How allotment societies can manage waiting lists without spreadsheets
allotments.info editorial · 20 April 2026
Walk into the average allotment society committee meeting and you will find a spreadsheet — often managed by one person, saved on one laptop, shared by email. When that person steps down, their replacement inherits a file that may or may not be up to date.
This is the reality for the vast majority of the UK's 330,000+ allotment plots. And it causes real problems.
The problems with spreadsheet-based waiting lists
For applicants: - No way to check your own position without emailing the secretary - No confirmation that your application was received - No notification when you move up the list - Risk of missing an allocation offer if contact details are stale
For secretaries and committee members: - Manual data entry for every new application - No automatic de-duplication - Difficulty maintaining priority rules consistently - Time-consuming annual renewals - No audit trail if an allocation decision is questioned - Handover risk when committee members change
For councils: - No visibility into how societies are managing their waiting lists - Difficult to report on demand - No way to enforce consistent priority rules
What modern waiting-list management looks like
A well-run digital waiting list gives applicants a self-service portal where they can check their position, update their contact details, and receive automatic notifications. It gives secretaries a dashboard showing every applicant, their priority score, and their history. It handles annual renewals automatically and generates an audit trail for every decision.
Critically, it connects to the national allotments.info directory so that applicants from across the country can find and apply to your site in a single form — rather than hunting for your council's website and filling in a PDF.
Making the switch
The biggest barrier most societies cite is time. "We do not have the bandwidth to migrate everything." But a good modern system should migrate in an afternoon: import your existing list, set your priority rules once, and go live.
allotments.info works with TerraLedger, which is built specifically for allotment societies and councils. It handles waiting lists, plot management, tenancy agreements, rent collection, and communications — and it connects directly to the allotments.info national directory so your site appears to the 174,000 people actively searching for a plot.
If you manage a site that is currently listed on allotments.info, you can claim your listing, verify your details, and get started. The first step takes under 10 minutes.
More allotment advice
What to do while you wait for an allotment
The average UK allotment wait is 4 years — and in some London boroughs it stretches far longer. Here is how to make the waiting time count without losing momentum.
How UK allotment waiting lists work
Confused about why the wait is so long, how positions are decided, and how to move faster? Here is the practical guide to how UK allotment waiting lists actually work.
Can you join more than one allotment waiting list?
Yes — and you should. Applying to multiple allotment waiting lists is perfectly legal and one of the most effective ways to reduce your wait time.