Ramsar Wetland Sites
What it is
Ramsar sites are wetlands of international importance designated under the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands (1971) — the oldest of the three international designations, and the only one that predates and sits outside the EU directives.
Ramsar is the wetland-focused member of the three "habitats site" designations:
- SAC → habitats & species (EU Habitats Directive).
- SPA → wild birds (EU Birds Directive).
- Ramsar → wetlands (Ramsar Convention 1971) — this page.
How it's produced
Ramsar boundaries are defined on designation under the Convention and published by Natural England / JNCC. In England, Ramsar sites almost always overlap an underlying SSSI and frequently an SAC or SPA as well.
Update frequency & currency
Very stable; changes are rare. Verify the current edition on data.gov.uk / JNCC.
Spatial resolution / precision
Precise boundaries. As with SAC/SPA, hydrological connectivity means a wetland's functional catchment extends beyond the polygon — water quality and quantity effects can originate upstream.
Known limitations
- A key legal nuance: Ramsar is an international treaty designation, not a UK statutory designation in the same sense as SSSI. In England, however, national planning policy directs that Ramsar sites be given the same protection as habitats sites — so in practice they are treated like SAC/SPA for assessment purposes. The protection is real; the legal route to it differs.
- Overlap with SSSI/SAC/SPA is the norm, not the exception.
How it compares to SAC and SPA
See the comparison table on the SAC profile. The thing to remember about Ramsar specifically: same practical protection, different legal source — a treaty and a policy direction rather than the Habitats Regulations directly.
Role in BNG assessment
A hard planning constraint, handled like SAC/SPA. A Ramsar site in potential play means the HRA-equivalent regime applies, and BNG cannot discharge it.
Ramsar is the designation practitioners most often get technically wrong while getting the outcome right. People assume it's "just another European site" — it isn't; it flows from a 1971 treaty and is protected in England by policy direction rather than by the Habitats Regulations themselves. That distinction rarely changes what you must do (assess it like a habitats site), but it changes how you argue it, and it matters if the policy framing ever shifts. Our approach: treat Ramsar as functionally equivalent to SAC/SPA for screening, but cite it correctly — the legal basis is the Convention plus national planning policy, not the Directives.
Official source
- Ramsar Sites (England) — data.gov.uk
- Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
- Habitats regulations assessments: protecting a European site — GOV.UK
Last reviewed
5 July 2026. Revisit if national planning policy changes how Ramsar sites are protected, or if new sites are designated. Confirm the exact data.gov.uk resource URL at review.