Updated: Address to submit documents after your consignment has arrived has been updated.
Categories of material
Plants, fruit, vegetables and plant material (like soil) from outside the EU fall into 3 categories:
- ‘unrestricted’ material you can bring to the UK without any conditions
- ‘controlled’ material that you can only bring into the UK with a ‘phytosanitary certificate’ to show it meets the requirements for entry to the EU
- ‘prohibited’ material you can’t bring into the UK unless you get a scientific research licence or an exception (‘derogation’) to the rules – contact the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) if you want to apply for a derogation
The rest of this guide explains how to import controlled material that requires a phytosanitary certificate.
Find out how to send or receive plants within the EU and how to export plants to non-EU countries.
Material that’s controlled
Controlled plants, fruit, vegetables and plant material include:
- all plants for planting
- common fruits (except for bananas and grapes) other than fruit preserved by deep freezing
- cut flowers
- some seeds and leafy vegetables other than vegetables preserved by deep freezing
- potatoes from some countries
If you’re not sure whether the item you want to bring to the UK is controlled, check the list of plant species by import category or contact APHA.
Personal allowance
You can import a total of 5 controlled plants without a phytosanitary certificate, if you’re returning from an EU country or Switzerland, Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia and Turkey and the plants are:
- in your personal baggage
- for your personal use
- not diseased or infected with pests
Otherwise you must follow the procedures in this guide.
Register as an importer
You must follow the Procedure for Electronic Application for Certificates from the Horticultural marketing inspectorate (PEACH).
Register for PEACH before you start importing plants.
Once you’re registered you can follow the progress of your consignments through inspections and other checks on the PEACH website.
Phytosanitary certificates
You must get a phytosanitary certificate for each consignment of controlled plants, fruit, vegetables or plant material that you import, from the plant health authority in the country where your supplier is.
The certificate is a statement from the plant health authority that the consignment:
- has been officially inspected
- complies with legal requirements for entry into the EU
- is free from serious pests and diseases
The inspection referred to in the certificate must take place no more than 14 days before the consignment is dispatched from the inspecting country. The certificate must be signed by someone in the inspecting plant health authority within the same 14 day period.
If your consignment includes plants from more than one country, you’ll need to get a separate phytosanitary certificate from the plant health authority in each country.
Quantity
Phytosanitary certificates include a ‘quantity declared’ section. Tell the plant health authority that’s completing the form to fill in quantities as follows.
For cut flowers quantity must be stated as the number of stems.
Quantities must be stated in kilograms (kg) for fruit, vegetables, soil and branches with foliage, potatoes, grain and the following plants for planting:
- bulbs
- corms and rhizomes
- plants in tissue culture
- seeds
For any other plants for planting, the quantity must be recorded as the number of items in the consignment.
It’s up to you to make sure quantities are stated in this way. The plant health authority may use quantity measures for consignments bound for other countries, so you will need to tell them about the measures required for UK-bound consignments.
Pre-arrival notification
You must use the PEACH website to give advance notice each time you bring a consignment to the UK.
You must give:
- in the case of any relevant material brought by air, at least 4 working hours before the relevant material is landed
- in any other case, at least 3 working days before the relevant material is landed
You must also scan the following documents and upload them to the PEACH website before your consignment arrives:
- the phytosanitary certificate for the consignment
- the travel ticket if you’re travelling with the plants yourself
- bill of lading, cargo movement request or delivery company invoice if you’re not travelling with the plants
- the form you must complete to record details of your imported plant material – this applies to plant material for planting
Inspections
When it arrives in the UK, your consignment must be presented for inspection to check it:
- includes all required documents
- contains the plants you have said it does
- is free from pests and diseases
If your consignment doesn’t pass an inspection it may be destroyed, treated, or sent back to where you sent it from at your expense.
Inspection fees
For each consignment imported you have to pay the following fees:
- A fee of £9.71 for each consignment to cover the cost of checking the consignment’s paperwork and identity.
- A physical inspection fee – the amount you will have to pay will depend on the type of plant material you’re importing.
See Schedule 1 of the Plant Health etc. (Fees) (England) Regulations 2018.
Reduced inspection fees
Some plant material, imported from particular countries, is eligible for a reduced level of physical inspection. This many mean a lower inspection fee.
Check schedule 2 of the Plant Health etc. (Fees) (England) Regulations 2018 to find out if your consignment qualifies for a lower inspection fee.
Points of entry
You can use these designated points of entry to bring your consignment into the UK.
You’ll be able to select the point of entry you want to use from a drop down list on the PEACH website.
Heathrow
Consignments can be inspected at Heathrow from 6am until midnight everyday.
APHA will inspect your consignment within 4 hours of it arriving as long as:
- you’ve given the required 4 working hours notice
- it arrives and is presented for inspection at the time you indicated on your PEACH application
Manchester, Gatwick or Stansted
Consignments can be inspected at Manchester, Gatwick or Stansted airports between 8:30am and 5pm from Monday to Friday (except UK bank holidays).
APHA will inspect your consignment within 4 hours of it becoming available for inspection (ie after you bring it to the office), as long as:
- you’ve given the required 4 working hours notice
- it arrives and is presented for inspection at the time you indicated on your PEACH application
Other airports
Consignments can be inspected at other airports between 8:30am and 5pm from Monday to Friday (except UK bank holidays).
APHA will inspect your consignment within one working day of it becoming available for inspection (ie after you bring it to the office), as long as:
- you’ve given the required 4 working hours notice
- it arrives and is presented for inspection at the time you indicated on your PEACH application
Seaports and approved inland inspection points
Consignments can be inspected at seaports and approved inland inspection points between 8:30am and 5pm from Monday to Friday (except UK bank holidays).
APHA will inspect your consignment within 1 working day of it becoming available (ie once the port has moved it to the approved inspection facility), as long as you’ve given the required 3 working days notice.
Alternative inspection posts
Inspections can also be carried out at:
- an External Temporary Storage Facility (ETSF) – read the list of ETSFs approved for plant imports
- premises designated under the Customs Freight Simplified Procedure (CFSP)
Apply to:
- have your premises authorised as an ETSF
- have your existing ETSF authorisation upgraded to allow plant health inspection to be carried out there
- have your premises designated under CFSP
How to present certificates
If you’re travelling with your consignment, you can provide phytosanitary and reforwarding certificates for inspection yourself when you arrive in the UK.
If you’re shipping the consignment by post, put the certificates in an envelope marked ‘For the attention of Border Force’ and attach it to the outside of your package.
If you have more than one package, attach certified copies of the certificates to each package. A certified copy is a copy signed by the plant health authority that drew up the certificate.
Submit documents after your consignment arrives
Within 3 days of your consignment reaching the UK, you must post the original phytosanitary certificate to APHA.
For consignments landing at Heathrow or Gatwick send the certificate to:
Animal and Plant Health Agency
1st floor
Building 4
Heathrow Boulevard
284 Bath Road
West Drayton
Middlesex
UB7 0DQ
For consignments landing anywhere else send the certificate to:
Animal and Plant Health Agency
Room 11GA02
Sand Hutton
York
YO41 1LZ
Consignments travelling through another EU state
If your consignment travelled through another EU member state, the plant health authority in the other member state will have taken the phytosanitary certificate and replaced it with a ‘plant health movement document’.
In this case, send the plant health movement document to APHA instead.
Complaints and appeals
You can complain or appeal if you’re unsatisfied with the service you receive from APHA.
Follow this news feed: DEFRA