Government makes life easier for families through thousands more school-based nurseries places
Schools report over 4,000 more school-based nursery places
available this month across England – delivering government's Plan
for Change. Parents accessing new school-based places can benefit
from fewer stops and less stress on the school run in the same week
as government delivers 30 hours of funded childcare. More children
access best start as government confirms further 300 new or
expanded nurseries next year with focus on childcare in
disadvantaged communities....Request free trial
Working parents will have their lives made easier as the government is opening 300 new or expanded nurseries on school grounds, helping to cut down on the school run and giving children a seamless start to their education. Meeting the latest milestone in its Plan for Change, the government has confirmed schools report over 4,000 extra school-based nursery places will be available across England this September as it vows to boost childcare access in disadvantaged communities in the next phase of the rollout. Thanks to the government's initial investment of £37 million, 189 of the 300 government-funded new or expanded nurseries are set to be up and running this month. Providing stability for children in their early years can help them get ready to start school. This leads to better outcomes, more opportunities to lift their life chances and stronger social cohesion that binds us all together. Children growing up in the same nursery and primary schools means they can thrive in an environment they trust, with friends, siblings and teachers they know, which is so important for their development. Amid the ongoing success of the first phase, the government is determined to go further and faster to offer more choice for parents in every corner of the country. As part of its drive to give every child the best start in life, it will invite more schools to bid for up to £150,000 funding from a £45 million pot to create a further 300 new or expanded best start school-based nurseries - offering up to 7,000 more places - from September 2026. The second phase will prioritise quality bids from schools serving some of the most disadvantaged communities, delivering thousands of new places for families who need them most. Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said: “The change we have delivered for working people this September is just the beginning - through our Plan for Change we are determined to give more children the best start in life. “School-based nurseries can offer a nurturing and stable environment for children that carries through into primary, and a helping hand for working parents tackling dual drop off. “Delivering more school-based nurseries – under our Best Start umbrella - means more choice and convenience for parents, and more opportunities to target parts of the country where families are most in need of additional support."
Making life easier for parents under the pressures of the school run means they can keep working with confidence, earn more money and supporting wider economic growth, a priority in our Plan for Change. This comes the same week as the government has delivered 30 hours of free childcare from age nine months to reception year, with take-up expected to be over and above initial projections at over half a million children. That's a promise made and a promise delivered, with 9 in 10 parents getting one of their three top choice nursery places. Alongside the best start school-based nurseries rollout, the government is upping funding for the sector to £9 billion next year to support delivery of a brilliant early years education to give every child the best start in life. Cinnamon Brow CE Primary was backed by the scheme last year, and, in partnership with PVI provider Let's Be Kids, is now rolling out 15 new nursery places for children from 9 months old in a previously unused classroom. The school will offer wraparound care for children from early morning to 6pm. Headteacher Rachel Pimblett says: “Applying for the government-funding to expand our nursery was a no-brainer. “We have families from all circumstances and backgrounds at our school, and it's so important to us to be able to support each and every one of them as much as we can. “With the new nursery, children get more consistency because they're able to be here with their siblings from their earliest years all the way up to age 11, and offering childcare around the school day is a huge help for working parents. They keep asking why we didn't do it sooner!” Adeola Olasosebikan's youngest daughter will be joining her older sister at St George's Catholic Primary Academy in Scarborough this term. The school, which is also one of the first 750 offering a free breakfast club, will be rolling out early years provision to two-year-olds for the first time thanks to government funding. Adeola said: “Having the nursery and school in the same place makes things so much easier for me and my husband. “We both work long hours, and so having a single drop-off and access to a free breakfast club is a life saver. It means we can make it to work on time, and know our girls are at school being well looked after and having fun.
“My oldest daughter already attends St George's and absolutely
loves it– she wants to go to the breakfast club even when I'm not
working!” CEO at Working Families, Jane van Zyl, said: “Any expansion in the provision of funded childcare places is good news for families. It will help ease the financial pressure many parents face and enable more, particularly mothers, to return to work or increase their hours. “Quality, affordable childcare is one of the biggest barriers to work, so steps that make it more accessible will boost labour market participation as well as family incomes. “For parents with school age children, co-located nursery provision can make daily logistics more manageable, which makes a real difference to working lives.” With free breakfast clubs saving parents £450 a year and setting older children up with a supportive start to the day, alongside the cap on branded uniform items and £1.4 billion to fix the inherited state of crumbling classrooms, the government's Plan for Change is building a better future for working families. A future that boosts work choices, life chances, and makes the daily balance of kids and career that much easier.
Notes to editors Schools will be invited to submit bids of up to £150,000 from 22nd September. The bidding round will close at 5PM on 11th December, with successful schools to be announced in April 2026. Full details of the third phase and plans to meet the government's manifesto pledge of thousands of new and expanded school-based nurseries will be shared ahead of its launch in early 2026. Parents should contact their local council if they remain concerned with how they are receiving their entitlement offer, following discussions with their childcare provider. Average savings for 30 hours of government-funded childcare are calculated by multiplying the average hourly fee for under 3s (SCEYP, 2024) by the 1140 hours per year.
As it has done with all previous rollouts, the government will
publish the final number of childcare codes issued and validated
for September later this month, when the data is final and
accurate for termly uptake. Delta poll, August 2025 Childcare deserts & oases: How accessible is childcare in Australia (2022)? | Victoria University
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