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Fostering in Manchester: 2025/26 Rates, Process and Local Contacts

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Thinking about fostering in Manchester—or already approved and planning your year? Here’s a clear, up-to-date guide to 2025/26 fostering allowances, how the application process works locally, the types of fostering Manchester needs most, and the best places to get in touch.

2025/26 fostering money at a glance

National Minimum Allowance (England)

The government sets a National Minimum Allowance (NMA) that all councils and agencies must at least meet for the child’s day-to-day costs (food, clothing, utilities, transport, activities). Manchester sits in the “Rest of England” band. From 6 April 2025 to 5 April 2026, the weekly NMAs are:

Child’s ageRest of England (per week)
0–2£170
3–4£176
5–10£194
11–15£220
16–17£258

These are child allowances only. Most carers also receive a carer fee/skill payment on top, and there can be extras for birthdays, holidays, mileage and specific needs. Packages above the NMA are common.

What Manchester City Council says about pay

Manchester publishes example figures to show typical packages for one child: around £300/week tax-free for new carers and around £400/week for experienced carers. Two children can mean around £800/week tax-free (examples, not caps). Manchester also lists extras such as uniforms, birthdays/festivals, transport and holidays, plus training and support benefits.

Bottom line: think of your income as allowance (child costs) + fee (your role) + extras. Ask for a written breakdown when you compare agencies.

2025/26 tax relief for foster carers

Most foster carers pay little or no income tax on fostering because of Qualifying Care Relief (QCR). For 2025/26, HMRC sets: £19,360 fixed per household plus £405 per week for each child under 11 and £485 per week for each child aged 11+. If your fostering receipts are under that “qualifying amount”, there’s no tax on them; above it, a simplified method still applies. (Always check the HMRC helpsheet or speak to an accountant.)

The fostering process in Manchester (step-by-step)

Manchester lays out a straightforward journey—typically a few months end-to-end, with training and support throughout. Here’s the council’s own structure, condensed:

Before you apply

  1. Research & Q&A: Read the council pages, attend an info event, and ask questions.
  2. Suitability call: A friendly screening call confirms you meet the basics.
  3. Initial home visit: A worker visits to discuss your home, family and motivations.
  4. ‘Skills to Foster’ training: Introductory course; great for expectations and practical tips.
  5. Application: If everyone’s happy, you proceed to assessment.

Your assessment

  1. Checks: DBS, medical and references.
  2. Home study (Form F): Several visits build your Form F report (your story, strengths, support network).
  3. Review: You read and agree the report.
  4. Panel: A multi-disciplinary panel recommends approval types/age range.
  5. Agency Decision Maker (ADM): Final sign-off and registration.

After approval

  1. Start fostering: You’re matched with a supervising social worker, offered ongoing training, 24-hour advice line and local support groups.

Tip: Keep a support network list (backup carers, school-run help). It reassures panel and genuinely helps once a child arrives.

What kinds of fostering does Manchester need?

Manchester recruits for all mainstream types and highlights some specialist roles where demand is high:

Short-term & long-term

  • Short-term: Care while plans are decided; contact with family and school stability are key.
  • Long-term: A permanent family through to adulthood when adoption isn’t right.

Emergency & respite

  • Emergency: Same-day, short notice.
  • Respite: Planned short breaks for children and for other fostering families.

Parent & Child (P&C)

A parent (often a mum and baby) lives with you for assessment and support over a few months. You’ll observe and record progress and help build safe routines.

Step-Across / Step-Down from residential

Supporting a child to move successfully from a residential home into a family setting—structured routines, close teamwork with professionals.

Teens, siblings, and children with additional needs

Manchester—like most big cities—has consistent demand for teen placements, sibling groups (to keep brothers/sisters together), and carers confident with neurodiversity or complex health/trauma needs. (National data and sector reviews reflect the wider pressure across England.)

Your support as a Manchester carer

Expect a named supervising social worker, regular visits, ongoing training (which can also unlock higher fee levels), peer groups across the city, 24-hour phone support, advice from FosterTalk, and LGBTQ+ friendly support via New Family Social. Some perks include the Manchester leisure card (free access to Better gyms).

Allowances vs fees: getting clarity

  • Allowance (NMA): ring-fenced for the child’s daily needs; minimums shown in the table above (Manchester = Rest of England rates).
  • Fee/skill payment: recognises your role, experience and the complexity of placements (varies by agency). Manchester’s examples—£300–£400/week for one child, more for two—illustrate how totals can sit above the minimum.
  • Extras: uniforms, birthdays/festivals, holidays, travel/mileage and one-off equipment—ask how these are claimed and recorded.

When comparing Manchester City Council with Independent Fostering Agencies (IFAs) that serve the city, ask for a written breakdown of: allowance, fee, add-ons, how respite/retainers work, out-of-hours support, and training-linked fee progression.

How matches work in practice

For each referral, you (and your social worker) review key information: age/needs, school/location, contact plans, routines, risks, and what success will look like in the first few weeks. It’s okay to ask questions quickly and to say “no” if the match isn’t safe or suitable; a good match helps stability for everyone.

Recording: Keep daily logs, school/health notes and, for P&C, clear observation records. They support children’s plans and, if needed, court reports later.

Local contacts (Manchester & Greater Manchester)

  • Foster for Greater Manchester (recruitment hub): 0300 303 0321 (Mon–Fri, 9–5). Online enquiry form available; a team member calls back within one working day. Ideal first contact if you live in Manchester and want to foster for your local council.
  • Manchester City Council fostering team: online contact form (for questions or to be put in touch with the team).
  • Private fostering notifications (legal duty if you know of a private arrangement)
  • Children’s Rights/Advocacy (Coram Voice): national helpline and WhatsApp for children and young people in care (details listed on Manchester’s local contacts page).

Manchester also publishes an annual fostering report and a recruitment & retention strategy—useful reads if you’re curious about placement demand and support trends in the city.

Frequently asked questions (Manchester-specific)

Do I need a spare bedroom?

Yes—generally every fostered child should have their own bedroom (exceptions are specific and risk-assessed, for example some sibling arrangements). Your initial call and home visit will check space and safety.

Can I foster if I rent or work full-time?

Yes. Renting is fine with the landlord’s consent; many carers work—what matters is capacity for school runs, appointments and contact. Your assessing social worker will explore realistic routines at home and your support network.

How long does approval take?

Manchester models a path where you learn and prepare in the first couple of months then complete assessment over the following months. Timelines vary with checks and availability, but the milestones (training → Form F → panel → ADM) are consistent.

What training will I get?

You’ll complete ‘Skills to Foster’ pre-approval and then a programme of CPD linked to placement types (e.g., therapeutic approaches, P&C recording, de-escalation). Training can also link to higher fee levels.

Is there 24-hour support?

Yes. Manchester highlights 24-hour phone support, regular supervision, peer groups and external advice via FosterTalk.

How to choose between Manchester City Council and an IFA

  • Mission fit: Fostering “for your local council” keeps children closer to home and schools, reducing disruption and travel. (Foster for Greater Manchester is designed for this.)
  • Package: Compare allowance vs fee components, extras, and training/CPD. Manchester’s public examples help set expectations.
  • Support & stability: Ask about out-of-hours cover, peer groups, and access to specialists (e.g., education/Virtual School, therapeutic input).
  • Matching & placements: Councils usually prioritise local school continuity; IFAs may have a wider geography. Ask candidly about placement availability for your approved range.

Next steps (and how to start today)

  1. Call the hub: 0300 303 0321 (Foster for Greater Manchester). A recruiter will talk you through eligibility and book your next step.
  2. Attend an info event (in person or online) and bring questions about approval types, support, fees and training.
  3. Take ‘Skills to Foster’ and start your Form F with confidence—keep a simple folder of documents (ID, references, home safety notes) to speed things up.
  4. Budget smartly: use the Rest of England NMA table as your baseline and Manchester’s example packages for planning; remember QCR when you estimate take-home.

Final word

Fostering in Manchester pairs strong local support with a clear process and rising awareness of the city’s placement needs. If you value making a difference close to home—and want access to regular training, 24/7 advice and a network of carers—start with Foster for Greater Manchester (0300 303 0321) or the council’s online form. Use the 2025/26 NMA as your budgeting baseline, ask each provider to spell out allowance vs fee in writing, and lean on the training and peer groups that help placements flourish.

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