Wind Turbine on Your Land: Why It’s Worth Knowing All Your Options
A wind turbine on your land could be worth far more than a small on-farm installation – but only if the full range of options is understood before a decision is made. Often the idea of wind energy creates a mental image of a single turbine covering electricity costs. For landowners whose sites clear the considerable hurdles onshore wind development imposes, that mental image is worth examining carefully.

Key Takeaways
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Very few land sites in the UK qualify for onshore wind development – planning viability, wind availability, grid access and environmental constraints each eliminate otherwise promising sites.
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Landowners who discover their land has wind energy potential often think first of small self-supply turbines, without realising that the same land may also be worth assessing for a larger commercial scheme.
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Commercial onshore wind farm leases in the UK have historically delivered substantial annual income per turbine over project lifetimes of 25 to 30 years, though the specifics depend on site characteristics and negotiated terms.
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Installing a small turbine without first assessing the site’s full potential can, in some situations, limit future development options – making early-stage awareness particularly valuable and important.
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Understanding the full range of options before committing to any particular path is the most important step a landowner can take when wind energy potential is identified on their land.
Why the default assumption is usually the smaller picture
In conversations with landowners, the initial assumption is often that of a single, small turbine. This is entirely understandable, as England faced a de facto moratorium for onshore wind between 2015 and 2024.
For nearly a decade, large-scale onshore wind was off the table, which means a whole generation of landowners has had little reason to think about commercial schemes at all. In 2024 planning regulations were changed, thereby lifting the de facto ban on onshore wind in England. With that policy change in place, the landscape is changing – but the assumptions many landowners make still need to adjust to the new reality.
The constraints that make a site viable for any kind of wind development are substantial. Planning viability, sufficient wind resource, a viable connection to the grid, and the absence of significant environmental, aviation or radar conflicts – each of these removes a proportion of otherwise promising land from the equation. For landowners whose land does clear those hurdles, it is worth being aware that a wider set of options may be open to them – and that the most obvious first step is not always the most appropriate one.

What a larger wind scheme involves – and how it differs from self-supply
On-farm turbines for self-supply typically operate at a scale of tens of kilowatts (kW). They offset energy costs on the holding and may export a surplus, but their financial impact is modest compared to commercial schemes. Smaller turbines are generally installed to cover part of a farm’s or estate’s electricity demand, with some surplus exported to the grid.
Commercial onshore wind operates at a different scale entirely. A modern commercial turbine typically generates 4 to 6 megawatts (MW) of capacity – enough to supply electricity to several thousand homes annually. Larger commercial projects are designed primarily to export electricity to the grid at much greater volumes, and the lease income associated with hosting them reflects that scale: landowners in commercial wind agreements have historically received high annual lease payments over project lifetimes of 25 to 30 years. The specific lease figure for any site depends on its project characteristics, as well as turbine number and the terms that are negotiated.
This is not to say that a large commercial wind farm is the right answer for every landowner with a qualifying site. The right outcome depends on individual circumstances, long-term plans for the holding, and what development options the site can genuinely support. The point is simply that it is worth knowing what those options are before settling on one.
The risk of underestimating site potential
One of the less obvious challenges is that the full development potential of a site is not always immediately apparent. Factors such as wind conditions, grid access, planning constraints and the usable area of the land all influence what might ultimately be feasible – and those factors are rarely obvious without a proper assessment. Without that assessment, it is easy to default to the most visible option rather than the most appropriate one for the site.
In some situations, installing a small turbine may also influence future planning possibilities. Depending on location and regulatory context, it can complicate or limit the scope for developing a larger project later on. This is not a reason to rule out smaller schemes where they are genuinely the right fit – it is a reason to understand the bigger picture first.
Why a competitive process gives landowners a stronger position
Transparency is best achieved when more than one developer has had the opportunity to put forward a proposal – a single offer, however attractive it appears, has no reference point. A structured process that brings multiple developers to the table, on comparable terms, makes it possible to see not just what one developer thinks the site is worth, but what the market actually thinks.
Differences in proposed lease terms, turbine configurations, project timelines and additional payments only become visible when offers can be placed side by side. That comparability is what turns an offer into a verifiably good one – and it is the basis on which landowners can negotiate, or simply choose, with confidence.
The most useful first step: understanding what your land can support
For landowners who become aware that their land may have wind energy potential – whether through Caeli’s site-check, an approach from a developer, a conversation with an adviser, or their own research – the most useful first step is to find out what options the site can genuinely support.
That means neither assuming the answer is a small self-supply installation, nor assuming it must be a large commercial wind farm. It means getting a clear picture of what the site can realistically accommodate, what each development route would involve, and what the income implications of each might be. Exploring the potential of a site does not obligate a landowner to pursue a large project – it simply provides a clearer basis for whatever decision follows.
Taking independent professional advice before entering into any agreement is strongly recommended. Landowners who understand their options fully are better placed to make decisions that genuinely fit their circumstances and long-term plans. Whether the final decision is a small installation, a larger project or no development at all, decisions based on comprehensive and transparent information are more likely to stand the test of time.
FAQ: Wind Turbine on Your Land – Questions Landowners Ask
For most of the past decade, large-scale onshore wind development in England was effectively off the table. Between 2015 and 2024, planning policy created a de facto moratorium that made new commercial projects near-impossible to approve – so a whole generation of landowners has grown up with little reason to think about commercial wind schemes at all. With that barrier now lifted, the options available to qualifying sites have changed significantly.
A small turbine for self-supply typically delivers value through energy cost savings – its financial impact is measured in what it offsets rather than what it generates as income. Commercial wind leases operate on an entirely different basis: landowners hosting commercial turbines have historically received substantial annual lease payments per turbine over project lifetimes of 25 to 30 years. The specific figure depends on site characteristics, turbine number and negotiated terms. The difference is not marginal – it is a difference in kind, not just scale.
It means neither assuming the answer is a small self-supply installation, nor assuming it must be a large commercial wind farm. It means getting a clear picture of what your site can realistically accommodate, what each development route would involve, and what the income implications of each might be. Exploring the potential of a site does not obligate a landowner to pursue any particular path – it simply provides a clearer basis for whatever decision follows.
A single offer from a single developer has no reference point. A structured process that brings multiple developers to the table on comparable terms makes differences in lease rates, turbine configurations, project timelines and additional payments visible and comparable. That comparability is what turns a good-looking offer into a verifiably good one – and it is the basis on which landowners can make decisions with confidence.
Qualifying land for onshore wind development must typically meet several criteria at once: sufficient average wind speed, viable grid connection proximity, planning policy compatibility, and the absence of significant environmental or aviation constraints. Very few sites clear all of these hurdles – which is precisely why those that do represent a genuine opportunity.
A preliminary indication of your land’s potential can be obtained in under a minute. Check your land in under a minute: Site Check.

