Grading permits in Henderson County, NC.
When the NC one-acre land-disturbance rule applies, what the E&SC plan costs, and who reviews it — explained for real Henderson County lots, not a generic state summary. Free on-site estimate, 24hr callback.
In Henderson County you need an approved Erosion & Sedimentation Control plan only when your work disturbs more than one acre on a tract, under NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973). That plan must be filed 30 or more days before grading starts and carries a state fee of $119 per acre (effective 2025-07-01). Below one acre, no state plan is required — though sediment control is still best practice. Because Henderson County’s median lot is just 0.79 acres and only 41% of parcels reach an acre, most single-home grading jobs here stay under the trigger. Most plans are reviewed by NC DEMLR’s Asheville Regional Office; confirm jurisdiction by address.
The one rule that decides everything: one acre
Almost every “do I need a grading permit?” question in Henderson County comes down to a single line in North Carolina law. Under the Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973 (NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973)), any land-disturbing activity that uncovers more than one acre on a tract requires an approved Erosion & Sedimentation Control (E&SC) plan. Disturb an acre or less, and a state plan generally isn’t required — though silt fence and sediment control remain best practice, and a delegated county or town ordinance can still apply.
The key detail people miss: the acre is measured by disturbed area, not lot size. You can own a five-acre Henderson County tract and disturb only a half-acre footprint for a house pad and short driveway — that stays under the line. With the county’s median parcel at 0.79 acres and just 41% of parcels reaching a full acre, the math works out so that most single-home builds here fall below the state trigger.
When Henderson County jobs do cross the line
The jobs that trip the one-acre rule in Henderson County are the bigger ones: multi-lot clearings, long ridge driveways, larger acreage tracts, and commercial sites. About 11.7% of county parcels are five acres or more, and those are where a full-tract clear-and-grade most often exceeds an acre of disturbance. When you’re over the line, the plan has to be filed 30 or more days prior to initiating the activity, at $119 per acre (2025-07-01).
Who actually reviews the plan
For most of Henderson County, the E&SC plan goes to the NC DEQ Division of Energy, Mineral & Land Resources (DEMLR), whose Asheville Regional Office covers all of WNC. But some municipalities and counties run a locally delegated program with their own intake, so whether your address is inside a town limit or in the unincorporated county can change who reviews it. We sort jurisdiction first — state DEMLR versus a local Henderson program — before a plan is drawn. The statewide sediment hotline is 1-866-STOPMUD.
Slope changes the plan, not the trigger
The one-acre threshold is identical on a flat valley lot and a 40% ridge. What slope changes is how aggressive the erosion-control plan has to be. Henderson’s dominant ridge soil, Ashe, sits at a typical 40.2% grade and is somewhat excessively drained — runoff moves fast, so a reviewer expects more silt fence, diversion ditches, and check measures than a near-flat Dillard bottomland lot at 3.7% would need. See the full Hendersonville soil-and-slope breakdown for how that plays out lot by lot.
The state plan kicks in past 1 acre of disturbance — a line most single Henderson County lots stay under.
Henderson County grading-permit rules at a glance.
The verified NC land-disturbance thresholds as they apply in Henderson County — sourced from NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973) and NC DEMLR, not from us. Local fees for a delegated program may differ; we confirm jurisdiction by address.
| Situation | What applies | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| Under 1 acre disturbed | No state E&SC plan required | A state Erosion & Sedimentation Control plan generally is not required, but silt fence and sediment control are still best practice — and a delegated county or municipal grading ordinance may still apply. |
| More than 1 acre disturbed | Approved E&SC plan required | Any land-disturbing activity that uncovers more than one acre on a tract requires an approved Erosion & Sedimentation Control plan under NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973). |
| Before you dig | File 30+ days ahead | The E&SC plan must be filed 30 or more days prior to initiating the land-disturbing activity. Express review can shorten this where offered. |
| Plan fee | $119 per acre | The NC E&SC application fee for a new or revised plan is $119 per disturbed acre as of 2025-07-01. |
Across Henderson County, lots run from valley bottoms near 0% slope to ridge series past 95% — slope changes the plan’s erosion controls, never the one-acre trigger itself.
Permits, folded into the grading job.
We don’t leave the permit question on you. Here’s how the three Henderson County situations actually play out — exact scope and pricing come from a free on-site estimate.
A typical house pad and driveway on Henderson’s 0.79-acre median lot usually disturbs well under an acre. We still install sediment control as best practice and check for any local Henderson ordinance.
Multi-lot clearings, long ridge driveways, and larger tracts cross the line. The plan is filed 30+ days ahead at $119 per disturbed acre; we coordinate the submission and the controls.
A new driveway tying into a state-maintained road needs an NCDOT encroachment permit, on top of any E&SC plan. We handle the encroachment coordination with the driveway grade.
Permit handling is part of the written estimate — call (828) 510-7217 or use the form above. Building a specific lot? Start with grading in Hendersonville or our grading & excavation service.
Henderson County grading permits — common questions
Do I need a grading permit in Henderson County, NC?
What is the one-acre rule, and does my Hendersonville-area lot trip it?
Who issues the grading / land-disturbance permit for Henderson County?
How much is the grading permit fee in Henderson County?
Does grading a steep ridge lot near Laurel Park change the permit picture?
Do I need a separate permit for a new driveway in Henderson County?
What happens if I grade more than an acre without an approved plan?
Where can I read the Henderson County and NC rules myself?
Grading a Henderson County lot? We'll sort the permit.
Tell us where the lot is and what you're building — we'll measure the disturbance against the one-acre line, confirm jurisdiction, and quote it free.