How to help your local allotment society as an applicant
allotments.info editorial · 15 April 2026
Being on a waiting list can feel passive. But allotment societies often need more help than they have hands for — and getting involved early is good for you, good for the community, and sometimes good for your position in the queue.
Why societies need help
Most allotment societies are run entirely by volunteers. The committee members who manage the site, chase rent payments, maintain hedges, deal with plot disputes, and write the newsletter are all plot holders giving up their evenings and weekends.
Common areas of need include:
- Plot clearing — overgrown plots returned by departing tenants often need significant work before they can be re-let
- Communal maintenance — paths, hedges, water points, noticeboards, and fences all need regular attention
- Events and open days — committees often welcome help with organising and running events
- Communications — newsletters, social media, and website updates are often handled by whoever has time
- Admin — some societies need help with waitlist management, membership renewals, and meeting minutes
How to make contact
Start with a polite email to the society secretary or the council's allotments team. Explain that you are on the waiting list and keen to get involved. Ask whether they have a volunteer programme or a way to stay in touch with news from the site.
Not every society will have a formal system — but most will appreciate the offer.
The benefit of building relationships
Getting to know a society before you have a plot means you arrive as a familiar, trusted face rather than a stranger. You will already know the culture of the site, the unwritten rules, which plot has the best drainage, and who to ask for advice.
Some societies do take volunteering into account when offering plots — not as a formal rule, but as one factor among several.
Staying connected without overcommitting
You do not need to spend every weekend at a plot that is not yet yours. Even attending one open day per year, signing up for the society newsletter, and offering to help with one work party per year puts you in a very different position to the applicant who applied and then fell silent.
The allotments.info national waitlist helps you find which nearby sites are run by societies and make contact directly. Some sites post volunteer days and community events on their listing pages.
Take the next step
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.