- Additional funding to help older and disabled people live
more independently in their own homes
- £50 million to be provided this year to adapt people’s homes
- Overall, adaptation grants support 50,000 people a year and
help people to be discharged from hospital quicker, cutting
waiting times
Fifty million pounds has been allocated to local authorities from
today to help older people and those with disabilities live
safely and independently in their own homes.
Delivered jointly by the Department of Health and Social Care and
the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities,
eligible disabled people of all ages will be able to apply to
their local authority for a grant to adapt their home to better
meet their needs.
Available to homeowners, private renters and those in social
housing, the funding will be delivered through the Disabled
Facilities Grant and comes on top of the annual £573 million
already provided to local authorities for home improvement
services.
Since 2010, there have been almost half a million home adaptions,
backed by £4.8 billion in funding.
Minister for Adult Social Care, , said:
If you’re older or living with a disability, a well-adapted home
gives you independence and safety.
Living in your own home can be impossible after illness or injury
without changes like wheelchair ramps, handrails or a stairlift
This new funding will help thousands more people have homes fit
for their needs - and faster. When time is of the essence, this
fund will help local authorities do urgent and smaller-scale
adaptations more quickly.
Sometimes all that stands in the way of a patient going home from
hospital is a simple home adaptation - so this this is good news
for patients and hospitals too. It’ll mean more people can
recover from a hospital stay at home, and more NHS beds for
patients who need them.
Announced as part of the Next Steps to Put People at the Heart of
Care plan, the £50 million is the first tranche of a £102 million
investment over two years, that will enable local authorities to
provide additional services that are agile, make minor
adaptations quickly and support speedier hospital discharge.
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Department for
Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, , said:
We want everyone to have high quality, safe, and suitable homes
so they can keep living more independently, including people
leaving hospital care. This funding provides councils with
additional resource to support those in need and builds on the
funding already in place.
Providing suitable adaptations to homes, such as wheelchair
ramps, handrails, stairlifts or specialist equipment, will mean
that when someone is medically fit to be discharged, they will
have somewhere safe to be discharged to, freeing up hospital beds
for those who need them.
As a result, this will help to reduce waiting times, which will
be important as the health service approach the winter months,
when pressure on the NHS increases.
The Disabled Facilities Grant is one of a range of housing
support measures that a local authority can use to help enable
people to live independently and safely at home. The government
also provides guidance to local authorities to help them
effectively and efficiently deliver home adaptations and best
serve the needs of older and disabled people in their local
communities.
Background information
- More detail for local areas can be found on the Foundations website.
Foundations is the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities funded national body for Disabled Facilities Grant
and Home Improvement Agencies – the website includes many case
studies from local authorities who are using their Disabled
Facilities Grant funding in innovative ways, with strong
partnerships between local health, care, and housing partners.
- The Next Steps to put People at the Heart of Care plan can be
found here.
- Further information on how local authorities can effectively
and efficiently deliver Disabled Facilities Grant funded
adaptations to best serve the needs of local older and disabled
people is contained in the Disabled
Facilities Grant guidance.
- Local councils manage their social housing waiting lists and
must give people who need to move for medical or welfare reasons
priority. Our £11.5 billion Affordable Homes Programme will
deliver thousands of affordable homes to buy and rent, including
new supported housing for disabled people.