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By the HomeArenaUK.co.uk — The Complete Guide to Home Equestrian Arenas Team · Updated May 2026 · Independent, reader-supported

How to Build a Home Menage in the UK: The Complete Planning Guide

Building a home menage is one of the most rewarding long-term investments for horse owners in the UK. Unlike relying on livery yards or shared facilities, a private arena gives you flexibility, saves money over time, and creates the ideal training environment tailored to your horses' needs. But getting one right requires careful planning across multiple areas—from site assessment to drainage to daily maintenance.

This guide walks you through the essentials so you can make informed decisions before breaking ground.

Understanding What You're Building

A menage (or arena) is a purpose-built riding surface, typically 20m × 40m or larger, enclosed by fencing. The surface itself—sand, rubber, or a blend—sits on a foundation layer that manages water drainage. Many owners add shelter around the perimeter through post-and-rail fencing, windbreaks, or covered structures.

The reality: a quality home menage costs £4,000–£12,000+ installed, depending on size and site conditions. The largest expense isn't the surface material but getting the ground preparation and drainage right. Cut corners here and you'll spend years battling mud and waterlogging.

Step 1: Site Selection and Survey

Your location determines everything that follows. A poor site can make a menage unusable for months each winter.

Look for:

Visit the site at different times—ideally after heavy rain. Where does water gather? Where does ground stay soft longest? These patterns reveal your real challenges.

Step 2: Planning Permission and Permissions

Most home menages don't require planning permission if they're for private use and fall under permitted development limits. However, check with your local planning authority first:

Getting this wrong delays projects months. A 20-minute call to planning saves headaches.

Step 3: Drainage Design

Drainage separates successful menages from seasonal swamps. Without it, your arena becomes unusable after December rain.

Effective systems typically combine:

Clay soil requires more aggressive drainage—potentially multiple drain lines. Sandy soil might get away with less. This is where a proper survey earns its cost.

Step 4: Surface Material and Foundation

The surface layer—what your horse's hooves touch—is just 150–200mm of your total construction. Below it sits the real work: a compacted stone base, often 300–400mm thick, that supports the surface and aids drainage.

Common surface choices:

Your foundation material—crushed rock, scalping, or recycled asphalt—must be compacted properly. Skimping here leads to uneven settling and puddles. Professional compaction costs extra but prevents years of frustration.

Step 5: Fencing and Structure

Post-and-rail fencing is standard, typically 1.2m high. It looks professional, lasts 15–20 years with decent maintenance, and is safe for ridden work. Some owners add mesh or netting to reduce wind and contain loose materials.

For a covered structure (shelter or full roof), costs rise dramatically but all-weather use becomes possible. Weigh this against your budget and climate zone. Most UK owners manage with open arenas and good drainage instead.

Step 6: Lighting (Optional but Valuable)

If you ride year-round, winter daylight becomes limiting. Adding weatherproof lighting extends usable hours significantly—but requires planning (electricity supply) and comes at real cost (£2,000–5,000 installed, depending on size).

Getting Started

Before spending money, answer these questions:

A menage survey or consultation (£300–800) from an experienced contractor often pays for itself by avoiding costly mistakes.

Once you're confident on site and drainage, the rest follows logically. You'll find detailed guides on each stage—from surface selection to fencing specification to lighting design—in the linked resources below.

Building right means your menage works for decades, not just seasons.