Office for National Statistics reveals woodlands provide £466 billion in ecosystem services, with annual benefits of £12 billion to the British economy
Britain’s woodlands are worth far more than the timber they produce. New figures from the Office for National Statistics show that the total asset value of ecosystem services in UK woodlands reached an estimated £466 billion in 2023 (expressed in 2024 prices), with these natural landscapes delivering £12 billion in annual benefits to the economy and society.
These figures represent a significant increase from 2021 data, when the Office for National Statistics valued UK woodland ecosystem services at £382 billion in asset terms and £10.4 billion annually. The rise reflects both the expanding area of UK woodlands and improved understanding of the multiple services these landscapes provide beyond traditional timber harvesting.
The valuation encompasses a diverse range of benefits that woodlands provide, often invisible in conventional economic accounting. According to the Office for National Statistics data, these services fall into three main categories: provisioning (such as timber and woodfuel), regulating (such as carbon sequestration and flood management), and cultural (including recreation and health benefits). Importantly, non-timber benefits vastly outweigh the market value of timber itself—by approximately 23 times, based on 2021 analysis.
The expanding woodland resourceThe growth in woodland value is partly driven by increasing forest cover across the UK. Woodland area has nearly doubled over recent decades, expanding from just 7 per cent of land cover in 1965 to 13 per cent by 2023. The UK now has approximately 3.3 million hectares of woodland, with Scotland leading expansion efforts and more than doubling its woodland area during this period.
This expansion reflects deliberate policy efforts to increase tree planting and woodland creation. Recent government targets have set ambitious goals for woodland expansion, recognising both the environmental and economic benefits of increased forest cover.
What woodlands actually deliverWhen the Office for National Statistics quantifies woodland value, it captures services many people take for granted. Greenhouse gas regulation—the capacity of woodlands to sequester carbon dioxide and other emissions—represented 39 per cent of total woodland asset value in earlier assessments. This climate regulation service alone was valued at £150 billion in 2021 terms, making it the single largest ecosystem service woodlands provide.
Recreation and health benefits constitute another major value stream. Approximately 3.2 million people gained measurable health benefits from spending time in UK woodlands in 2022, with this recreational benefit valued at £1 billion annually. Beyond physical health, woodlands provide important mental health and wellbeing benefits, though these remain partially unmeasured in formal economic accounts.
Flood regulation represents a third significant service. Woodlands reduce downstream flooding by absorbing and storing water, avoiding the need for expensive artificial flood defence infrastructure. The Office for National Statistics estimated the annual value of flood regulation from UK woodlands at £911 million in 2022, with the underlying asset value standing at £27 billion.
Air pollution removal through broadleaved woodlands provides further environmental benefits, with these habitats removing an estimated £965 million worth of pollutants annually, including nitrogen dioxide, ammonia, and particulate matter that damage human health.
Market benefits lag behind total valueTraditional timber and woodfuel markets generate comparatively modest returns. The market value of timber provisioning across the UK reached only £399 million in 2022, accounting for less than 4 per cent of total woodland asset value. This fundamental imbalance reveals why timber production alone cannot justify woodland investment—the true economic case for woodlands rests on their broader ecosystem services.
Scotland’s timber sector has seen growth, with the annual value of timber (excluding woodfuel) tripling from £81 million in 2010 to £251 million in 2022, yet this still represents a small fraction of overall woodland value. These figures underscore that woodland policy should be framed around ecosystem services rather than timber returns alone.
The Office for National Statistics notes that current valuations remain partial, excluding some services such as food from agroforestry and educational benefits that woodlands provide. As measurement methodologies improve, the true economic value of these natural assets may prove even higher.
Source: @ONS
Key Takeaways
- UK woodlands’ total asset value reached £466 billion in 2023, delivering £12 billion in annual economic benefits
- Woodland coverage has expanded from 7 per cent to 13 per cent of UK land area since 1965, now covering 3.3 million hectares
- Non-timber ecosystem services—including carbon sequestration, flood management, recreation, and health benefits—vastly exceed timber market value
- Approximately 3.2 million people gain measurable health benefits from woodland recreation annually
What This Means for Kent Residents
For Kent households, these woodland valuations have direct relevance. As the South East’s population density increases and housing pressures mount, access to accessible woodlands becomes increasingly valuable for physical and mental health. Kent’s mix of ancient woodlands and newer plantations contributes to these broader ecosystem service values. Additionally, as flooding becomes more frequent due to climate change, the flood regulation services provided by woodlands across southern England—including Kent’s own woodland estate—offer cost-effective alternatives to hard engineering flood defences. Recognising woodlands’ true economic value should strengthen the case for woodland expansion and protection in Kent’s landscape planning, benefiting both residents’ wellbeing and the local economy.


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