Aylesbury Vale District Council granted Rectory (Aston Clinton) Ltd outline planning permission for housing development on land to the rear of 93 Aylesbury Road, Aston Clinton, Buckinghamshire. A condition attached to the planning consent (Condition 13) required the implementation of a programme of archaeological investigation as a consequence of the development. Archaeological field evaluation, completed in December 2016, had indicated that the north-eastern half of the development site retained archaeological potential. As a result, the Archaeology Officer of Buckinghamshire County Council issued an Archaeological Design Brief setting out a requirement for open-area archaeological excavation within this part of the development site. Given the nature of the recovered data sets, it was agreed with the Archaeology Officer that this report would present the results of all stages of the archaeological investigations, including any required analysis of the results. The earliest and most notable archaeological features revealed were boundary ditches and an enclosure dating to the late Bronze Age/early Iron Age. Their location and, albeit small, finds assemblage suggest that the related settlement focus is likely to have lain to the west and north-west of the site. Later features were largely associated with the site's agricultural use during the medieval and post-medieval periods, consisting of a series of furrows pre-dating the upstanding ridge and furrow earthworks within the site. A distinct area temporarily set aside for quarrying, probably during the late medieval/early post-medieval period, was also revealed.