The Department for Education and Children and Families Minister Josh MacAlister have published an Implementation Plan for Children’s Social Care, setting out national reforms following the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Act 2026.
The plan, published on 21 May 2026, sets out how reforms to child protection and children’s social care will be delivered across England. It follows the passage of legislation described by the department as the most ambitious child protection law in a generation.
The measures cover local authority family support, safeguarding teams, kinship care, foster care, care leaver support and children’s homes. The department said the reforms are backed by investment across family services, legislative commitments and capital funding.
Government launches children’s social care implementation plan
The Implementation Plan for Children’s Social Care sets out how the government intends to roll out reforms contained in the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Act 2026. The plan is titled Delivering the Children’s Social Care reset and applies to child protection and care services across England.
The Department for Education said the Act contains reforms intended to keep children safe and address problems in the care market. The plan moves those commitments into delivery, with measures covering local services, placements, public bodies and workforce regulation.
- Legislative basis: the plan follows the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Act 2026 and sets out implementation steps for reforms now in law.
- National scope: the measures apply across England through local authorities, public bodies and partner agencies.
- Delivery focus: the plan covers family support, safeguarding, care placements, care leavers and workforce measures.
Local Family Help services and safeguarding reforms
Every local authority will be required to deliver a single Family Help service. The department said these services will provide support and interventions intended to help families remain together where possible.
New multi-agency child protection teams will bring together social workers, police, health and education professionals. The government said the teams are intended to strengthen safeguarding for vulnerable children through closer coordination between agencies.
Expansion of kinship care and foster care capacity
The plan includes strengthened support for kinship carers, with every council required to publish a local kinship offer backed by national standards. The department said this is intended to support children being cared for by grandparents, aunts and uncles rather than entering care.
Foster care capacity will also be increased, alongside the expansion of Regional Care Cooperatives. The department said this will support placement planning and help more children in care access foster homes with appropriate support networks.
Children’s Care Reform Measures
| Indicator | Recent Movement | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Family Help services | Required in every local authority | The Department for Education said councils will deliver a single service to support families earlier. |
| Child protection teams | Multi-agency model introduced | The teams will bring together social workers, police, health and education professionals. |
| Kinship care | Local offers required | Councils will publish kinship offers backed by national standards. |
| Regional Care Cooperatives | Expansion planned | The department said cooperatives will support commissioning and placement planning. |
Support package for care leavers and children in care
Care leavers will receive strengthened support through a national Staying Close offer from 2029. The department said this will provide help with accommodation, employment and healthcare up to the age of 25.
The plan also introduces new corporate parenting responsibilities across public bodies. The government said this is intended to create a more coordinated support framework across public bodies and young people leaving the care system.
Funding commitments and national delivery framework
The reforms are backed by £2.4 billion for the Families First Partnership Programme, £245 million to deliver legislative commitments and improve the care market, and £560 million in capital funding to expand and refurbish children’s homes.
Alongside the plan, Foundations published an evidence-based implementation framework. The department said the framework is intended to support councils and local partners in delivering reforms effectively.
Funding And Programme Delivery
| Indicator | Recent Movement | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Families First Partnership Programme | £2.4 billion | The Department for Education said funding will support family help and early safeguarding measures. |
| Legislative commitments and care market | £245 million | The funding is linked to delivery of the Act and improvements to the care market. |
| Children’s homes capital funding | £560 million | The department said funding will expand and refurbish children’s homes. |
Adoption support and sibling relationship measures
Adoption support will remain part of the reform programme. The government will continue to fund the Adoption and Special Guardianship Support Fund, consult on its long-term future, and introduce a universal parenting support offer from autumn 2026.
The plan also reflects a new legal duty for local authorities to promote contact between siblings in the care system where this is in children’s best interests. The department said this will support children in care to maintain relationships with family members.
- Adoption support: the Adoption and Special Guardianship Support Fund will continue while its long-term future is considered.
- Parenting support: a universal offer is planned from autumn 2026 as children move to secondary school.
- Sibling contact: local authorities must promote contact where it is in the child’s best interests.
Workforce reforms and regulatory oversight
The plan includes measures to enhance training and professional standards for children’s homes staff. It also includes investment in early career development for social workers and changes intended to streamline Ofsted registration processes.
The government said it will strengthen the regulatory framework for agency workers from 2028. The department said this is intended to improve workforce stability and support consistent, consistent care delivery and workforce continuity for children and families.
Ministerial Comments
Josh MacAlister, Children and Families Minister said;
“Bringing in the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Act was a major early priority for this government and it marks a historic moment for children’s social care and child protection in England.”
“The Plan we’re publishing today sets out how we will now deliver that change — intervening earlier to support families, strengthening protection for vulnerable children, and ensuring more children can grow up in stable, loving homes.”
The Implementation Plan for Children’s Social Care sets out how reforms under the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Act 2026 will move into delivery across England. The programme covers family help, child protection teams, kinship care, foster placements, care leaver support, adoption measures, workforce standards and market oversight, with funding assigned to national and local delivery.
Sources: Department for Education and Josh MacAlister OBE MP.
Prepared by Ivan Alexander Golden, Founder of THX News, an independent news organisation delivering timely insights from global official sources. Combines AI-analysed research with human-edited accuracy and context.



