Councils and leading children’s charities have issued a stark warning that England’s children’s social care system is teetering on the edge of collapse. The growing crisis, fuelled by soaring demand and rising costs, has prompted urgent calls for Government intervention and a commitment to long-term, sustainable funding in the upcoming spending review.
Organisations within the Children’s Charities Coalition – including Barnardo’s, Action for Children, The Children’s Society, NSPCC, and the National Children’s Bureau – said services are buckling under the strain, leaving vulnerable children exposed to harm. In a joint statement, the coalition said: “All children have the right to grow up in safe and happy homes. Yet we are seeing a children’s social care system at breaking point, crying out for investment to deliver timely and effective support.”
Recent Government figures paint a grim picture: over 621,000 referrals to children’s social care were made in the year to March 2024 – averaging 1,704 every single day. Nearly 400,000 children were deemed in need of support and protection, and 50,000 were placed on child protection plans due to the severity of risk. Abuse, neglect, domestic violence, and mental health challenges were cited as the leading causes.
The Local Government Association (LGA) reported that 224,520 investigations were launched to determine if children were suffering, or at risk of, significant harm. Over half were found to have abuse or neglect as their primary need. Arooj Shah, chair of the LGA’s children and young people board, said: “Support for young people is key to delivering the Government’s mission to break down barriers. This is a chance to ensure every child gets the help they need before reaching crisis point.”
Despite a notable 11% increase in children’s social care budgets for 2024/25 – now standing at £14.2 billion – the rise has been outpaced by escalating placement costs and the growing complexity of need. The majority of residential placements, now commanding record high fees, are provided by private providers, adding further pressure to public funds.
The Government has introduced the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill and a children’s social care prevention grant in an effort to improve the system. However, experts argue that these initiatives do not go far enough. The Children’s Charities Coalition cited a 42% reduction in council spending on early intervention services since 2010/11 – a drop of more than £2 billion – while spending on residential care has simultaneously surged.
Rachael Wardell, president of the Association of Directors of Children’s Services, said the system needs to be rooted in “actual levels of need,” warning that “safety and stability is not the reality for too many children in this country.”
She added: “Rather than responding once families are already in crisis, we must prioritise early help and prevention. But to do that, social care services must be backed with proper funding and capacity.”
A study led by University College London recently revealed that one in four children in England will come into contact with social care services before they reach adulthood, underscoring the need for a more comprehensive, long-term approach to policymaking.
The Department for Education responded by defending its record, stating: “This Government inherited a children’s social care system failing to meet the needs of the country’s most vulnerable children. Our landmark Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill will deliver the most significant overhaul in a generation.”
A spokesperson added: “We’re doubling council funding for early intervention and ensuring thousands more families have access to skilled workers who can support them with parenting, mental health, and addiction issues.”
But with frontline services stretched to the limit and local authorities trapped in a “downward financial spiral,” according to the coalition, many believe more ambitious action is needed to safeguard the wellbeing of future generations.