Connect with us

Fostering

how foster care pay allowances and tax work in the uk

Published

on

how foster care pay allowances and tax work in the uk

How fostering pay works – cash‑flow basics

When a placement starts you receive a start‑up payment that covers immediate set‑up costs (furniture, clothing, etc.). After the first week you are paid weekly on a set day (usually Thursday). In addition, if there is a period without a placement you continue to receive a bridging retainer payment (typically 50 % of the weekly allowance) to smooth cash flow.

Allowance amounts by child age and region

The National Minimum Allowance (NMA) sets a baseline that varies by age and by devolved nation. The 2025‑26 rates are:

  • England (London & South‑East): £245 per week for a child aged 0‑4, £220 per week for 5‑11, £210 per week for 12‑15, £200 per week for 16‑17.
  • England (Rest of England): £225 / £200 / £190 / £180 respectively.
  • Scotland: £215 / £195 / £185 / £175.
  • Wales: £210 / £190 / £180 / £170.
  • Northern Ireland: £215 / £195 / £185 / £175.

These figures include the basic allowance for the child’s needs; a separate professional fee is added on top, based on the carer’s skill level and the placement type.

For a detailed breakdown of the 2025‑26 regional rates see fostering allowances 2025‑26 explained.

Skill‑level fees and how carers progress

Beyond the basic allowance, carers may receive:

  • Professional fee: £150‑£300 per week for standard placements, reflecting experience and training.
  • Complex‑needs premium: additional £75‑£150 per week when caring for a child with significant medical or behavioural needs.
  • Sibling‑group premium: £50‑£100 per week for each additional sibling in the same household.

Carers can move to higher fee bands by completing approved training, gaining accreditation, or successfully caring for complex‑needs placements. Local authorities regularly review fee levels at the end of each placement.

Regional cost‑of‑living impact

Because living costs differ, many authorities add a regional uplift. London and the South‑East commonly receive an extra £20‑£30 per week on the basic allowance.

Example: London single‑child placement (age 3)

Basic allowance: £245 /week
Professional fee (standard): £250 /week
Regional uplift: £25 /week
Total weekly cash flow: £520 (≈ £2,240 per month, £26,880 per year).

Placement scenarios – single child, siblings, and sequential placements

Different configurations change the total income.

Single child (age 8, England – rest of England)

Basic allowance £200 /week + professional fee £250 /week = £450 /week.

Two siblings (ages 2 and 5, Scotland)

Basic allowances: £215 + £195 = £410 /week
Sibling premium: £80 /week
Professional fee: £300 /week
Total: £790 /week.

Sequential placements with a three‑month gap

Assume two 12‑month placements of a single child (£450 /week) with a three‑month gap. Income calculation:

  • Placement 1 (12 months): £450 × 52 = £23,400
  • Gap (12 weeks) – bridging retainer 50 %: £225 × 12 = £2,700
  • Placement 2 (12 months): £23,400
  • Annualised average (over 27 months): (£23,400 + £2,700 + £23,400) ÷ 27 months ≈ £2,040 /month.

Tax treatment – below and above the income‑tax threshold

Foster carers are classed as self‑employed. Under the Qualifying Care Relief (QCR) scheme the first £30,000 of fostering income is tax‑free, provided it is the only self‑employment income. If total self‑employment earnings exceed £30,000, the excess is taxed at the usual rates and Class 4 National Insurance (NI) applies.

Example 1 – Below the £30,000 threshold

Carer receives £520 /week (London single‑child example). Annual income = £520 × 52 = £27,040. Because this is under £30,000, no income tax or Class 4 NI is due. The carer still files a self‑assessment but records zero tax liability.

Example 2 – Above the threshold (additional part‑time job)

Fostering income: £27,040
Part‑time job: £8,000
Total self‑employment income: £35,040
Tax‑free allowance (QCR): £30,000
Taxable profit: £5,040
Income‑tax (20 % basic rate) = £1,008
Class 4 NI (9 % on profit above £12,570, but only on the £5,040) ≈ £454.
Total tax & NI payable: £1,462.

Effect on state benefits – practical scenarios

Because fostering income is treated as self‑employment, it can affect means‑tested benefits. The impact varies by benefit type.

Scenario A – Universal Credit with part‑time work

Assume a single adult earning £8,000 from a part‑time job plus £27,040 fostering income. Universal Credit assesses earnings after the £4,400 work allowance. The £27,040 is considered self‑employment profit; after the tax‑free QCR portion, the remaining £5,040 is counted as earnings. This reduces the UC entitlement by roughly £5,040 × 0.55 ≈ £2,772 per year.

Scenario B – Child Tax Credit

Child Tax Credit is based on household income. If the only income is the fostering allowance (£27,040), the family may still qualify for the full credit because the allowance is largely tax‑free. Adding a £8,000 part‑time salary pushes total income to £35,040, which could reduce the credit by about £1,500 annually.

For more on tax record‑keeping see foster carer tax qualifying care relief and record keeping.

Common misunderstandings

  • “Foster pay is taxable like a regular salary.” – Only the amount above the QCR threshold is taxed.
  • “Allowances cover every expense.” – They cover basic needs; additional costs (e.g., specialist equipment) may require separate reimbursement.
  • “I will lose all benefits when I start fostering.” – Many benefits are adjusted, not eliminated; the impact depends on total earnings.
  • “Regional variations are negligible.” – London and South‑East uplifts can add £20‑£30 /week, noticeably affecting net income.
  • “A gap between placements means no income.” – Bridging retainer payments provide partial income during gaps.

Financial comparison – fostering versus adoption

Both routes provide a stable home, but the financial landscape differs.

  • Up‑front costs: Adoption typically involves application fees (£4,000‑£9,000) and legal costs, whereas fostering has no placement fee.
  • Ongoing payments: Adoptive parents receive the Adoption Support Fund (≈ £300 per month) and may claim Child Tax Credit, but no regular allowance. Foster carers receive a weekly allowance that can exceed £500 in high‑cost regions.
  • Tax treatment: Adoption support is taxable income; fostering allowance is largely tax‑free under QCR.
  • Benefit interaction: Adoption support is counted as income for means‑tested benefits; fostering allowance may be partially exempt, preserving more benefit entitlement.
  • Long‑term financial stability: Foster carers can experience income gaps; adoptive parents have a steady cost structure (mortgage, utilities) without regular payments from a local authority.

Prospective carers should model their personal situation using the examples above to decide which pathway aligns with their financial goals.

For the latest changes to Universal Credit for foster carers, see fostering and universal credit benefits what changes.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Copyright © 2025. Fostering News

Connect with the best fostering agency

Let's have a chat