Accredited official statistics

Statutory homelessness in England: January to March 2024 infographic

Published 8 August 2024

Applies to England

This document summarises the key findings from the quarterly statistics release for statutory homelessness assessments and activities in England covering the period between 1 January to 31 March 2024.

1. Homelessness duties

94,560 households have had initial assessments, an increase of 10.8% since last year, and an increase of 4.1% since last quarter.

Chart 1 shows the number of accepted prevention and relief duties from 2019

38,440 households were owed a prevention duty, 48,080 households were owed a relief duty.

Chart 2 shows the household characteristics of those owed a prevention or relief duty

Chart 3 shows the mains reason for loss of settled home of those owed a prevention or relief duty this quarter

The prevention duty ended for 34,550 households, the relief duty ended for 53,210 households.

Chart 4 shows outcomes of duty end for those owed a prevention or relief duty

17,120 households were owed a main duty, up 19.8% from last year

Chart 5 shows the outcomes of main duty assessments

2. Temporary accommodation

Chart 6 shows the number of households in temporary accommodation on the last day of the quarter

117,450 Households in temporary accommodation on 31 March 2024, an increase of 12.3% since last year, and up 4.3% since last quarter.

Map 1 shows the number of households in temporary accommodation per thousand households across England

A total of 151,630 dependent children were living in temporary accommodation on 31 March 2024.

Single households increased by 3.8% and households with children increased by 4.6% from the previous quarter.

There were 17.8 households living in temporary accommodation per 1,000 households in London, compared with 2.5 households per 1000 in the Rest of England.

2.1 Types of temporary accommodation

81.7% of households with children were in self-contained accommodation (private sector, nightly paid, or local authority or housing association accommodation).

17,750 households were living in B&B accommodation, up 30.0% from last year. 68.7% of these households were single households, up 24.5% from last year.

5,550 households with dependent children were in in B&Bs, up 44.2% from the same date last year.

Of these, 3,420 had been resident for more than the statutory limit of 6 weeks, up 89.0% from last year and up 9.3% from the previous quarter.

3. Notes on usage

  • Statutory homelessness concerns duties placed on local authorities to take reasonable steps to prevent and relieve homelessness to eligible houses.
  • Each case included in this report is representative of a household, which includes households with children as well as single adult houses.
  • This report only covers those owed a duty between 1 January and 31 March 2024.
  • All figures except for temporary accommodation is a cumulative count over the period of the reported quarter, temporary accommodation is a snapshot of the last day of the quarter.
  • 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.
  • Definitions and a comprehensive breakdown of the quality assurance process can be found in the technical notes.

4. Uses and limitations

These statistics can be used:

  • To count the number of homelessness duties accepted by local authorities for this quarter and to compare local authorities and regions in England
  • To assess changes in the number of homelessness duties since 2018
  • To understand the causes, circumstances, and characteristics of households owed a duty for this quarter
  • To understand the number of households and the characteristics of Temporary Accommodation

These statistics are not suitable:

  • To estimate the total number of people sleeping rough
  • To estimate the total number of people sofa surfing, those in recreational or organised protest, those in squats, or traveller campsites
  • To estimate the households that have yet to make a homelessness application and those who aren’t eligible
  • To compare with other countries in the UK
  • To compare to figures recorded via the P1E

5. Further information