Guidance

Social Care Grant Determination 2023 to 2024

Updated 4 April 2023

Applies to England

Social Care (Revenue) Grant Determination (2023-24): No 31/6647

The Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Local Government and Building Safety (“the Minister”), in exercise of the powers conferred by section 31 of the Local Government Act 2003, makes the following determination:

Citation

1. This determination may be cited as the Social Care (Revenue) Grant Determination (2023-24): No 31/6647.

Purpose of the grant

2. The purpose of the grant is to provide support to local authorities in England towards expenditure lawfully incurred or to be incurred in respect of meeting adults’ and children’s social care needs.

Determination

3. The Minister determines the authorities to which grant is to be paid and the amount of grant to be paid as set out in Annex A of this determination.

4. The grant will be paid in monthly instalments.

Grant conditions

5\. Pursuant to section 31(4) of the Local Government Act 2003, the Minister determines that the grant will be paid subject to the conditions in Annex B.

6. Before making this determination in relation to local authorities in England, the Minister obtained the consent of the Treasury.

Signed by authority of the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Local Government and Building Safety

Lucy Pedrick, Deputy Director
Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities
April 2023

Annex A: Social Care Grant allocations to local authorities 2023-24

Local authority* Social Care Grant 2023-24
Barking and Dagenham £16,626,506
Barnet £20,800,533
Barnsley £22,856,712
Bath and North East Somerset £10,072,293
Bedford £8,255,716
Bexley £13,532,282
Birmingham £106,475,356
Blackburn with Darwen £13,968,316
Blackpool £16,652,343
Bolton £24,407,845
Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole £25,564,483
Bracknell Forest £4,863,324
Bradford £39,805,462
Brent £22,339,306
Brighton and Hove £17,855,885
Bristol £31,871,589
Bromley £15,870,107
Buckinghamshire Council £22,343,283
Bury £12,634,488
Calderdale £14,940,650
Cambridgeshire £31,623,405
Camden £21,846,992
Central Bedfordshire £11,462,064
Cheshire East £19,364,672
Cheshire West and Chester £20,890,931
City of London £629,576
Cornwall £43,786,976
Coventry £27,684,927
Croydon £18,999,372
Cumberland** £25,100,583
Darlington £8,444,915
Derby £20,046,628
Derbyshire £61,318,597
Devon £54,014,961
Doncaster £26,868,756
Dorset Council £22,316,220
Dudley £27,626,913
Durham £49,564,497
Ealing £22,531,674
East Riding of Yorkshire £21,128,509
East Sussex £38,557,255
Enfield £21,105,905
Essex £89,891,295
Gateshead £19,543,198
Gloucestershire £36,053,136
Greenwich £24,236,468
Hackney £26,719,058
Halton £11,560,539
Hammersmith and Fulham £17,280,292
Hampshire £64,760,488
Haringey £19,261,462
Harrow £12,807,595
Hartlepool £9,001,113
Havering £14,246,398
Herefordshire £13,465,934
Hertfordshire £54,681,221
Hillingdon £15,606,788
Hounslow £15,441,323
Isle of Wight £11,449,882
Isles of Scilly £169,401
Islington £23,690,381
Kensington and Chelsea £13,909,606
Kent £88,770,679
Kingston upon Hull £27,215,688
Kingston upon Thames £7,472,733
Kirklees £29,810,411
Knowsley £19,283,986
Lambeth £25,838,700
Lancashire £94,568,677
Leeds £52,281,697
Leicester £28,100,955
Leicestershire £33,173,679
Lewisham £23,401,502
Lincolnshire £56,394,128
Liverpool £58,942,153
Luton £12,743,025
Manchester £50,694,742
Medway £14,329,753
Merton £10,429,778
Middlesbrough £15,017,219
Milton Keynes £12,452,129
Newcastle upon Tyne £27,341,393
Newham £28,108,563
Norfolk £66,524,505
North East Lincolnshire £12,960,614
North Lincolnshire £12,494,195
North Northamptonshire £18,226,490
North Somerset £13,294,831
North Tyneside £17,004,869
North Yorkshire** £33,359,399
Northumberland £22,056,243
Nottingham £27,520,770
Nottinghamshire £55,409,491
Oldham £21,453,651
Oxfordshire £32,683,943
Peterborough £12,287,315
Plymouth £21,701,741
Portsmouth £14,869,932
Reading £7,499,349
Redbridge £17,329,222
Redcar and Cleveland £12,187,834
Richmond upon Thames £8,813,641
Rochdale £19,331,842
Rotherham £24,329,530
Rutland £1,792,854
Salford £22,640,491
Sandwell £35,739,383
Sefton £27,205,781
Sheffield £48,204,724
Shropshire £21,547,059
Slough £7,759,622
Solihull £12,820,464
Somerset** £39,245,509
South Gloucestershire £12,757,691
South Tyneside £16,786,601
Southampton £18,467,922
Southend-on-Sea £13,196,589
Southwark £27,647,962
St. Helens £17,510,080
Staffordshire £56,759,062
Stockport £18,577,141
Stockton-on-Tees £13,086,998
Stoke-on-Trent £24,789,958
Suffolk £52,523,414
Sunderland £29,337,386
Surrey £52,532,733
Sutton £9,516,919
Swindon £10,194,941
Tameside £20,266,265
Telford and Wrekin £13,479,301
Thurrock £10,330,015
Torbay £14,256,444
Tower Hamlets £25,957,938
Trafford £14,572,614
Wakefield £27,908,401
Walsall £24,494,320
Waltham Forest £18,061,903
Wandsworth £25,623,573
Warrington £11,986,566
Warwickshire £30,255,428
West Berkshire £6,792,908
Westmorland and Furness** £17,493,988
West Northamptonshire £18,967,113
West Sussex £46,446,746
Westminster £26,522,501
Wigan £29,250,669
Wiltshire £24,335,552
Windsor and Maidenhead £6,190,213
Wirral £32,142,368
Wokingham £5,387,520
Wolverhampton £24,739,648
Worcestershire £37,426,587
York £10,300,622
England £3,851,967,868

*Funding paid to local authorities with responsibility for social care only.

**On 1 April 2023 the following unitary authorities will be established:

  • Cumberland, comprising the areas of Allerdale, Carlisle, Copeland and part of Cumbria County Council.

  • Westmorland and Furness, comprising the areas of Barrow-in-Furness, Eden, South Lakeland and part of Cumbria County Council.

  • North Yorkshire, comprising the areas of Craven, Hambleton, Harrogate, Richmondshire, Ryedale, Scarborough and Selby.

  • Somerset, comprising the areas of Mendip, Sedgemoor, South Somerset and Somerset West and Taunton.

Allocations may not sum to exact totals due to rounding.

Annex B: Grant conditions

1. In this Annex—

a. “a recipient authority” means a local authority listed in Annex A to this determination;

b. “the Department” means the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities;

c. “the Minister” means the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Local Government and Building Safety

Use of grant

2. Grant paid to a recipient authority under this determination may be used only for the purposes of—

a. meeting adult social care needs, and

b. meeting children’s social care needs.

3. A recipient authority must provide written confirmation to certify that the authority’s allocation of the Social Care Grant has been used exclusively on adults’ and children’s social care in 2023-24. One statement from the Section 151 Officer will be required at the end of the financial year which will need to be returned to the Department by 10 April 2024.

Financial management

4. A recipient authority must maintain a sound system of internal financial controls.

5. If a recipient authority has any grounds for suspecting financial irregularity in the use of any grant paid under this funding agreement, it must notify the Department immediately, explain what steps are being taken to investigate the suspicion and keep the Department informed about the progress of the investigation. For these purposes “financial irregularity” includes fraud or other impropriety, mismanagement, and the use of grant for purposes other than those for which it was provided.

Breach of conditions and recovery of grant

6. If the authority fails to comply with any of these conditions, or if any overpayment is made under this grant or any amount is paid in error, the Secretary of State may reduce, suspend or withhold grant payments or require the repayment of the whole or any part of the grant monies paid, as may be determined by the Secretary of State and notified in writing to the authority. Such sum as has been notified will immediately become repayable to the Secretary of State who may set off the sum against any future amount due to the authority from central government.