Allocating static synchronous compensators (STATCOMs) to regulate given allotted wind-based distributed generators (W-DGs) during planning stages can provide high investment returns by maximizing the installed W-DGs. Amidst rising global warming concerns, commitments to adopt renewable energy gain international momentum to curb greenhouse emissions and meet environmental targets, reducing reliance on fossil-based resources. Renewable energy's intermittency complicates distribution planning, stressing voltage devices and increasing network losses. This paper presents a new hierarchical stochastic planning model that addresses uncertainties related to W-DGs and generic loads. The model optimizes allocation with voltage constraints and reactive power while incorporating a two-stage mixed-integer nonlinear program (MINLP), maximizing net profit, and adding an economic dimension to promote renewable energy investments. Improved wind power modeling with historical data and collective evaluation metrics for selecting the best-fitted probability distribution function (PDF) enhances the accuracy of wind power integration assessment. The hierarchical approach considers relaxed voltage constraints in Stage I to allow maximum allotment of W-DGs while introducing STATCOMs and DGs' reactive power in Stage II to address voltage violations. Verification on the Canadian 41-bus network demonstrates the advantage of the hierarchical approach in allocating more W-DGs and achieving higher profits than the simultaneous planning approach. These advances significantly enhance renewable energy integration in power systems.