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Vulnerable children become income streams in gold rush to invest in care homes
The Observer
|December 21, 2025
What do the directors of freight businesses, guest houses, insurance brokers and property developers have in common?
They have all opened children’s homes in the last year.Investors are flocking to a new opportunity. England now has 4,010 children’s homes, a record number, and almost 15% of these - 520 homes were registered with Ofsted in the 12 months up to March this year.
An Observer analysis shows that 41% of these new children’s homes are run by companies founded after 2022. While some were set up by people with a long history of working with children, others have a new enthusiasm for the care sector.
A home in Bury, registered in May 2024 and rated as “requiring improvement” by Ofsted, is run by a company whose director has also been in charge of a tax consultancy, an IT firm, a call centre and a bookkeeping firm. Another, in Southend, is run by the owner of a guest house.
Property advisers have started to push children’s homes as an investment vehicle. Foot Forward Property Investments says it “ensures a net income of £81,000 per year for a minimum of 20 years” for what it calls a “hands-off” investment. Supported Living Gateway has urged property investors to “pay attention to the children’s homes sector”, but warns it is “different from standard buy-to-let”.
It feels like a gold rush. How did it happen? And what does it mean for the children being looked after?
The boy - let’s call him David - loves sign language. He scratches his armpits and waggles his finger, making the sign for “cheeky monkey”. When his carers sign it back at him, he feigns disbelief. It’s a game he can play all day. The 11-year-old is deaf and has been in care since the age of two. He started learning to sign after arriving at this children’s home, in northern England, about a year ago.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 21, 2025-Ausgabe von The Observer.
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