Guidance

Crayfish: apply for permission to trap

When you can get permission or a licence to trap crayfish in England. How to apply and rules to follow.

Applies to England

You must have certain permissions before you trap or remove crayfish.

You could be prosecuted if you trap or remove crayfish without written permission.

Native crayfish

You must not trap or remove any native crayfish in England without written permission from the Environment Agency.

Native (white-clawed) crayfish are a protected species – you can only trap them for scientific purposes. It is an offence to harm or remove native white clawed crayfish.

You can register for a licence for activities affecting white-clawed crayfish with Natural England.

Non-native crayfish

You must not trap or remove any non-native crayfish in England without written permission from the Environment Agency.

You also need permission from the landowner and any relevant angling clubs.

In some areas you also need a licence to keep non-native crayfish alive after trapping. Find out more in the guidance on how to apply for a licence to keep non-native crayfish.

Crayfish trapping and removal rules

There are strict rules about the design and size of crayfish traps because they can harm other wildlife. If traps are the wrong size or design your application will be refused.

Traps must:

  • be no longer than 600mm
  • be no wider than 350mm at the widest point
  • have an entrance no more than 95mm wide (unless fitted with an otter guard)
  • have mesh no bigger than 30mm at its widest point
  • have an Environment Agency issued trapping tag attached when in use

You must:

  • return fish species not covered by your permission to the water they came from
  • comply with the conditions of your issued permission

You must not transport or take live crayfish away from the location you caught them. There are 2 exceptions to this:

Other crayfish removal methods that require permission

You must apply for permission to remove crayfish by any other method. For example:

  • fyke nets
  • drop nets
  • hand net
  • by hand
  • artificial refuge traps

Protect water voles

Your application may be refused if there are risks to water vole populations.

Deliberately killing water voles is an offence.

You are breaking the law if you:

  • recklessly allow water voles to drown in crayfish traps
  • place traps in the entrances to water vole tunnels

You may be allowed to use baited drop nets in areas where water voles are present. Check this with your local fisheries officer at the Environment Agency.

Environment Agency: Area Fisheries team
Telephone: 03708 506 506 (ask for your local Fisheries Officer)
Email: enquiries@environment-agency.gov.uk
Monday to Friday, 8am to 6pm
Find out about call charges

Charges

There are no charges for permissions to trap or remove crayfish.

Apply for permission or find out more

Form CR1: Application to trap or remove crayfish in England

Request an accessible format.
If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of this document in a more accessible format, please email enquiries@environment-agency.gov.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

Fish movements team

Environment Agency

Email fmapplications@environment-agency.gov.uk

Telephone 0208 474 5243

Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm

Updates to this page

Published 22 December 2025

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