- Five local authorities across England will trailblaze adult
social care charging reform
- Trailblazers will implement the new adult social care
charging reform system early
- Charging reforms will mean no one has to face unpredictable
care costs
Government has announced that five local authorities in England
will implement a new and improved adult social care charging
reform system which caps the cost of care.
To ensure a smooth transition from the current charging system
the five trailblazing local authorities - Wolverhampton,
Blackpool, Cheshire East, Newham, North Yorkshire - will put the
charging reform plans in place in January 2023 ahead of a
national rollout in October next year.
This includes a new lifetime cap of £86,000 on the amount anyone
in England will need to spend on their personal care, alongside a
more generous means test for local authority financial support.
The trailblazing areas were selected to ensure a cross section of
communities are represented and so any insight, evidence and
lessons learned from this initiative will be useful to providers
and authorities in all parts of England.
The Health and Social Care Levy will raise more than £5.4 billion
for adult social care reforms which includes including £3.6
billion to reform the way people pay for their social care
charging reform to ensure the new system is fair and responsible,
balancing government support and the need for people to be
responsible for their future care needs.
From October 2023 no-one starting to receive care will pay more
than £86,000 over their lifetime, and no-one with assets of less
than £20,000 will have to make any contribution from their
savings or housing wealth – up from £14,250. Anyone with assets
between £20,000 and £100,000 will be eligible for some
means-tested support with the upper limit more than four times
the current limit.
The trailblazers will shape the government’s approach to
implementation by allowing the Department of Health and Social
Care to test key aspects of the reforms.
The initiative will generate valuable evidence and insight to
help the government to monitor progress, identify challenges and
improve understanding of how this will work in practice.
These five local authorities will co-produce documentation to
educate and inform other local authorities with a series of
events to be planned before the final rollout.
The launch of the operational initiative is running in parallel
with the ongoing Parliamentary discussions on the Health and Care
Bill, which includes charging reform.
This is necessary to make sure England is operationally ready for
charging reform.