Churches have been home to bats for hundreds of years. Between 60-90% of historic churches now have protected bat roosts. Churches provide voids and crevices for roosting, safe flight spaces and plenty of insects to feed on in the surrounding churchyards.

Find out more about our work between 2019 and 2023, some of the challenges facing churches with bats and how we've been able to help.

Our Project Churches

We worked with over 100 project churches across England aiming to protect bats and the amazing heritage buildings they call home.

All
  • All
  • East Anglia
  • Midlands and the North
  • South
church interior showing tiled floor and arches

Arundel, St Nicholas

The church of St Nicholas Arundel is full of treasures

Church with bell tower, surrounded by trees, with sign and a few people in churchyard

Askham, St Peter

A small ‘pre-ecclesiological’ Gothic Revival church of 1832 by Sir Robert Smirke (the architect for nearby Lowther Castle), incorporating features from the earlier medieval church on this site.

A shield shaped panel of stained glass showing a coat of arms of three bulls head arranged around a red chevron

Baconsthorpe, St Mary

A pretty decorated Norfolk church full of monuments to the Heydon family and home to a roost of Common and Soprano Pipistrelles.

A medieval wall painting in tones of red showing the lower half of St George spearing the mouth of a small dragon

Banningham, St Botolph

A part-thatched Norfolk church with a series of wall paintings and a collection of fine Medieval glass. Home to Pipistrelle and Brown-long Eared bats.

An iron gate and arched gateway, the end of church is just visible through the gate

Billingford, St Leonard

A picturesque, peaceful church on the Norfolk/Suffolk border with Natterer’s bats roosting in the low tower.

Looking down on church tower beside a lake with fields and houses

Blagdon, St Andrew

The C15th tower of the beautiful church of St Andrew’s is one of the tallest in Somerset, and an important feature in the landscape.

This is a weeping angel

Blickling, St Andrew

Home of the Boleyn family and the Marquesses of Lothian, we’re working to protect the many brasses and monuments from bat-related damage.

A medieval carved miserichord showing a man reaping wheat with a scythe alongside another figure

Brampton, St Mary Magdalene

An active community church just outside Huntingdon. We’re commissioning full surveys of the bats and the church heritage to see how we can help here.

Braunston-in-Rutland, All Saints

One of our three pilot churches, the Soprano Pipistrelle colony is still thriving in the south aisle roof with no mess or damage inside the church.

A wall painting of St Andrew, now in black red and cream, he has a red halo and holds two crossed staves

Brisley, St Bartholomew

A large church full of carved bench ends and Medieval wall paintings. We’re funding conservation work on the wall paintings and surveys of the bat roosts to see how we can help.

The Challenge

Churches are important roosting sites for bats, and for generations many churches have provided a refuge for bats in a landscape of habitat loss.

Many churches live happily alongside their bats, and even large bat roosts can almost go unnoticed. However, in some cases, bats roosting or flying within the church can cause serious problems. They can create an unimaginable cleaning burden, prevent the church from having services and events and cause damage to irreplaceable historic artefacts.

The Bats In Churches Project was created to work with churches, bat workers and heritage communities to find bespoke, sustainable solutions for some of the worst affected churches in England and provide advice for any church that has resident bats.

Partnership

Natural England, the Church of England, Historic England, the Bat Conservation Trust and the Churches Conservation Trust have come together as the Bats in Churches project. This unique partnership brings together cross-sector experts, church communities and volunteers to address the issues that can arise when bats and historic churches co-exist and help to ensure a harmonious future for both.

The project secured funding from The National Lottery Heritage Fund, with additional funding from the partners and the AllChurches Trust.

Our Story

The Bats In Churches Project started in 2018 and ran until the end of 2023. We have carried out bat mitigation works in over 30 project churches, and are closely monitoring the results. Over 20 more churches now have plans in place to help manage their bat roosts. 

Much of this work has been possible due to the new Bats In Churches Class Licence, which allows experienced ecologists to carry out complex work around bat roosts. The work has highlighted the importance of brining together church communities, architects, ecologists, and heritage specialists who can all share their experience and expertise. This includes training bat workers to work with churches, and providing professional training to heritage specialists on working around bats, aiming to create a base of professionals who understand all the issues around both churches and bats and how best to solve the issues.

As well as carrying out major capital works in churches, we helped churches find, simple sustainable solutions. We ran regular cleaning workshops, training and masterclasses and provided covers and protection for historic monuments and artefacts. We developed resources to help churches run schools workshops, events and other activities and free online training.

We celebrated bats and churches through our own events, online talks and our new children's book.

The project ran two major citizen science surveys, the National Bats In Churches Study and Church Bat Detectives, encouraging people to explore their local churches and helping us map bat distribution in churches across England.

Need help or info about bats?

Call the Bat Helpline on 0345 1300 228

Churches in England are eligible for free bat advice provided by Natural England. This can include a free visit by a trained volunteer and can be obtained when:

  • Bats are causing a nuisance inside the church
  • Renovation or small scale building work is planned
  • Grounded bats are found
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