RWK Goodman - January Bulletin
Effective regulation depends on timely, credible assessments. Without them, people using services are left without reliable information, providers operate in uncertainty, and poor care can go undetected for far too long.
The 2025 assessment data from CQC suggests that this is precisely the position adult social care in England now finds itself in. As if adult social care providers did not have enough to worry about!
Background
In 2019, CQC assessed and rated 15,757 locations of all service types. By 2023 that figure had dropped to 6,484 and a shocking 3,253 in 2024. Their organisational paralysis has been well publicised and is not the focus of this article.
9,000 Assessment Target
In April 2025, CQC set itself a target of carrying out 9,000 assessments, across all services by September 2026, or 500 a month. As they carried out an average of 1,313 inspections per month in 2019, that stated target was only 38% of previous levels.
While no one thought this was anywhere near sufficient to provide effective oversight of services, it would have been a marked improvement on CQC’s recent performance. So, how has it gone?
In short, not well.
From April 2025 to 13 January 2026 (when I wrote this article) CQC had published 4,337 reports across all services, 4,337 reports in 9.5 months or 456.5 reports a month. Clearly CQC is falling behind even their own woefully unambitious target. CQC’s response is even more surprising, announcing on 23 December 2025 they were ‘ahead of target’ having published 4,308 assessments, with seemingly no awareness of just how poor this figure is. I will concede that I have no idea what internal targets CQC have set and whether they are planning to ‘ramp up’ inspections in 2026.
What about adult social care specifically?
When we break the figures down further, and look specifically at care homes and home care, the picture becomes even more concerning. Looking at the assessment figures in 2025 for the local authorities with the highest number of social care settings, it’s clear that the assessment numbers are deficient.