in our Patent Box vs R&D Tax Relief comparison.
What happens after a successful Land Remediation Relief application?
Successful applicants sign a funding agreement, complete onboarding, and report against agreed milestones. Use the award to build the evidence base for follow-on funding once the project delivers measurable outcomes.
What are the most common mistakes when applying for Land Remediation Relief?
Weak fit with the stated objectives, vague impact metrics, missing match funding, and applying before the business is operationally ready are the most common reasons applications stall or are rejected.

Usually too early when

Advisor signal

Apply before you can clearly articulate the project scope, evidence of fit with HMRC's priorities, and a credible delivery plan. Although open to most stages, assessors expect a coherent track record on which to score the application.

Eligibility

UK companies subject to corporation tax that have incurred qualifying remediation costs on land acquired in a contaminated or derelict state, meeting HMRC's polluter-pays and other rules.

Common reasons applications fail

Reasons applications fail or stall: • Weak fit with the stated objectives of the scheme. • Vague impact claims without named metrics, baselines or timing. • Match funding not secured at the point of application. • Project plan that reads like business-as-usual rather than additional, new activity. • Insufficient evidence the team has delivered comparable work before. • Late engagement — applying close to deadline without internal sign-off.

What improves your odds

Strong alignment with HMRC's published priorities. A specific, measurable project with named deliverables and timelines. Evidence the team can deliver — relevant prior projects, named technical leads, and secured (not hoped-for) match funding where required. Clear quantified impact: jobs, productivity, exports, emissions reduction or commercial outcomes appropriate to the scheme.

Typical successful applicant

A UK-based organisation that already meets the eligibility criteria for Land Remediation Relief on paper, has prior delivery experience relevant to HMRC, and can evidence the stated impact within the funding window.

Common misconceptions

That Land Remediation Relief is a quick or guaranteed source of capital. It is not — assessment is competitive and most applicants are unsuccessful. That a strong application can be drafted in days; in practice, competitive submissions take weeks of preparation, evidence gathering, and internal sign-off.

What comes next

On a successful award: deliver against the agreed milestones, build the evidence base for follow-on funding (commercial pilots, larger grants, debt or equity), and document outcomes that strengthen the next application. On rejection: request feedback, address the specific weaknesses, and consider an adjacent scheme on the R&D Tax & Reliefs Pathway before re-applying.

Funding context

Land Remediation Relief sits within HMRC's wider funding remit. Treat it as one option on the R&D Tax & Reliefs Pathway; the right route depends on stage, project type and what comes next commercially. Use it alongside, not instead of, complementary support.

Related routes

Industries