Barrier to social housing now lifted for vulnerable people
New changes to remove a local connection requirement for young care leavers and domestic abuse survivors comes into effect today.

- Local connection tests officially removed for care leavers under 25 and victims of domestic abuse聽聽
- Forms part of the five-step plan to deliver a decade of renewal for social and affordable housing聽聽
- Delivering the government鈥檚 Plan for Change to provide more vulnerable people with a safe and secure roof over their head
More young people leaving care and domestic abuse survivors can now have greater access to social housing, thanks to new changes removing a local connection requirement coming into effect today. 聽聽聽
Last month the Deputy Prime Minister confirmed the government is rewriting the rules for vulnerable groups who have faced barriers to social housing when they do not have a connection to the local area, meaning they can no longer be unfairly penalised.聽The move has been largely welcomed by charities across the sector including Become and Centrepoint.
Many domestic abuse survivors and care leavers under the age of 25 face unique challenges, such as fleeing an unsafe home to seek safety or adjusting to life outside of the care system, so may be forced to move from area to area without having a local connection.聽
Government guidance for councils across England, nearly 90% of which currently use local connection tests, sets out their obligations to prioritise vulnerable people applying for social housing. This has now been updated to confirm young care leavers and domestic abuse survivors must be exempt from any local connection tests.
It comes as the government recently published its five-point plan to deliver a decade of renewal for social and affordable housing and pave the way for the biggest boost in a generation. This includes the new 拢39 billion Social and Affordable Homes Programme to build around 300,000 new homes over the next decade, with at least 60% for social rent.
Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary, Angela Rayner said:
鈥淚鈥檓 immensely proud this government is delivering real change for some of our most vulnerable in society, making sure more young people and families can have a safe and secure roof over their head.聽聽
鈥淚t鈥檚 only right we remove local connection tests for these groups and from today they will no longer face such barriers 鈥 it鈥檚 a promise we made and a promise we鈥檝e kept.聽聽
鈥淭his builds on our Plan for Change to deliver the biggest boost to social and affordable housing in a generation, turning the tide on the crisis we鈥檝e inherited and building hundreds of thousands of new homes to bring down housing waiting lists for good.鈥
Today鈥檚 changes follow the rules overhauled last year to remove local connection tests for all former UK Regular Armed Forces Veterans, regardless of when they last served, as pledged by the Prime Minister.聽聽
The government remains fully committed to supporting more vulnerable groups and veterans into social housing but also recognises the challenges faced by councils dealing with unprecedented pressures on housing supply as well as depleted housing stocks.聽聽
That鈥檚 why the government has now set out ambitions to ramp up housing delivery for this Parliament and beyond, equipping councils and providers with greater tools to invest in existing and new social homes. This includes:
- Bringing forward long-overdue reforms to Right to Buy, including a 35-year exemption for newly built social homes, to protect and reverse the decline in much-needed council housing.聽聽
- Extending the flexibilities on spending Right to Buy receipts introduced last year, as well as allowing councils to retain 100% of Right to Buy receipts and from next year combine receipts with grant funding for affordable housing, which will further accelerate the delivery of new homes to replace those sold.聽聽
- Introducing a new long-term 10-year settlement for social housing rents to provide the sector with the certainty they need to reinvest in new housing stock.
New funding for a 拢12 million Council Housebuilding Skills & Capacity Programme has also been announced, which will upskill and expand council workforces to get more spades in the ground for a new era of council housebuilding.
Centrepoint鈥檚 Director of Policy and Prevention, Balbir Kaur Chatrik said:
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 right that young care leavers were subjected to local connection tests 鈥 particularly聽at a point in their lives聽where they should be able to move on and thrive.聽
鈥淩emoving this barrier is a huge step in protecting some of the country鈥檚 most vulnerable young people and should help in reducing聽youth homelessness more broadly.鈥
A care-experienced young person, Tia Shillito-Radicic said:
鈥淭he passing of this new legislation is nothing short of life-changing for many care-experienced young people and especially for me.
鈥淭his legislation gives me the opportunity to live somewhere safer, closer to my support network, and within reach of my career in the Civil Service. It鈥檚 not just about having a roof over my head - it鈥檚 about having a foundation to build a future. It鈥檚 about independence, security, and dignity.
鈥淭oo often, young people in care are uprooted from their communities and placed far from home due to foster care shortages or safeguarding concerns. When we age out of care, we鈥檙e then expected to return to the original council that placed us - sometimes hundreds of miles from where we鈥檝e built our lives. That system leaves many of us isolated, detached from the people and places we trust most.
鈥淭his legislation changes that. And with it, comes hope. Hope that young people won鈥檛 have to start over, again and again. Hope that we can remain close to the support systems we鈥檝e fought to create. And hope that we鈥檒l finally be seen not just as care leavers, but as individuals with dreams, careers, and futures.
鈥淭o everyone who worked tirelessly to make this happen: thank you. You haven鈥檛 just changed a policy - you鈥檝e helped us hold onto something many of us lose far too often: a sense of home, of belonging, and of hope.鈥
Further information
Last month the government published a confirming new changes for young care leavers and domestic abuse survivors. The regulations were laid on 19 June and come into force today.聽聽
While the changes remove a specific barrier for these vulnerable groups, the allocation of social housing is still at the discretion of the local housing authority.聽聽
On 24 September, the Prime Minister set out his ambition to improve access to social housing for former UK Armed Forces Veterans, young care leavers and domestic abuse survivors.聽聽
The government recently set out its long-term plan 鈥 Delivering a decade of renewal for social and affordable housing 鈥 which includes a commitment to support more vulnerable groups and veterans having access to social housing.