Ministers tweak supported housing licensing over cost fears

Source: housingtoday.co.uk

TL;DR

The story at a glance

Ministers have announced changes to the proposed licensing regime for supported housing providers, responding to sector concerns over costs. The updates come from the government's response to a 2025 consultation on implementing the Supported Housing (Regulatory Oversight) Act 2023, published around 16 April 2026. The regime involves local authorities issuing licences and enforcing national standards to target rogue providers. Sector groups have welcomed the moves, especially expanded exemptions.[[2]](https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/supported-housing-regulation-consultation/outcome/supported-housing-regulation-consultation-government-response)[[1]](https://www.housingtoday.co.uk/ministers-announce-changes-to-new-supported-housing-licensing-regime-following-sector-concern-over-cost-burdens/5141814.article)

Key points

Details and context

The Supported Housing (Regulatory Oversight) Act 2023 enables local licensing to raise standards and tackle poor providers, following a consultation from February to May 2025. The government response, updated 16 April 2026, accepts sector feedback on burdens like admin costs and capacity strains for small providers and councils. Changes simplify processes—no discretionary local conditions, standardised forms, and new burdens funding for authorities—to keep things proportionate.[[2]](https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/supported-housing-regulation-consultation/outcome/supported-housing-regulation-consultation-government-response)

Exemptions aim to avoid overlap with existing rules, like CQC for care or Regulator of Social Housing for extra care. Enforcement uses improvement plans first, fines up to £40,000, or revocation; inspections are risk-based. This follows earlier steps like an advisory panel in March 2026.[[3]](https://www.housingtoday.co.uk/news/government-names-supported-housing-advisory-panel-members/5141280.article)

Key quotes

“Supported housing gives independence in safe environments; Act tackles rogue providers and ensures good quality; reforms proportionate and robust; listened to respondents.”[[2]](https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/supported-housing-regulation-consultation/outcome/supported-housing-regulation-consultation-government-response)

Alison McGovern MP, Minister for Local Government and Homelessness.

Why it matters

The changes support better oversight of supported housing for vulnerable people while easing rollout costs amid housing pressures. Providers face fewer admin hurdles and clearer rules, councils get funding help, and residents gain from standards without service gaps. Watch for draft regulations and further consultation in late 2026, plus how exemptions play out in practice.[[2]](https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/supported-housing-regulation-consultation/outcome/supported-housing-regulation-consultation-government-response)