Vegetated Filter Strip¶
Source: NJ Stormwater BMP Manual, Chapter 9, Section 9.5 (2026)
Vegetated filter strips are uniformly graded, densely vegetated land areas that receive stormwater runoff as sheet flow from adjacent impervious or disturbed surfaces. As runoff flows across the vegetated strip in a shallow, distributed sheet, flow velocity is reduced, coarse sediment particles settle, and filtering through the dense grass or meadow sward removes suspended solids. They represent one of the simplest and lowest-cost stormwater quality pretreatment measures available.
Filter strips do not provide significant volume reduction or groundwater recharge — they are not a primary volumetric BMP. Their primary regulatory function in NJ is water quality pretreatment: removing coarse sediment and debris from runoff before it reaches a downstream engineered BMP, extending the O&M interval of inlet zones and media in bioretention, sand filters, and wetland systems.
GI Classification (2026): Vegetated filter strips have a limited GI classification. When runoff is entirely sheet-flow and native soil infiltration under the strip is confirmed per Chapter 12, partial VRC credit may be calculated. In most applications they are treated as Non-GI pretreatment and the downstream BMP provides the primary volumetric compliance.
Primary stormwater functions:
- Water quality pretreatment — 50–70% TSS removal from sheet-flow runoff at design width
- Sediment filtering — reduces coarse loading on downstream engineered BMPs
- Partial infiltration — limited groundwater recharge from sheet-flow moving slowly over permeable soil surface
When engineers choose this BMP:
Vegetated filter strips are selected as the first element of a treatment train before bioretention, subsurface gravel wetlands, or stormwater wetlands; for roadway shoulder runoff treatment adjacent to grass shoulders; or as a simple water quality measure for low-intensity sites where a full engineered BMP is not practical.
Source: NJ Stormwater BMP Manual, Ch. 9, Section 9.5 (2026)
| Parameter | 2026 Requirement | 2023 Requirement | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum strip width | 25 feet for 75% TSS removal goal | 25 feet | Must maintain sheet-flow across full width |
| Level spreader | Required at inlet where concentrated flow transitions to sheet flow | Same | Critical — concentrated flow creates channels; filter strip fails |
| Maximum longitudinal slope | ≤ 5% measured in flow direction | ≤ 5% | Steeper slopes produce erosive velocities |
| Maximum cross-slope | ≤ 5% across the strip width | Same | Cross-slope causes concentrated flow channels to form |
| Vegetation density | Dense, uniform grass or native grass/meadow; no bare areas | Same | Bare areas create preferential flow channels |
| Drainage area ratio | Strip width-to-drainage area ratio per 2026 Table 9.5-1 | Table reference | Sizing table links strip width to drainage area |
| Contributing flow | Sheet flow only; no concentrated inlet inflow | Same | Concentrated flow bypasses treatment |
| Level spreader design | Stone trench or perforated pipe level spreader per Ch. 9.5 detail | Same | Must achieve uniform flow distribution across full strip width |
Source: NJ Stormwater BMP Manual, Ch. 9, Section 9.5; Ch. 14 (2026)
Slope and Grade
- Not suitable on slopes > 5% without engineering design adjustments; high-velocity sheet flow at steeper slopes exceeds vegetation erosion resistance and concentrates
- Cross-slope ≤ 5% required; topographic depressions within the strip width concentrate horizontal flow creating channels and bypassing the vegetated filter treatment
Level Spreader Availability
- Only functions correctly when a level spreader converts concentrated flow to sheet flow before reaching the strip; sites without space for a properly functioning level spreader upstream of the strip cannot use this BMP effectively
Soil Permeability for VRC Credit
- Limited VRC credit requires Chapter 12 investigation if claimed in SWM Report
- Most practical applications treat the filter strip as Non-GI pretreatment only
- See Soil Permeability Testing
Source: NJ Stormwater BMP Manual, Ch. 9, Section 9.5 (2026)
Routine Mowing — Growing Season
- Mow entire strip to maintain grass at 3–6-inch height; do not mow below 3 inches
- For native meadow species filter strips: one annual cut in late winter; no summer mowing
- Remove clippings to prevent organic mat accumulation that creates concentrated-flow channels
Level Spreader and Inlet Maintenance
- Inspect level spreader stone trench or perforated pipe after each significant storm event; confirm flow is distributed uniformly across full strip width
- Remove sediment, leaves, and debris accumulated at the level spreader apron
- If channels or rills have formed across the strip, restore to uniform grade and re-seed affected areas before the next storm season
Sediment Monitoring
- Inspect strip for visible sediment deposition (sand/silt layer on grass blades or soil surface); heavy deposition > 0.25-inch deep reduces infiltration and vegetation function
- If deposition is heavy, scrape, remove, and re-grade affected areas; re-seed if needed
Source: NJ Stormwater BMP Manual, Ch. 8; Ch. 9, Section 9.5 (2026)
Design Errors
- Concentrated flow enters strip — no level spreader provided; runoff channels immediately; flow bypasses virtually all vegetated area; TSS removal negligible; the most common failure
- Strip width below 25 ft — shorter strips have significantly lower TSS removal efficiency; performance does not meet regulatory credit claimed in SWM Report
- Slope exceeds 5% — high-velocity sheet flow erodes grass surface; no treatment time
Construction Issues
- Level spreader grade not level — flow concentrates at low end of spreader; only a fraction of strip width used for treatment; effective width far less than design width
- Vegetation not established before site goes into service — bare soil erodes in first storm season; rilling destroys strip effectiveness before it begins functioning
Long-Term Performance Risks
- Rill formation and channel incision — once a single concentrated-flow channel forms across the strip, subsequent storms deepen it; bare soil channel widens; filter strip function progressively concentrates rather than distributes flow
- Invasive species colonization — Phragmites, Japanese knotweed, or common reed invade wet depressions; monoculture reduces uniform resistance; flow preferentially bypasses
Source: NJ Stormwater BMP Manual, Ch. 9, Section 9.5 (2026)
Governing Regulations
| Rule Section | Topic | Engineering Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| N.J.A.C. 7:8-5.3(d) | Water Quality Treatment | TSS removal credit; 25-ft minimum for 75% TSS removal at sheet flow |
| N.J.A.C. 7:8-5.3 | Green Infrastructure Requirement | Limited GI credit when infiltration confirmed; typically Non-GI pretreatment |
BMP Manual Sources
- NJ Stormwater BMP Manual, Chapter 9, Section 9.5 (2026) — Vegetated Filter Strips
- NJ Stormwater BMP Manual, Chapter 8 (2026) — Operation and Maintenance
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