Largest national providers of private and voluntary social care (March 2023)
Updated 9 October 2024
Applies to England
Main findings
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The percentage of homes and places owned by the 10 largest private owners of childrenās homes remained at 30%.
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The 22 largest companies owned 977 homes, which is 40% of all private childrenās homes and 31% of all childrenās homes.
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Just 1 in 7 private childrenās homes (358, 15%) was a single provider that is not in the ownership chain of a larger company.
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Among privately owned independent fostering agencies (IFAs), 3 in 5 were single providers (172, 64%). The remaining 98 agencies were within the ownership chain of a company that owns 2 or more IFAs.
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Among the 98 privately owned IFAs that were within a company ownership chain, the majority (76) were owned by 7 large providers, owning 20,465 places.
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There are 4 companies that appear on the list of largest providers for childrenās homes and IFAs. These companies are: CareTech Holdings PLC, the Outcomes First Group (SSCP Spring Topco Ltd), Nutrius UK Topco Ltd (Polaris) and Compass Community Ltd.
Introduction
This release provides information about the ownership of childrenās homes andĀ IFAsĀ in England, as at 31 March 2023. Childrenās homes andĀ IFAs run by the private and voluntary sector are the most common types of childrenās social care settings in England.
According to the , there were 82,000 children looked after in England, as at 31 March 2022. Of these, nearly 37,000 were in private or voluntary sector placements.
This release also describes the picture of private and voluntary ownership across childrenās homes andĀ IFAs, as at 31 March 2023. This includes information about the largest providers, which are the companies that own the largest number of childrenās homes or provide the largest number of fostering places through theĀ IFAsĀ they own.
These large providers looked after around 26,000 children in private and voluntary childrenās homes and IFAs ā just under one third of all children in care in England.
We extracted the ownership data for this release from theĀ āget information about a companyāĀ tool on Companies House. The information on Companies House is provided by companies themselves, and neither Companies House nor Ofsted verify its accuracy. The company names used throughout this release are presented as at source.
There are some companies that also own other types of childrenās social provision, such as: further education college with residential accommodation and residential special schools. However, we do not look at these in this analysis.
All childrenās homes
As at 31 March 2023, there were 3,119 childrenās homes of all types actively operating in England, offering 13,528 places for children.
This paper focuses on private ownership of childrenās homes, as at 31 March 2023. Secure childrenās homes, residential special schools registered as childrenās homes and short-break-only childrenās homes have been excluded from this analysis.
Childrenās homes
Childrenās homes (2,880) were the largest groups of homes (92% of all types of homes). These offered the largest number of residential places (10,818 places, 80% of all places).
More than 4 in 5 of these homes were owned by private companies (2,450 homes, 85%), which accounts for 8,791 places (81%). Of the remaining childrenās homes, 333 (12%) were owned by the local authority (1,529 places, 14%), and 97 (3%) were owned by voluntary organisations (498 places, 5%).
There was a rise in the number of private sector homes, from 2,205 in 2022 to 2,450 homes in 2023. This 11% increase is in line with the 9% increase of all childrenās homes. As a result, the proportion of homes owned by the private sector stayed fairly static from 2022 to 2023. The voluntary sector remained at 97 homes and the local authority sector went from 340 homes in 2022 to 333 homes in 2023 (a decrease of 2%).
Figure 1: Comparison of the sector breakdown of childrenās homes, as at 31 March 2023 and 31 March 2022
View data in an accessible format.
Ownership of private childrenās homes
There is a wide range of ownership among childrenās homes. Some homes are single providers (existing as a single entity, not owned by a larger company). Others are nested within a larger companyās ownership chain. Some of these companies own only a few homes, but some own a considerably larger number.
As at 31 March 2023, a total of 334 private companies owned multiple homes. The majority of these (270 companies, 81%) owned between 2 and 5 homes each. The company with the most homes, CareTech Holdings PLC, owned 207. Because there is such variation in the number of homes that companies own, we have analysed the largest providers separately. We looked at how homes owned by these companies differ from all childrenās homes nationally.
We have data, extracted from Companies House, on the ownership of 2,439 of the 2,450 private childrenās homes. The remainder are owned by individuals, not companies, and have been excluded from the following analysis.
Of these 2,439 privately owned childrenās homes, as at 31 March 2023:
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358 (15%) were single providers
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2,081 (85%) were owned as part of another top company with at least 2 homes
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1,042 (50%) of the 2,081 homes were owned by companies that each owned 10 or more separate childrenās homes; of these 1,042 homes, 977 (94%) were owned by just the 22 top companies
Overall, the top 10 companies accounted for 30% of all private childrenās homes, in line with previous years. CareTech Holdings PLC ā the largest ā alone accounted for 8% of all private childrenās homes.
Table 1: The 10 largest providers of private childrenās homes, as at 31 March 2023, compared with 31 March 2022
Position | Position change | Top company | Number of childrenās homes | Net change in number of homes | Places | Net change in places |
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1 | Position unchanged | CareTech Holdings PLC | 207 | +2 | 681 | +3 |
2 | Increase from last yearās position | Keys Group Ltd(G Square Healthcare Private Equity LLP) | 114 | +9 | 431 | +59 |
3 | Decrease from last yearās position | Aspris Holdco Ltd | 98 | -10 | 344 | -50 |
4 | Position unchanged | The Outcomes First Group (SSCP Spring Topco Ltd) | 61 | +1 | 273 | +1 |
5 | Increase from last yearās position | Hexagon Care Services Ltd (Hcs Group Ltd) | 51 | +3 | 188 | +7 |
6 | Increase from last yearās position | Esland Group Holdings Ltd | 47 | +4 | 120 | +2 |
7 | Decrease from last yearās position | Range Topco Ltd | 44 | -6 | 146 | -29 |
8 | Increase from last yearās position | Compass Community Ltd | 38 | +10 | 201 | +59 |
9 | Position unchanged | Homes2Inspire Ltd (The Shaw Trust Ltd) | 38 | +6 | 135 | -67 |
10 | Position unchanged | Wordsworth Midco 1 Ltd (Witherslack) | 37 | +5 | 236 | +119 |
The largest providers have generally continued to grow in terms of the number of homes owned and places provided. The greatest increase within the largest providers has been for Compass Community Ltd, with an increase of 10 homes (36% increase). Due to this increase, they moved to join the top 10 largest provider list in 8th position, while in 2022 they were in 11th.
The next companies, ranked 11 to 22 in terms of the number of childrenās homes they own, are detailed in table 2.
Table 2: Next 11 largest providers of private childrenās homes, as at 31 March 2023, compared with 31 March 2022
Position | Position change | Top company | Number of childrenās homes | Net change in number of homes | Places | Net change in places |
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11 | Decrease from last yearās position | The Partnership Of Care Today (Care Today Childrenās Services) | 35 | +2 | 125 | +4 |
12 | Increase from last yearās position | Nutrius UK Topco Ltd (Polaris) | 32 | +7 | 136 | +36 |
13 | Decrease from last yearās position | Ardenton Capital Ltd | 26 | -1 | 74 | -2 |
14 | Increase from last yearās position | Reflexion Care Group Ltd | 20 | +1 | 65 | +14 |
15 | Decrease from last yearās position | Meadows Care Holdco Ltd | 20 | 0 | 64 | 0 |
16 | Position unchanged | Time-out Childrenās Homes Ltd | 18 | 0 | 33 | 0 |
17 | Increase from last yearās position | Blue Mountain Homes Ltd | 17 | +2 | 55 | +4 |
18 | Decrease from last yearās position | Phoenix Learning & Care Holdings Ltd (Ashridge Capital) | 17 | 0 | 42 | 0 |
19 | Decrease from last yearās position | Your Chapter Holdings Ltd (Care 4 Children Holdco Ltd) | 15 | -1 | 62 | -3 |
20 | Position unchanged | Ethelbert Specialist Homes Ltd | 14 | 0 | 57 | 0 |
21 | Position unchanged | Foundation Investment Partners Management LLP | 14 | 0 | 44 | 0 |
22 | New to the list of largest providers | First Blue Group Ltd | 14 | Not previously in data as top company | 37 | Not previously in data as top company |
As at 31 March 2023, the number of largest providers has increased to 22 from 21 in 2022, as First Blue Group Ltd is a new addition this year. The 11th to 22nd largest companies owned 242 homes, which was only 35 more than CareTech Holdings PLC owned alone. Overall, the 22 largest providers owned 977 homes (40% of all private childrenās homes) this year. This was a 5% increase in 2023 compared with 929 homes owned by the top 21 largest providers in 2022.
Inspection outcomes for privately owned childrenās homes
As at 31 March 2023, the inspection profile for the 2,232 private childrenās homes with judgements was as follows:
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218 (10%) were graded outstanding
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1,555 (70%) were graded good
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413 (19%) were graded requires improvement to be good
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46 (2%) were graded inadequate
There were 207 homes that have not been inspected. A full discussion of childrenās homes inspection outcomes is available in our Childrenās Social Care in England 2023 national statistics.
This release includes inspection activity up to 31 March 2023 only. Settings that have been inspected since then may have grades that have improved or declined.
Figure 2: Grade profile of childrenās homes with inspection outcomes, as at 31 March 2023, split by sector
View data in an accessible format.
Ownership of voluntary childrenās homes
As at 31 March 2023, there were 97 voluntary owned childrenās homes (homes owned by charities or not-for-profit organisations). The breakdown of these was very similar to 2022:
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20 (21%) were single providers
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77 (79%) were owned as part of another top company with at least 2 homes
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56 (58%) were owned by companies with 5 or more separate childrenās homes
Compared with the private sector, there were fewer large companies in terms of number of homes. Only one top company, The Together Trust, had more than 10 homes under its ownership.
Table 3: The 5 largest providers of voluntary childrenās homes, as at 31 March 2023
Position | Top company | Number of childrenās homes | Places |
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1 | The Together Trust | 11 | 47 |
2 | Break | 8 | 32 |
3 | The Caldecott Foundation Ltd | 7 | 42 |
4 | St Christopherās Fellowship | 7 | 41 |
5 | Birtenshaw | 6 | 21 |
Inspection outcomes
The latest full graded inspection outcomes for the 95 voluntary childrenās homes with judgements were as follows:
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9 (9%) were graded outstanding
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69 (73%) were graded good
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17 (18%) were graded requires improvement to be good
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0 (0%) were graded inadequate
This release includes inspection activity up to 31 March 2023 only. Settings that have been inspected since then may have grades that have improved or declined.
Independent fostering agencies
. This can be provided by either local authority fostering agencies orĀ IFAs. According to our mostĀ recent statistics, just under half of fostered children (around 20,175) are fostered throughĀ IFAs.
As at 31 March 2023, there were 319Ā IFAsĀ operating in England (excluding the 9 IFAs owned by trusts that operate on behalf of local authorities). This was a net increase of 3Ā IFAsĀ (1%) from last year, when there were 316Ā IFAs. There were 14 joiners and 11 leavers this year. The 319Ā IFAsĀ offered a total of 38,785 fostering places for children, as at 31 March 2023.
Data on the number of places provided by eachĀ IFAĀ comes fromĀ Ofstedās annual fostering data collection. As the 2023 collection is ongoing, data included here reflects the 2022 returns. This means we do not know the number of places offered by the 14 agencies that registered during 2022 to 2023.
Private or voluntary organisations can ownĀ IFAs, but the majority are privately owned (272 IFAs, 85%). As at 31 March 2023, the 272 privateĀ IFAsĀ offered a total of 34,955 fostering places (90% of allĀ IFAĀ places). Voluntary organisations accounted for the remaining 47Ā IFAsĀ (15%) and offered 3,835 places (10% of allĀ IFAĀ places).
Figure 3: Proportion ofĀ IFAsĀ andĀ IFAĀ places provided by the private and voluntary sector
View data in an accessible format.
The private sector has grown since 2022, with a net increase of 4 privateĀ IFAs. This is because of 14 registrations opening and 10 closing.
The new private IFAs accounted for all the IFAs registered in 2022ā23; there were no new registrations within the voluntary sector. The number of voluntary sector IFAs fell by 1 this year, as 1 IFA closed. The private sector percentage of IFAs has remained at 85%.
Ownership of privateĀ IFAs
Although manyĀ IFAsĀ are single providers not owned by a larger company, a number are nested within a larger companyās ownership chain. Some of these companies own only a fewĀ IFAs, but some own a considerably larger number.
As at 31 March 2023, there were a total of 14 private companies that owned at least 2Ā IFAs. Because there is such variation in the number ofĀ IFAsĀ that companies owned, and the number of fostering places they provided, we have analysed the largest providers separately.
As a result, throughout the following section of the release, we have describedĀ IFAsĀ as having 3 different types of ownership:
- single provider: thoseĀ IFAsĀ that exist as a single entity and are not owned by a larger company
- small provider: thoseĀ IFAsĀ that are within the ownership chain of a small company. For this release, we defined a small company as one that owns multipleĀ IFAs but offers fewer than 1,000 fostering places through all of theĀ IFAsĀ it owns
- large provider: thoseĀ IFAsĀ that are within the ownership chain of a large company. For this release, we defined a large company as one that owns multipleĀ IFAs and offers more than 1,000 fostering places through all of theĀ IFAsĀ it owns. This is consistent with the definition used inĀ previous releases on this topic
When determining the size of companies, we chose to use the number ofĀ IFAĀ places offered by each company, rather than the number ofĀ IFAsĀ that it owns. This best captures the reach of a company, in terms of how many children it could offer care to. We calculated the total number of places a company offers as the sum of all places offered by allĀ IFAsĀ within its ownership chain. For example, if a company has 4Ā IFAsĀ in its ownership chain, and each of these offered 25 places, the total places offered by the company is 100.
We have extracted data from Companies House on the ownership of all of the 272 privately ownedĀ IFAs. There were 2 agencies owned by individuals. These 2 agencies and the places they provided have been excluded from this dataset. Of the 270Ā IFAs, 172 (64%) were single providers, 22 (8%) were owned by 7 small providers and 76 (28%) were owned by 7 larger providers.
Most of the private IFAs were single providers. They accounted for only around a third (32%) of the 34,785 places provided by all privateĀ IFAs. The majority of private fostering places (59%) were provided by the 76Ā IFAsĀ owned by large providers. The average of places for larger providers for 2023 was 270, lower than 280 in 2022. For small providers, the average number of places, 140, has increased from 125 in 2022. Single providers places have remained the same (65).
Figure 4: Number of privateĀ IFAsĀ and privateĀ IFAĀ places, as at 31 March 2023, by ownership type
Number ofĀ IFAsĀ excludes 2 agencies for whom there was no data available on Companies House.
View data in an accessible format.
In the private sector, small providers accounted for the smallest number ofĀ IFAsĀ (22, 8%) and places (3,070, 9%). The total combined number of places offered by all small providers was smaller than that of each of the 3 largest providers.
The largest private providers ofĀ IFAĀ places
There were 7 private companies that offered over 1,000 fostering places and are therefore included in our list of largest providers. These 7 providers accounted for 59% of all privateĀ IFAĀ places in England as at 31 March 2023 (20,465 out of 34,785 places).
Table 4: The largest providers of privateĀ IFAĀ places, as at 31 March 2023, compared with 31 March 2022
Position | Position change | Top company | Number of IFA places, 2023 | Change in number of IFA places since 2022 |
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1 | Position unchanged | The Outcomes First Group (SSCP Spring Topco Ltd) | 6,285 | -205 |
2 | Position unchanged | Nutrius UK Topco Ltd (Polaris) | 5,045 | -555 |
3 | Position unchanged | Compass Community Ltd | 3,485 | +970 |
4 | Position unchanged | Alderbury Holdings Ltd (Lindale Holdings Ltd) | 2,075 | +75 |
5 | Position unchanged | Capstone EOT Trustee Ltd | 1,290 | -160 |
6 | Increase from last yearās position | Five Rivers Ireland Ltd | 1,270 | +55 |
7 | Decrease from last yearās position | CareTech Holdings PLC | 1,015 | -260 |
Of the 7 large providers, 4 offered a smaller number of places in 2023 than in 2022, mostly due to agencies closing.
Small private providers ofĀ IFAĀ places
In addition to the 7 large providers, there were 7 smaller private companies that owned 2 or moreĀ IFAsĀ each. These small providers accounted for 22Ā IFAsĀ (8% of all privately ownedĀ IFAs) and 3,070 places (9% of all privateĀ IFAĀ places). The number ofĀ IFAsĀ owned by these companies ranged from 2 to 6, and the total number of places provided through theirĀ IFAsĀ ranged from 130 to 835.
Table 5: Small providers of privateĀ IFAĀ places as at 31 March 2023, compared with 31 March 2022
Position | Position change | Top company | Number of IFA places, 2023 | Change in number of IFA places since 2022 |
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8 | Position unchanged | Swiis International Ltd | 835 | -55 |
9 | Position unchanged | Sunbeam Fostering Agency Ltd | 825 | +75 |
10 | Position unchanged | Fusion Fostering Ltd | 535 | +45 |
11 | Increase from last yearās position | Positive Aspirations Ltd | 295 | +5 |
12 | New to the list of small providers | Mainspring Fund Services Ltd | 285 | Not previously in data |
13 | Increase from last yearās position | Young People At Heart Ltd | 160 | +10 |
14 | Increase from last yearās position | Futures For Children Ltd | 130 | -105 |
Inspection profile of the largest private providers ofĀ IFAsĀ as at 31 March 2023
We are required byĀ regulations to inspectĀ IFAsĀ at least once within a 3-year inspection window. Agencies judged inadequate or requiring improvement to be good are usually re-inspected within a shorter timeframe.
Private IFAs are similar in good and outstanding judgements (96%) to voluntary IFAs (91%). The largest private providers of IFAs contribute 29% of good and outstanding judgements. The majority of IFAsĀ owned by large providers (97%) that had received an inspection grade as at 31 March 2023 were good or outstanding. The same was true forĀ IFAsĀ owned by private small providers, all of which were good or outstanding.
This release includes inspection activity up to 31 March 2023 only. Settings that have been inspected since then may have grades that have improved or declined.
Ownership of voluntaryĀ IFAs
There were 47 voluntary IFAs, which had 3,835 places between them.
Of the 47 voluntaryĀ IFAsĀ that were active as at 31 March 2023, 21 (45%) were single providers. The remaining 26 (55%) were within the ownership chains of 6 companies. This is a different pattern of ownership to that seen in the private sector, where around 64% ofĀ IFAsĀ were private single providers.
All 6 of the voluntary companies that owned multipleĀ IFAsĀ offered fewer than 1,000 fostering places in total, so are considered small providers. All but one of them had fewer than 400 places. The 26 voluntaryĀ IFAsĀ that were owned by small providers accounted for more than half of all fostering places provided by voluntary IFAs (2,265, 59%).
Figure 5: Proportion ofĀ IFAsĀ andĀ IFAĀ places provided by voluntary and privateĀ IFAs, by ownership type
Number ofĀ private IFAsĀ excludes 2 agencies for whom there was no data available on Companies House.
View data in an accessible format.
The number ofĀ IFAsĀ owned by each voluntary small provider ranged from 2 to 7. The total number of places provided by these providers ranged from 105 to 800. The biggest voluntary company, The Adolescent and Childrenās Trust, ownedĀ 7 IFAs and provided the most places with 800 places (35% of all voluntary places).
Table 6: Small providers of voluntaryĀ IFAĀ places as at 31 March 2023, compared with 31 March 2022
Position | Position change | Top company | Number of voluntary places, 2023 | Change in number of voluntary places since 2022 |
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1 | Position unchanged | The Adolescent and Childrenās Trust | 800 | -115 |
2 | Position unchanged | µž²¹°ł²Ō²¹°ł»å“Ēās | 375 | -110 |
3 | Position unchanged | Team Fostering | 375 | -5 |
4 | Position unchanged | The Childrenās Family Trust | 370 | +15 |
5 | Position unchanged | Action For Children | 240 | -35 |
6 | Position unchanged | St Christopherās Fellowship | 105 | -25 |
Inspection profile of voluntaryĀ IFAs owned by small providers and single providers, as at 31 March 2023
IFAs owned by voluntary small providers that are outstanding and good (24 out of 26) have decreased from 100% in 2022 to 92% in 2023. The remaining 2 are requires improvement to be good, which is an increase of 8 percentage points in 2023 compared with 0% in 2022.
Companies among the largest providers of childrenās homes andĀ IFAĀ places
There are 4 companies that appeared on both lists of largest providers for childrenās homes andĀ IFAs. These were: CareTech Holdings PLC; Outcomes First Group (SSCP Spring Topco Ltd); Compass Community Ltd; and Nutrius UK Topco Ltd (Polaris).
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CareTech was the largest provider of childrenās homes (207 homes, offering 681 places), and the 7th largest provider ofĀ IFAĀ places (3Ā IFAs, offering 1,015 places).
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The Outcomes First Group (SSCP Spring Topco Ltd) was the 4th largest provider of childrenās homes (61 homes, offering 273 places), and the largest provider ofĀ IFAĀ places (24Ā IFAs, offering 6,285 places).
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Compass Community Ltd was the 8th largest provider of childrenās homes (38 homes, offering 201 places), and the third largest provider ofĀ IFAĀ places (7Ā IFAs, offering 3,485 places).
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Nutrius UK Topco Ltd (Polaris) was the 12th largest provider of childrenās homes (32 homes, offering 136 places), and the second largest provider ofĀ IFAĀ places (24Ā IFAs, offering 5,045 places).
These 4 companies accounted for: 14% of private childrenās homes; 15% of private childrenās home places; 21% of privateĀ IFAs; and 45% of privateĀ IFAĀ places.
Contacts
If you are a member of the public and have any comments or feedback on this publication, contact Emma Martin (emma.martin@ofsted.gov.uk)Ā or the social care and area SEND analysis team (socialcaredata@ofsted.gov.uk).
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Noopur Naik.
Annex: data tables for figures
This section contains the underlying data in an accessible table format for all figures.
Data for Figure 1: Comparison of the sector breakdown of childrenās homes as at 31 March 2023 and 31 March 2022
As at date | Total number | Private | Voluntary | Local authority |
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As at 31 March 2023 | 2,880 | 2,450 | 97 | 333 |
As at 31 March 2022 | 2,642 | 2,205 | 97 | 340 |
See Figure 1
Data for Figure 2: Grade profile of childrenās homes with inspection outcomes as at 31 March 2023, split by sector
Sector | Total number | Outstanding | Good | Requires improvement to be good | Inadequate |
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Private | 2,232 | 218 | 1,555 | 413 | 46 |
Voluntary | 95 | 9 | 69 | 17 | na |
See Figure 2
Data for Figure 3: Proportion ofĀ IFAsĀ andĀ IFAĀ places provided by the private and voluntary sector
Data item | Total number | Private sector | Voluntary sector |
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Percentage of providers | 319 | 85% | 15% |
Percentage of places | 38,785 | 90% | 10% |
See Figure 3
Data for Figure 4: Number of privateĀ IFAsĀ and privateĀ IFAĀ places as at 31 March 2023, by ownership type
Data item | Total number | Single provider | Small provider | Large provider |
---|---|---|---|---|
Number of IFAs | 270 | 172 | 22 | 76 |
Number of places | 34,785 | 11,250 | 3,070 | 20,465 |
See Figure 4
Data for Figure 5: Proportion ofĀ IFAsĀ andĀ IFAĀ places provided by voluntary and privateĀ IFAs, by ownership type
Data item | Total number | Single provider | Small provider | Large provider |
---|---|---|---|---|
Private IFAs | 270 | 64% | 8% | 28% |
Private IFA places | 34,785 | 32% | 9% | 59% |
Voluntary IFAs | 47 | 45% | 55% | na |
Voluntary IFA places | 3,835 | 41% | 59% | na |
See Figure 5