Quick answer
Biochar filter systems range from £1,000 for simple runoff units to £20,000–£70,000+ for complex engineered solutions. Most farms and estates fall in the £5,000–£15,000 band once proper sizing and design are included.
Below is a practical budgeting framework to help you understand which category your site is likely to fall into.
Tier 1 — Simple, low‑risk runoff (field drains, tracks, yard edges)
Budget: £1,000–£3,000 per location
When suitable:
- Low, steady flows (<2–5 L/s)
- Mainly sediment + nutrient polishing
- No requirement for guaranteed pollutant removal
Typical costs:
- Biochar media: £400–£700 per m³
- Simple casings/IBCs/DIY structures: £300–£1,000
- Total typical cost: £1,000–£3,000
Rule of thumb: 1–3 m³ of biochar media per discharge point.
Notes: Best for quick wins where the aim is improved water quality without formal performance guarantees.
Tier 2 — Medium complexity (farmyard runoff, estates, lakes, fisheries)
Budget: £5,000–£15,000
When suitable:
- Known upstream contaminants (slurry yards, wash-down areas, metals, organics)
- Desire for expected performance but not regulatory guarantees
- Moderate or variable flows
What is usually involved:
- 0.5–2 days site assessment (remote or onsite)
- Preliminary sizing and modelling
- Optional sampling
- Media and casing specification
Typical costs:
- Design/scoping: £800–£2,500
- Media (2–8 m³): £800–£5,000
- Units, manifolds, installation: £1,500–£6,000
- Total typical cost: £5,000–£15,000
Notes: This is the range most farms and estates fall into when they want a thought‑through, evidence-based installation.
Tier 3 — High‑complexity engineered systems (large flows, multi‑input, high compliance risk)
Budget: £20,000–£70,000+
When suitable:
- Flows >20 L/s or highly variable loads
- Sites with EA compliance pressure, SSSI sensitivity, or fishery risk
- Systems requiring multiple treatment stages (settlement → biological → biochar)
What is usually involved:
- 2–5 days investigation & sampling
- Hydraulic and contaminant load modelling
- System layout development
- Specification for contractors
- Optional monitoring plans
Typical costs:
- Design & modelling: £3,000–£10,000
- Media (5–30 m³): £2,500–£20,000+
- Installation by third parties: £10,000–£40,000+
- Total typical cost: £20,000–£70,000+
Notes: These systems behave like small wastewater treatment works. Biochar is one part of a wider train.
What should I do next?
If you are unsure which tier you fall into, the simplest approach is:
- Identify your runoff type and scale.
- Estimate flow (even roughly).
- Match to the closest tier above.
- Contact us with a brief description — we can confirm the likely range before any site visit.
This structure helps set realistic expectations while keeping options flexible for early‑stage, evidence‑based design.
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