Statutory homelessness in England: Infographic 2023-24
Updated 30 October 2024
Applies to England
Statutory Homelessness 2023-24 Financial Year Infographic
This page provides a quick visual summary of key findings from the annual statistics release for statutory homelessness assessments and activities in England covering the period between 1 April 2023 to 31 March 2024.
1. Overall
Figure 1: Trends in prevention, relief and temporary accommodation since 2019 Q2
146,430 households were owed a prevention duty in 2023-24, up 3.1% from 2022-23. Of which there was:
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0.8% increase in households with children owed a prevention duty to 62,200 households
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4.6% increase in single households owed a prevention duty to 83,930 households
178,560 households were owed a relief duty in 2023-24, up 12.3% from 2022-23. Of which there was:
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8.3% increase in households with children owed a relief duty to 47,380 households
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13.7% increase in single households owed a relief duty to 130,930 households
On 31 March 2024, 117,450 households were in temporary accommodation, an increase of 12.3% from 31 March 2023.
2. Households with children
62,200 households with children were owed a prevention duty in 2023-24, up 0.8% from 2022-23.
47,380 households with children were owed a relief duty in 2023-24, up 8.3% from 2022-23.
41.9% of households with children owed a prevention or relief duty in 2023-24 had at least one support need, a similar proportion to 2022-23.
Figure 2: Proportion of households with children owed a prevention or relief duty, by reason for loss of last settled home
For those owed a prevention duty, the most common cause was due to the end of their private rented assured shorthold tenancy (AST) at 32,860 households, an increase of over 3.8% from 2022-23.
For those owed a relief duty, the most common cause was due to domestic abuse at 12,130, up 0.5% from 2022-23.
Figure 3 : Proportion of households with children whose duty ended by outcome
59,440 prevention duties ended for households with children in 2023-24.
48.3% of households with children whose prevention duty ended secured accommodation for 6 months or more and were no longer threatened with homelessness, this is lower than 49.6% in 2022-23.
65,920 relief duties ended for households with children in 2023-24.
63.4% of households with children had their relief duty end because their homelessness had not been relieved within 56 days and at this point the local authority would need to assess whether a main duty is owed to them.
Figure 4: Proportion of households with children who secured accommodation by type
Of the households with children whose prevention duty ended and were able to secure accommodation, the most common accommodation secured was self-contained accommodation in the private rented sector (50.2%).
For those whose relief duty ended with secured accommodation, the most common accommodation secured was self-contained accommodation in the private rented sector (30.1%) or a registered provider tenancy in the social rented sector (32.2%).
3. Single households
83,930 single households were owed a prevention duty in 2023-24, up 4.6% from 2022-23.
130,930 single households were owed a relief duty in 2023-24, up 13.7% from 2022-23
60.6% of single households had at least one support need, compared with 59.8% in 2022-23.
Figure 5: Proportion of single households owed a prevention or relief duty, by reason for loss of last settled home
The most common reason for loss of last settled home for single households was family or friends no longer able to accommodate.
This accounted for 23,320 households or 27.8% of single households owed a prevention duty, down 4.3% from 2022-23.
For single households owed a relief duty, this accounted for 40,950 households or 31.3%, an increase of 4.7% from 2022-23
Figure 6: Proportion of single households whose duty ended by outcome
75,740 prevention duties ended for single households in 2023-24.
53.1% of single households whose prevention duty ended secured accommodation for 6 months or more.
133,190 relief duties ended for single households in 2023-24.
35.6% of single households whose relief duty ended secured accommodation for 6 months or more.
Figure 7: Proportion of single households who secured accommodation by type
For single households whose prevention duty ended in accommodation secured, the most common type secured was self-contained accommodation in the private rented sector at 46.7%.
For single households whose relief duty ended in accommodation secured, the most common type was in supported housing or hostel accommodation at 35.0%
4. Other demographics
Ethnicity
During 2023-24 62.7% of homeless households had a White lead applicant. Compared to England population estimates White households seem to be underrepresented in the those owed a homelessness duty. Households with an Asian/Asian British lead applicant are also underrepresented as they account for 7.5% of those owed a homelessness duty. Conversely, households with a Black, Black British, Caribbean or African lead applicant are most likely to be overrepresented as they account for 11.1% of those owed a homelessness duty.
Figure 9: Age of lead applicant
In 2023-24, the most common age group of lead applicants was those aged between 25 to 34 years old, making up 29.3% households owed a prevention or relief duty.
Figure 10: Employment status of lead applicant
The most common employment status for lead applicants of households owed a prevention or relief duty was registered unemployed, accounting for 34.9% of households in 2023-24.
5. Main duty
Figure 11: Number of households assessed against a main duty decision, by outcome
Local authorities made 94,280 main homelessness duty decisions in 2023-24, up 25.1% from 2022-23.
Of these 68.9% were owed a main homelessness duty, an decrease of 2.4 percentage points compared to the proportion of main duties which were accepted in 2022-23.
6. Temporary accommodation
Figure 12: Number of households in temporary accommodation since Q2 2019, by household type
On 31 March 2024, 117,450 households were in temporary accommodation, up 12.3% from the same period last year.
Figure 13: Households in temporary accommodation on 31 March 2023, by ethnicity of lead applicant
Figure 14: Households in temporary accommodation on 31 March 2023, by age of lead applicant
Figure 15: Type of accommodation for households in temporary accommodation on 31 March 2023, by length of stay and household type
The most common length of time for households with children to be in temporary accommodation was for less than 6 months accounting for 23.4% of households with children.
The most common length of time for single households to stay in temporary accommodation was less than 6 months, accounting for 39.0% of single households.
7. Things to know about these statistics
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Statutory homelessness concerns duties placed on local authorities to take reasonable steps to prevent and relieve homelessness to eligible houses
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Each case included in this report is representative of a household, which includes households with children as well as single adult houses
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This report only covers those owed a duty between 1 April 2023 to 31 March 2024
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All figures except for temporary accommodation is a cumulative count over the period of the reported financial year, temporary accommodation is a snapshot of the last day of the year
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Data is collected via the Homelessness Case Level Information Collection, submitted quarterly by local authorities. This method of collection was introduced in 2018 alongside significant homelessness legislation; before this statutory homelessness was recorded in the P1E
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Definitions and a comprehensive breakdown of the quality assurance process can be found in the technical note
8. How these statistics can be used
These statistics can be used to:
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To count the number of homelessness duties accepted by local authorities between 1 April 2023 to 31 March 2024 and to compare local authorities and regions in England
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To assess changes in the number of homelessness duties since 2018
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To understand the causes, circumstances, and characteristics of households owed a duty for between 1 April 2023 to 31 March 2024
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To understand the number of households and the characteristics of Temporary Accommodation
These statistics cannot be used to:
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To estimate the total number of people sleeping rough
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To estimate the total number of people sofa surfing, those in recreational or organised protest, those in squats, or traveller campsites
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To estimate the households that have yet to make a homelessness application and those who aren’t eligible
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To compare with other countries in the UK
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To compare to figures on homelessness previously recorded via the P1E