Today, we have published the outcome of
our 12-week consultation on proposals to make changes to
the fees for social workers, including new applicants.
After carefully considering all of the feedback we received
during the consultation, we have decided it is appropriate to
increase our fees as set out in our proposals.
This means that we will be increasing fees for social workers and
applicants for the upcoming registration year which runs from 1
December 2025 to 30 November 2026. We will also then increase
these each year by 1.85% until 2029. Full details of these
changes are outlined in Table 1 below.
Social workers renewing their registration from 1 September 2025
will be required to pay a £120 registration renewal fee for the
upcoming registration year. Our initial registration, restoration
and scrutiny fees will also increase from 1 December 2025.
Social workers, who are UK taxpayers, may be eligible to claim
tax relief on their fees. This could be backdated for up to 4
previous tax years. For the upcoming registration and renewal
period, this equates to £96 (from £120) for a tax rate of 20%.
Further details can be found on HMRC's website.
We will be emailing everyone on the social work register to let
them know the outcome and the upcoming changes.
This decision was made as the fees for social workers have not
changed in 10 years, while the grant-in-aid we receive has
increased every year since Social Work England's establishment
which is not sustainable. The increase to fees will ensure a more
balanced and stable funding base aligned to our true cost of
operation and to enable positive change in social work.
For full details of the feedback, we received during the
consultation and how we used this to make a decision, please
read our
consultation response.
Colum Conway, Chief Executive of Social Work England, said:
“Over the past few months we have taken time to consider all the
feedback we received through the public consultation.
We understand many people will not agree with the decision to
increase our fees, but we feel this necessary to help us continue
to meet our overarching objective of protecting the public.
This will ensure we can deliver all of our regulatory objectives
and goals and protect the public. This includes helping us to
further improve case progression and timeliness in the fitness to
practise process.”
The new fee structureTable 1: The
changes we will make to our fees each registration year (which
runs from 1 December to 30 November each year)*
If you are viewing this table on a desktop please use the scroll
underneath the table to view proposed fees up to 2029
Fee type
|
Current fee
|
2025 to 2026
|
2026 to 2027 (adjusted for annual inflation)
|
2027 to 2028 (adjusted for annual inflation)
|
2028 to 2029 (adjusted for annual inflation)
|
Application for initial registration and renewal of
registration
|
£90 (£72 after tax relief**)
|
£120 (£96 after tax relief**)
|
£122 (£98 after tax relief**)
|
£124 (£100 after tax relief**)
|
£127 (£101 after tax relief**)
|
Application for restoration of registration
|
£135
|
£180
|
£183
|
£187
|
£190
|
Scrutiny fees
|
£495
|
£670
|
£682
|
£695
|
£708
|
* Please note renewal fees are charged in advance of the
registration year as part of the registration renewal process
during 1 September and 30 November each year.
** The above tax relief values outlined in table 1 are based on a
tax rate of 20%. Further details can be found on HMRC's website.
Further information about why we are increasing our fees can be
found in our frequently asked
questions section at the end of our consultation
response.