In total, 14 calcicolous grassland communities have been identified.
All but two of the calcicolous grassland communities fall into two broad groups:
seven communities which group loosely together under an umbrella of "chalk grassland" and which are found on calcareous soils in the comparatively dry climatic conditions of the lowlands of southern and eastern England (and also in northern and southern coastal areas of Wales).
five upland calcicole communities, distributed in areas of wetter climate through the uplands of Wales, northern England and Scotland.
The lowlands group comprises two subgroups:
three short-sward communities associated with heavy grazing: a widespread community (CG2) that is regarded as "typical" chalk grassland, though it also occurs widely on limestone, and its "south-west coastal" (CG1) and "eastern" (CG7) counterparts
four communities of rank, tussocky grassland associated with low levels of grazing (CG3, CG4, CG5 and CG6)
The upland group comprises the following subgroups:
a widespread short-sward community associated with heavy grazing, CG10
two localised communities characterised by the presence of Alpine Lady's-mantle (Alchemilla alpina), CG11 and CG12
two localised communities characterised by the presence of Mountain Avens (Dryas octopetala), CG13 and CG14
The remaining two communities (CG8 and CG9) are characterised by the presence of Blue Moor-grass (Sesleria caerulea), both of which are localised in northern England and do not fall neatly into either of the two groups described above.