Universal infant free school meals (UIFSM): conditions of grant 2018 to 2019
Updated 21 June 2019
Applies to England
1. Introduction
We will pay the universal infant free school meals (UIFSM) grant 2018 to 2019 under section 14 of the Education Act 2002. Under section 16 of that act, the Secretary of State lays down the following terms and conditions on which we give assistance in relation to the UIFSM grant payable to schools and local authorities for the financial year beginning 1 April 2018.
2. Funding rates and allocations
Each meal taken by an eligible pupil attracts £2.30. An allocation assumes that pupils will take 190 school meals over an academic year, providing £437 per eligible pupil, as counted in section 2.2 below.
2.1 Provisional allocation
For the academic year 2018 to 2019, we will base a provisional allocation to schools on the final allocation for academic year 2017 to 2018. We will count dual registered pupils at the setting at which they took the meal on the census day, even if it is their subsidiary setting.
2.2 Final allocation
We calculate a final allocation for academic year 2018 to 2019 in June 2019 using the number of pupils recorded as taking a meal in year 1 and year 2 in the October 2018, and January 2019, school censuses. We then subtract those pupils known to be eligible for FSM in the same censuses who are taking a meal. This figure is then divided by 2 to give the average number of eligible UIFSM pupils in years 1 and 2.
The number of reception pupils used will be the greater of either:
- the number of pupils recorded as taking a meal in the October 2018 and January 2019 school censuses, minus those pupils taking a meal known to be eligible for FSM in the same censuses, divided by 2 (this gives the average number of eligible UIFSM pupils in reception for academic year 2018 to 2019)
- the number of pupils recorded as taking a meal in January 2019 school censuses, minus those pupils taking a meal known to be eligible for FSM in the same census
We will count dual registered pupils where they took their meal on the census days, even if it is their subsidiary setting.
Where a school does not record pupils in year groups, we will use those aged 4, 5 or 6 on the relevant school censuses to calculate the allocations. We include pupils on the alternative provision census placed in independent schools in the provisional and final allocations to local authorities.
3. Allocations to schools
The Education and Skills Funding Agency (EFSA) pays the UIFSM grant directly to academies and free schools open on or before 1 April 2018. Local authorities must allocate the amounts set out in the attached schedule of allocations to each maintained school, and any that convert to academy status after 1 May 2018; they cannot hold the grant centrally.
A school may agree to use their UIFSM grant allocation to contribute to central local authority provision, but local authorities must allocate the grant to each school to enable them to make that decision.
We allocate the grant to schools federated, or to be federated, under the provisions of section 24 of the Education Act 2002, during the financial year beginning 1 April 2018 as if they were not federated.
In the case of a school which closes before 1 September 2018, the local authority should not allocate the grant to the school. In the case of a school which closes between 1 September 2018 and 31 August 2019, the local authority will allocate the grant for the proportion of that period that the school is open.
A school which opens between 1 September 2018 and 31 August 2019, and receives all the pupils from two, or more, schools which have closed, will receive a grant equal to the total which would be payable to the schools had they remained open. The grant will be proportionate to the period of 1 September 2018 to 31 March 2019, for which the school is open.
Where a school has pupils transferred from a closing school during the period 1 September 2018 to 31 August 2019, the local authority should allocate the grant that would have been paid to the closing school, had it remained open, to the school receiving those pupils; the school should agree the amount allocated.
The grant is payable irrespective of the existence of any deficit relating to the expenditure of the school’s budget share. UIFSM grant is not part of schools’ budget shares and is not part of the individual schools budget. It is not included in the minimum funding guarantee calculations.
4. Terms on which UIFSM grant is allocated to schools
The grant supports schools in delivering the legal requirement to offer free school meals, meeting the school food standards, to all their reception, year 1 and year 2 pupils. Subject to meeting this legal duty, schools may spend the grant for the purposes of the school; that is to say for the educational benefit of pupils registered at that school, or for the benefit of pupils registered at other schools.
They may also spend it on community facilities, for example services whose provision furthers any charitable purpose for the benefit of pupils at the school or their families, or people who live or work in the school’s locality. Schools do not have to spend the entire grant in the financial year beginning 1 April 2018; they may carry forward some or all the grant.
5. Alternative provision pupils
We will allocate UIFSM grant to local authorities for each pupil recorded as aged 4, 5 and 6 on the January 2018 census, who is not recorded as eligible for a free school meal, and where the local authority placed the pupil in an independent school.
The local authority should spend the amount allocated for such pupils by the end of the academic year 2018 to 2019. They can only spend it on providing a free school meal to pupils not recorded as eligible for a free school meal, and aged 4, 5 and 6.
6. Payment arrangements
The Secretary of State will pay the grant to local authorities as follows:
Month | Proportion of grant |
---|---|
June 2018 | Seven twelfths of each school’s provisional main allocation. Schools that were academies on 1 May 2018 will receive their UIFSM grant direct from EFSA in July 2018. |
June 2019 | The final main allocation for each maintained school as at 1 April 2019, minus the amount of the main allocation paid in July 2018. Any school that converts to academy status after 1 May 2018, and by 1 May 2019, will receive the rest of its main allocation direct from EFSA in July 2019. |
Non-converter academies and free schools, which open after 1 April 2018, and by 31 August 2019, will receive their grant direct from EFSA.
Where a school’s final main allocation is less than the provisional payment made in June 2018, we will deduct the difference from grant payments for the 2018 to 2019 academic year.
7. Certification
Local authorities must certify that they have passed on the correct amount of funding to schools or, where they have spent funding centrally, that they have spent it in line with the conditions of grant. We will issue details of this process alongside the certification arrangement for other grants paid to local authorities.
8. Variation
The Secretary of State may vary the basis for the allocation from those set out above, if the school or local authority requests it.
9. Overpayments
Any overpayment of grant must be repaid to the Secretary of State.
10. Further information
The Secretary of State, and the Comptroller and Auditor General, may inspect the books, records and other documents that relate the recipient’s accounts. Under Section 6 of the National Audit Act 1983, the Comptroller and Auditor General may examine whether the authority or school spent the premium in an efficient and cost-effective way.
The recipient should provide any information the Secretary of State requires in order determine whether the authority or school has complied with the conditions in this document.
11. Other conditions
The Secretary of State may require the repayment of the whole or any part of the grant if the authority or school fails to follow the conditions in this document.