New data reveals £38,000 difference in payments to fostering families across the UK

Media release

New data has revealed a major postcode lottery for fostering families, with some foster carers receiving £38,000 a year more than others, according to the UK’s leading fostering charity.

A new report ‘Out of Pocket: Fairer Fees for Foster Carers’, published today by The Fostering Network, reveals too many fostering services are providing inadequate fee payments to their foster carers. Some foster carers are receiving £732 more per week than others, a difference of £38,000 per year.

Almost half of fostering services are providing between £100-200 per week, which for most fostering families is an annual income of £5,200 - £10,400 per year.  

The Fostering Network is now calling for each government in the UK to carry out comprehensive reviews of foster carer fees to investigate and address the discrepancies across the UK.  

Sarah Thomas, Chief Executive Officer at The Fostering Network, said: “It is unacceptable that there are such huge differences in fees paid to foster carers across the country, with some receiving no fee and many as little as £18 a week.

“Adequate fees are essential to ensure foster carers can continue looking after the children and young people in their care. If they are not sufficiently remunerated, we will continue to lose foster carers and struggle to recruit new ones.

“Foster carers are needed now more than ever – so we urgently need governments to invest in and develop a strong fee framework to send out the message to foster carers that they are recognised, respected and valued for the care they provide to children and young people.”

Foster carers are currently remunerated in different ways. All foster carers receive a weekly fostering allowance, which is intended to cover all costs related to child directly, such as clothes, food, and hobbies. Fees should be paid in addition to the child’s allowance to recognise a foster carer’s time and commitment to the role.

Many foster carers give up work to foster - around 60 per cent of foster carers do not work in England, Scotland and Wales, while 45 per cent don’t work in Northern Ireland, so fees are their only income.

While supporting children is more important to foster carers then the financial reward they receive, the current state of foster carer fees is not fit for purpose. Many foster carers are not being given enough money to support the cost of living while supporting a child in foster care.

There is currently no national guidance for foster carer fees in any nation of the UK, however national minimum allowances (NMA) are set by each government for allowances. Our State of the Nations’ Foster Care survey 2024 found that most foster carers and fostering services want a national fees framework, similar to the NMA.

Ends.

Notes to editors 

For more information and interview requests, please email media@fostering.net or call 020 7620 6450

The report is based on FOIs responses from 80% of local authorities and trusts across the UK for the period April 23 to March 2024

The findings refer to mainstream and kinship foster carers fostering with local authorities in all nations, health and social care trusts in Northern Ireland, and children’s trusts in England.

Mainstream foster carer refers to those fostering with both local authorities and independent fostering agencies. It excludes households where the primary form of care is family and friends/kinship foster care. For this report, ‘mainstream foster carers’ only refers to those fostering with local authorities.

Differences in fees across the nations

The below data shows the disparity within fee payments to foster carers.

 

UK 

England 

Northern Ireland 

Scotland 

Wales 

Max difference between weekly foster carer fees 

£731.60 

£731.60 

 

£687.71 

£667.24 

£273 

Max difference between annual foster carer fees 

£38,043 

£38,043 

£35,761 

£34,696 

£14,196 

About The Fostering Network 

The Fostering Network is the UK’s leading fostering charity, bringing together everyone who is involved in the lives of children who are fostered to make foster care the very best it can be. With 60,000 foster carers and 450 fostering service members, we represent three-quarters of foster carers in the UK and connect everyone involved in fostering.