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lookinto.co.uk Research

Published 26 June 2026. Analysis by the lookinto.co.uk Research team. Free to cite with attribution.

A self-funded residential care place in the UK now costs an average of £1,298 a week, or £67,496 a year. To work out what care really costs families in 2026, we combined the latest regional fee data with the official means-test thresholds, benefit rates and average house prices. The figures show wide regional gaps and a state safety net that meets only a small share of the bill.

£67,496Average annual self-funder bill, residential care
£81,328Average annual bill, dementia nursing care
+10%Rise in self-funder fees, Dec 2024 to Dec 2025
17.7%Share of a care bill the full state pension covers

Seven things our analysis found

  1. Care now costs more than the average salary. The average self-funded residential place runs to £67,496 a year and nursing care to £79,820, before any dementia premium. Full dementia nursing care averages £81,328 a year.
  2. There is a postcode penalty worth about £25,000. The same nursing care costs £1,759 a week in London against £1,264 in the North East. That 39% gap adds up to £25,740 a year for identical care, and residential fees show the same spread.
  3. The state pension barely touches the bill. The full new State Pension of £230.25 a week covers just 17.7% of an average residential placement. The remaining £1,068 a week, close to £55,500 a year, has to come from savings, property or other income.
  4. The average home buys roughly four years of care. At £270,080, the average UK house funds about 4.0 years of residential care, 3.4 years of nursing care or 3.3 years of dementia nursing care. After that the means test takes over.
  5. Home care is cheaper, but only up to a point. At the £32.14 an hour benchmark rate, a care home works out cheaper once someone needs more than about 40 hours of home care a week, or roughly 5.8 hours a day. Below that, staying at home usually costs less.
  6. Self-funders subsidise everyone else. The Competition and Markets Authority found self-funders pay around 40% more than councils for the same bed, which works out at roughly £10,000 to £19,000 a year per resident.
  7. Fees are rising far faster than inflation. Self-funder fees jumped 10% in a single year, adding about £6,750 to the annual bill. The main causes were the rise in employer National Insurance, from 13.8% to 15%, and successive minimum-wage increases.

The Cost of Care Index, by region

We indexed each region’s self-funder residential fee against the UK average, which we set at 100. An index of 119 means care there costs 19% more than the national average. London and Scotland top the table at 119, while the North East (86) and North West (88) are the most affordable places to fund a care home.

lookinto.co.uk Cost of Care Index 2026. Base fee data: carehome.co.uk self-funder fees, 9 September 2025. Index and annual figures calculated by lookinto.co.uk Research, with the UK residential average set at 100.
RegionResidential /wkNursing /wkDementia nursing /wkIndexResidential /yr
London£1,548£1,759£1,767119£80,496
Scotland£1,539£1,646£1,656119£80,028
South East England£1,446£1,706£1,721111£75,192
East of England£1,359£1,606£1,573105£70,668
South West England£1,339£1,595£1,627103£69,628
UK average£1,298£1,535£1,564100£67,496
West Midlands£1,202£1,426£1,45393£62,504
East Midlands£1,197£1,380£1,41592£62,244
Yorkshire & The Humber£1,170£1,422£1,46290£60,840
Wales£1,156£1,394£1,44089£60,112
North West England£1,143£1,422£1,47088£59,436
North East England£1,112£1,264£1,29686£57,824

Annual self-funder cost by care type (UK average)

Residential£67,496
Residential dementia£69,836
Nursing£79,820
Dementia nursing£81,328

What the state actually pays

Support depends heavily on where you live, and the thresholds have not kept pace with fees. In England and Northern Ireland you must fund your own care in full once your assets pass £23,250. In Scotland the upper limit is £35,000, and in Wales a single £50,000 threshold applies. The proposed £86,000 lifetime cap on care costs was scrapped in July 2024, so there is currently no ceiling on what a self-funder can pay.

A few payments are available regardless of savings. Attendance Allowance is worth up to £114.60 a week. NHS-funded Nursing Care in England pays £254.06 a week, rising to £267.68 from April 2026. Scotland’s free personal care payment is £254.60 a week, with a further £114.55 if nursing is needed, and Wales pays a nursing care contribution of £221.80 a week. Even at their most generous, these payments cover only a fraction of a typical bill.

Who pays, and why fees keep climbing

About 137,480 care-home residents in England, or 37%, fund themselves entirely, and the share rises to almost half (48.9%) in homes for older people, according to the Office for National Statistics. Because councils pay providers less than the true cost of a placement, those self-funders end up subsidising state-funded residents in the same home. In cash terms, that is what the Competition and Markets Authority meant when it found self-funders paying around 40% more.

The 10% jump in self-funder fees over 2025 came from real cost pressure on providers. The employer National Insurance rate rose from 13.8% to 15% in April 2025, which the Nuffield Trust estimates added £940 million to English care homes’ costs. On top of that came back-to-back rises in the National Living Wage, with another increase due in April 2026.

Cite this study

This research is free to reproduce for editorial and educational use, with a credit and link to lookinto.co.uk. Suggested citation:

lookinto.co.uk Research (2026), The UK Cost of Care Index 2026. https://lookinto.co.uk/care/uk-cost-of-care-index/

Journalists and researchers: for the full regional dataset or a comment, contact us through the site. Figures may be quoted directly.

Methodology and sources

The Cost of Care Index brings together publicly available data in a single comparative framework. We did not run a survey or collect new fee data. The underlying weekly fees are sourced and dated below, and all index values, annual figures and ratios were calculated by lookinto.co.uk Research.

  • Weekly care fees, UK and regional, self-funder basis: carehome.co.uk, dated 9 September 2025.
  • Index calculation: each region’s residential fee divided by the UK average (£1,298), times 100. Annual figures are the weekly fee times 52.
  • Means-test thresholds, Personal Expenses Allowance and the cap: GOV.UK Local Authority Circular on charging for care 2025 to 2026, Care Information Scotland, and GOV.WALES.
  • Attendance Allowance and State Pension rates for 2025/26: DWP and GOV.UK.
  • NHS-funded Nursing Care and devolved care payments: NHS England, mygov.scot and Age Cymru.
  • Home-care hourly benchmark of £32.14: Homecare Association Minimum Price for Homecare, England 2025/26.
  • Self-funder population: ONS, Care homes and estimating the self-funding population, England.
  • The 40% cross-subsidy figure: Competition and Markets Authority care homes market study.
  • Average UK house price of £270,080: HM Land Registry UK House Price Index.
  • Year-on-year fee rise and cost drivers: carehome.co.uk Caring Britain report and the Nuffield Trust.

Figures are averages and will vary by provider, individual need and exact location. This page is general information, not financial or legal advice. Last updated 26 June 2026.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average cost of a care home in the UK in 2026?
The average self-funded residential care home costs £1,298 a week, or £67,496 a year, and nursing care costs £1,535 a week, or £79,820 a year. Dementia nursing care averages £1,564 a week, which is £81,328 a year.
Which region has the most expensive care homes?
London and Scotland are the most expensive, both about 19% above the UK average. The North East is the most affordable, at roughly 14% below average. The gap between the dearest and cheapest region is about 39%, worth up to £25,740 a year for the same nursing care.
How much can you have in savings before you pay for care?
In England and Northern Ireland you fund your own care in full above £23,250 in assets. In Scotland the upper limit is £35,000 and in Wales it is £50,000. There is currently no lifetime cap on care costs, as the planned £86,000 cap was scrapped in July 2024.
Does the state pension cover care home fees?
No. The full new State Pension, £230.25 a week in 2025/26, covers only about 17.7% of an average residential care bill. That leaves roughly £55,500 a year to be met from other income, savings or property.
Is home care cheaper than a care home?
Usually, up to a point. At the £32.14 an hour benchmark rate, residential care becomes cheaper once you need more than about 40 hours of home care a week, or around 5.8 hours a day.

Sources: carehome.co.uk care home costs (Sept 2025 data); GOV.UK charging for care 2025/26; Homecare Association minimum price 2025/26; ONS self-funding population; HM Land Registry UK House Price Index.

Research and data from lookinto.co.uk

lookinto.co.uk publishes independent UK cost research and free quote comparisons across home energy, mobility, home improvement and later-life care. Our research team turns public data into original cost indices and reports that households use and the press cite.