Main features
This is an old version of the page
Date published: 25 June, 2019
Date superseded: 4 July, 2019
For recent changes to this guidance, please see the bottom of the page.
Table of Contents
- Background to the scheme
- Participation
- Active farming – undertaking agricultural activity and the "Negative List"
- Entitlements
- Usage rules
- Payment regions
- Transition period for payment rates
- Capping
- Land at your disposal
- Land eligible for this scheme
- Greening
- Cross border business
- Young Farmer payment
- Cross Compliance
- Inspections
- Appeals
- Payment in euros
- Publication of your payments
- Further information
- Recent changes
- Previous versions
- Download guidance
Background to the scheme
The Basic Payment Scheme is a result of reforms to the Common Agricultural Policy that will affect farmers and crofters from 2015. The need for reform came from three reasons:
- so as to better address the challenges of:
- food security
- climate change and sustainable management of natural resources
- looking after the countryside and keeping the rural economy alive
- to help the farming sector become more competitive and to deal with the economic crisis and increasingly unstable farm-gate prices
- to make the policy fairer, greener, more efficient and more effective and more understandable
The Basic Payment Scheme replaces the Single Farm Payment Scheme (SFPS). To be eligible to apply for the scheme you must fall into one or more of the following categories:
- automatic right of allocation – for businesses who were active in 2013 and declare land in 2015
- active farmers in 2013 – you must be able to supply evidence if you did not apply for SFPS. Please note definition of this point is still being looked into
- businesses in excluded sectors – fruit and vegetable producers or deer farms can apply
- businesses sold or leased – the buyer or lessee can take over the original business’ qualification for subsidy
If none of the above apply to you, you may be eligible to apply to the National Reserve.
Participation
You can participate in the scheme and receive subsidy if you:
- are an active farmer – see below for more details
- hold Basic Payment Scheme entitlements, either through an original award or having acquired them by transfer – see National Reserve for more information
- submit a claim in the form of a Single Application Form (IACS) Aid Application
- farm a minimum of three hectares of eligible land
- have one eligible hectare of land for each entitlement
- be involved in agricultural activity
- maintain your land in Good Agricultural and Environmental Condition (GAEC) and meet a number of Statutory Management Requirements covering the environment, food safety, animal and plant health and animal welfare (Cross Compliance)
- undertake agricultural practices beneficial for the climate and the environment – commonly known as “Greening”. This is a compulsory part of Direct Payments and you could lose your right to payments if you fail to comply
- keep comprehensive, accurate, and up-to-date records
We may inspect your holding to verify your claim and it is a condition of receiving subsidy that you co-operate with any inspection.
Active farming – undertaking agricultural activity and the "Negative List"
An important part of being eligible to apply for the Basic Payment Scheme, is being able to meet the requirements of being a “farmer” who undertakes an “agricultural activity”. These separate but related requirements are explained below.
You must meet the legal definition of a “farmer” to participate in BPS. For this purpose, a farmer is a natural or legal person (or a group of natural or legal persons) whose holding (production units) are situated within Scotland.
You might not be classed as an “active farmer”.
You must also exercise an agricultural activity. An agricultural activity can include the production, rearing or growing of agricultural products, including harvesting, milking, breeding animals and keeping animals for farming purposes.
If you have land which is naturally kept in a state suitable for cultivation and grazing (essentially all land in Payment Regions Two and Three) and it represents more than half of your holding (inclusive of any seasonal land) you must also meet rules on exercising a minimum activity.
You must qualify as an “active farmer” each year that you apply for Basic Payment Scheme. You should declare on your SAF each year whether you operate activities under the Negative list or not. You will not be able to receive any payments until we have confirmed that you meet the “active farmer” requirements.
Exemption
You will qualify as an “active farmer” automatically if the value of your claims under the Basic Payment Scheme, Scottish Upland Sheep Support Scheme or Scottish Sucker Beef Support Scheme in the previous year were worth €5,000 or less, before any penalties were applied or cross compliance reductions were made.
Farmers who didn’t claim under any of these schemes in the previous year can still qualify automatically if their claim would have been worth €5000 or less, had they applied. You should contact your local RPID area office if unsure.
20 February 2018 Negative List Update
Under proposals to simplify CAP, the Scottish Government has removed the requirement of the negative list, an element of the active farmer requirement.
EU regulations currently prevent member states from automatically making direct payments over €5,000 to specific types of businesses – known as the negative list.
This includes claimants who operate permanent sporting and recreational grounds and other services such as railways or airports. Safeguards continue to be in place to ensure funds go to active farmers.
Announcing the change, Rural Economy Secretary Fergus Ewing said:
“I have made no secret of my belief that current CAP rules are too prescriptive, often place excessive administrative burdens on our farmers, and do not allow for enough flexibility at a local level.
“That is why I have taken the decision to allow for the removal of the negative list, which will reduce the administrative burden on our farmers and crofters. Although the question will continue to feature in the 2018 Single Application Form, I want to be clear that we will not be assessing that element.
Entitlements
In order to receive support, you will need entitlements to claim from the Basic Payment Scheme.
For example, if you took part in the Single Farm Payment Scheme (SFPS), meaning that you submitted a Single Application Form in 2013 and 2014 and were paid on your SFPS entitlements, you will eligible to receive an automatic allocation of entitlements.
To be paid on those entitlements, however, you must make an application to ‘activate’ them against eligible land. For your Basic Payment Scheme application to be valid, you must have at least three entitlements and activate them. That means you will need at least three hectares of eligible land to activate them.
If you are a young farmer (under 40 years of age) or new to farming (starting an agricultural activity in 2013 or later) you need to apply to the National Reserve.
This is about how we will fund your entitlements but, if successful, you will be allocated Basic Payment Scheme entitlements, the same as those receiving an automatic allocation. The activation rules also apply to your entitlements.
The number of payment entitlements allocated in 2015 will equal the number of eligible hectares determined from your Single Application Form in each of payment regions you are involved in.
For example, if we determine that you have 50 hectares in Payment Region One, you will receive 50 entitlements for that region.
If you have 100 hectares in Payment Region Two or Three or a combination of both, you will receive 90 entitlements for those regions. This is because we have decided to apply a reduction co-efficient of 10 per cent to eligible hectares declared in those regions.
You can find out more about payment regions below.
For the period after 2015, it will be possible to purchase or lease entitlements in order to receive Basic Payment Scheme payments.
These are transactions between individuals and we do not get involved beyond recording the change in ownership. If you are considering acquiring entitlements in this way, it is advisable for you to seek professional advice on the matter from a commercial broker.
Usage rules
All Basic Payment Scheme payment entitlements, including entitlements allocated from the National Reserve, are subject to a two-year usage rule.
The rule has changed, compared to the two-year usage rule that was in place for the Single Farm Payment Scheme. From 2015, over any two-year period you must activate (use) all of your Basic Payment Scheme payment entitlements in at least one year.
Therefore it will not be possible to rotate entitlements using some in year one and the remainder in year two. If you lease your Basic Payment Scheme entitlements out, you will be relying on that farmer to ensure the two-year usage rule is met.
If leased-in Basic Payment Scheme entitlements are not activated during the rolling two-year period they will revert to the National Reserve.
For example:
In the case of a farmer who had 50 Basic Payment Scheme entitlements allocated (and activated) in 2015, who then activates 30 Basic Payment Scheme entitlements in 2016 and 50 Basic Payment Scheme entitlements in 2017, they will have activated all 50 entitlements at least once in the two-year period.
However, if they had activated only 40 entitlements in 2017, they have not activated all 50 entitlements once in the two year period and the 10 entitlements not used will be withdrawn and revert to the National Reserve.
If you have entitlements in more than one region then usage will be considered within each region allocation. Where you have entitlements within the same region which have different values then the lowest value entitlements (owned or leased-in) will revert to the National Reserve first.
You may be exempt from the two-year usage rule if you can prove that you (or your business) were subject to exceptional circumstances or a force majeure event, which prevented you from activating the entitlements for the relevant Basic Payment Scheme year.
Payment regions
The starting point for payments under the Basic Payment Scheme is the area of land farmed in 2015.
Because the agricultural potential of the land in Scotland varies, the Scottish Government has used objective criteria and factors such as the agricultural and economic characteristics of an area to identify three payment regions.
- Payment Region One – includes better quality agricultural land that has been used for arable cropping, temporary grass and permanent grass
- Payment Region Two – includes rough grazing with a Less Favoured Area (LFA) grazing category of B, C, D, or is outside the LFA
- Payment Region Three – including rough grazing with a Less Favoured Area (LFA) grazing category of A
Transition period for payment rates
The Scottish Government is obliged to make sure all payment entitlements in the same payment region have the same value but has opted not to move to these regional rates in one-step.
Instead, it has opted for a phased approach where claimants will move to a wholly area-based payment system by 2019, in equal size steps. This means a five-year transition period with claimants receiving 100 per cent area based payments by 2019.
Under this system, some existing beneficiaries will see their payments rise (in comparison to what they received under SFPS) whilst other will see their payments fall.
This is an inevitable result of the change, required to meet European Commission regulations of switching from payments based on an individual farmer’s historic agricultural activity to payment rates according to three different land regions.
These rates will not be fixed until we have calculated the number of entitlements to be allocated, the extent of successful National Reserve applications and the total of payments to young farmers.
All of this information, together with the land declared, will stem from the Single Application Forms submitted by 15 May, 2015. Consequently, it is not possible to say in advance what these rates payment will be.
As an indication of what the payment rates might be, the Scottish Government estimates are as follows:
- Payment Region One = €145.00
- Payment Region Two = €25.00
- Payment Region Three = €7.00
Capping
Capping is the progressive reduction of payments above a certain level with the reduction being used to supplement funding for rural development measures.
In Scotland, we will reduce the total of Direct Payments over €150,000 by five per cent. Direct Payments means Basic Payment Scheme and the sheep and beef support schemes.
In addition to this reduction, where the direct payments to be granted exceed €600,000 for calendar year 2018 or any subsequent calendar year, the sum in excess of that amount will be reduced by 100 per cent.
Land at your disposal
For detailed guidance on what constitutes “eligible land”, please see below.
If you own the land or are a tenant, the land will be ‘at your disposal’ when you declare it on your Single Application Form on the qualifying date of 15 May. Whether or not a contract farming arrangement meets the definitions will depend on the details of the working arrangement. If you are in any doubt, please contact your area office with details of your contract farming agreement.
Where grazing is shared then all claimants must reach a joint agreement on how much of the land they are entitled to declare on their claim. This can be achieved by using the number of Livestock Units that each will be grazing during the season and apportioning the area of the land accordingly.
The terms of any sub-letting and contractual agreements can have an important effect on your ability to make a claim for payment.
You will need to reach a workable agreement that takes into account your responsibility for compliance with the Basic Payment Scheme and your ability to claim entitlements.
We recommend that all parties involved in the agreement include a clear breakdown of responsibility for each of the major Cross Compliance conditions, with a default position that the claimant will be responsible.
In cases where more than one farmer carries out an agricultural activity on the same area of land, it should be made clear in any tenancy agreement who has the land ‘at their disposal’, and who is entitled to claim payment on it. Arrangements for common grazing in the crofting counties and other common land will continue as normal. You cannot backdate agreements. You must be able to prove that you have land at your disposal not just through an agreement, but also through your practice on that land. |
If we find that you have under declared or over declared land then penalties may apply. For further information on penalties, please refer to our published guidance on Single Application Form
Land eligible for this scheme
You can use only eligible land to activate entitlements for payment under Basic Payment Scheme.
Eligible land under the scheme is any agricultural area of the holding used as arable land or permanent pasture or permanent crops.
Permanent pasture is land:
- used to grow grasses or other herbaceous forage, either naturally (self-seeded) or through cultivation (sown)
- not included in the crop rotation for five years or longer
- was not taken out of production under some agri-environment scheme options
To determine whether your land is permanent pasture for the purposes of the scheme you should consider its status on 15 May each year.
This means that land will be classified as permanent pasture when declared as being in grass or herbaceous forage on six consecutive Single Application Forms (or IACS) applications.
For example, if you first declared a parcel as being in grass on 15 May, 2010 (that is, was first put down to grass some time during the period 16 May, 2009 to 15 May, 2010) and remains in grass on 15 May, 2015, then it will be classified as permanent pasture and you should declare it as such on your 2015 Single Application Form.
Where you did not declare land on a Single Application Form, the same principle applies. That is, it will be classified as permanent pasture when it has been in grass or herbaceous forage on 15 May in six consecutive years.
Land that you have re-sown with grass or other herbaceous forage during a five-year period is still counted as permanent pasture. However, land which is in long-term grass, but which you have reseeded following a catch crop such as stubble turnips in the last five years, is considered arable land.
Permanent crops are those defined as non-rotational crops (other than permanent pasture) that occupy land for five years or more and yield repeated harvests, including nurseries and short rotation coppice.
Greening
Greening is the requirement to follow certain agricultural practices that are beneficial for the climate and the environment.
The Scottish Government will allocate 30 per cent of its budget for Direct Payments to payments linked to these practices. In order to access this funding, farmers will be required to follow a new set of three greening requirements, namely:
- crop diversification
- maintenance of permanent grassland
- establishment of Ecological Focus Areas on five per cent of arable land
Our latest information on the greening rules was published in leaflet form.
Cross border business
The European Commission’s regulations governing agricultural support require that all the land farmed in the United Kingdom be covered by one single application form.
If you farm land in more than one region of the UK (Scotland, England, Northern Ireland and Wales), your Single Application Form will be made up of two or more forms applicable to each region involved.
You must submit all relevant forms together to the administration that will be dealing with your claim.
The handling administration is decided based on the region in which most of your farmland is situated. You will receive one payment, made up of all the entitlements held from the handling administration.
Young Farmer payment
If you qualify for the Basic Payment Scheme, you may also receive the Young Farmer payment. You will receive this if you:
- submit a Single Application Form
- farm a minimum of three hectares in Scotland
- are a sole trader or head of the farm business
- less than 41 years of age on 31 December of the first year you apply for the Basic Payment Scheme
The level of Young Farmer payment is based on a maximum of 90 eligible hectares and rate is 25% of the average value of payment entitlements held for the scheme year concerned.
For businesses where the young farmer is classed as head of the farm business, this means that person is the main shareholder / partner in the business, takes the majority share of any profits and makes the key business decisions.
The Young Farmer Payment is made to eligible applicants for a maximum of five years from the date of their first application submission.
Applicants who set up from calendar year 2014 onwards will be eligible to receive YFP for a period of five years from the date of first submission of an application for payment.
For example, a young farmer setting up in 2014 who submitted their first application for YFP in 2015 will continue to be eligible to apply for payments in 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019. A young farmer setting up in 2014 who submits their first application for YFP in 2016 will continue to be eligible to apply for payments in 2017, 2018, 2019.
All current schemes are running until 2019 meaning eligible applicants who have applied for YFP in 2015 onwards will be eligible to apply for their payments until then.
YFP must continue to be claimed annually by the eligible business and annual checks will be undertaken to ensure the business remains eligible for payment.
You can apply for the Young Farmer payment on the Single Application Form, where you will be asked to provide evidence of your eligibility. Full details of how to apply for the payment will be included in the guidance notes issued with your Single Application Form.
Cross Compliance
Payment under the scheme is conditional on meeting the Cross Compliance conditions.
Under Cross Compliance, you must continue to comply with the Statutory Management Requirements in force for public health, animal and plant health, environmental protection and animal welfare.
You must also maintain your land in Good Agricultural and Environmental Condition (GAEC).
Separate, detailed guidance is available below about Cross Compliance and all farmers should study the requirements and ensure that they understand what is involved. When you sign the Single Application Form, you are making a declaration that you have read all applicable guidance, including Cross Compliance requirements.
Failure to meet Cross Compliance conditions do result in penalties being applied to claims.
Inspections
Farmers must allow us to inspect their holdings, at any reasonable time, to check that the scheme rules have been met. We are not required to provide advance notice of inspections.
If a farmer refuses to co-operate, or if an inspecting officer is obstructed or the farmer fails to give reasonable assistance, we are within our rights not pay the farmer and may commence a prosecution.
Further information on inspections can be found below.
Appeals
At present you can ask us, within a set timescale, to review any decision to refuse, reduce, or recover subsidy using the EU Agricultural Subsidy Schemes Appeal procedure.
This procedure has two stages: an in-house review and an appeal to the Scottish Land Court.
You can find out more about our appeals process in our appeals section.
Payment in euros
We provide producers with the option of receiving certain payments in euros. These are, at present, those covered by the Direct Payments programme (Basic Payment Scheme and the sheep and beef support schemes).
The facility is not be available (for the time being) for other measures, such as the Less Favoured Area Support Scheme and certain agri-environment schemes.
If you wish to be paid in euros for these schemes, you must indicate by answering the relevant question on your Single Application Form. If we have paid you in euros in the preceding year (for example, SFPS in 2014) we will use the same account details for your payment.
You must keep us informed of any changes to your bank account details. If you have requested payment in euros and then change your mind, or requested payment in sterling and then decide you would prefer euros, you must inform us before 9 June.
When registering a new bank account or telling us of a change to your bank account, please note that we operate a 10-day “quarantine” period for your own security.
This means if you change your bank account details during the payment processing period, you will experience a delay to your payment.
Publication of your payments
We will publish information on Direct Payments made to businesses. The European Commission has introduced new legislation that requires us to publish details about the payments you receive.
If you receive payments of more than €1,250 per annum we will publish your business name, locality (nearest town), postcode, and the amounts and schemes you have received payments for.
We will publish this from 31 May, 2015 and it will cover all payments made in the period 16 October, 2013 to 15 October, 2014.
Further information
For further support and information, please get in touch with your nearest area office.
Recent changes
Section | Change |
---|---|
Capping | Updated information provided on capping. |
Active farming - undertaking agricultural activity and the "Negative List" | Negative List guidance replaced by update from February 2018 |
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