-
The total number of households stuck in temporary
accommodation in England – including hostels and nightly paid
B&Bs – is up 7.6% to a new record high
-
Ahead of the Budget, Crisis urges the Westminster
Government to unfreeze housing benefit and to finalise its
long-awaited homelessness strategy
National homelessness charity Crisis has called on the
Westminster Government to unfreeze housing benefit in the
forthcoming Budget after the number of children growing up in
temporary accommodation in England reached a new record high.
According to new quarterly figures released today (Thursday 16
October), 172,420 children were trapped in temporary
accommodation at the end of June this year. This is an 8.2% rise
on the same period last year (159,310) and marks the 10th
consecutive new record level .
The new statistics from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and
Local Government also show that at the end of June 2025:
- There are now 132,410 households living in temporary
accommodation in England – another record high. Every quarter
since March 2023 has been a new record high
- The number of households in the most unsuitable forms of
emergency accommodation - including B&Bs, hostels and other
nightly paid placements – has increased by 13.1% to 70,010
- The regions that have seen the biggest increases in children
growing up in temporary accommodation are Yorkshire and the
Humber (23.9% increase on the same time last year) and the North
West (14.0%). The regions that have seen the biggest increases in
households in temporary accommodation are the North West (12.6%)
and the West Midlands (8.6%).
In response to today's figures, Crisis is urging the Westminster
Government to use the forthcoming Budget on 26 November to
unfreeze housing benefit so it covers the cheapest third of local
rents. In many cases current, frozen rates do not cover rising
rents, or leave families and individuals little money to cover
food costs and other bills. This is forcing thousands into, and
keeping thousands in, homelessness.
This year the Westminster Government committed £39bn to a new
generation of social and affordable homes, which would help
deliver 180,000 new social homes for rent over 10 years. It has
not, however, yet published a cross-department strategy to tackle
all forms of homelessness originally promised in its 2024
election manifesto.
Matt Downie, Chief Executive of Crisis, said:
"Tragically we have now become totally accustomed to seeing
record levels of children growing up in temporary accommodation.
We are talking about children with no space to play, no place to
do homework, no safe, stable place to call home. So we have to
ask, as living costs increase and the supply of social homes
recedes, when this will end.
“The truth is that only the Westminster Government can stop this
with an ambitious homelessness strategy. It's essential this
helps councils coordinate efforts and plan longer term.
“At the forthcoming Budget ministers have a choice to unfreeze
housing benefit, which would enable more people and families to
stay in their homes. And they can, through urgently kickstarting
a new generation of social homes, help families and children
escape poverty and see a brighter future for themselves and their
communities.”