Policy paper

Police grant report (England and Wales) 2026 to 2027 (accessible)

Published 28 January 2026

Applies to England and Wales

Presented to the House of Commons pursuant to section 46 of the Police Act 1996

Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed on 28 January 2026

HC 1638

1. Introduction

1.1 The majority of public funding for local policing bodies in England and Wales is provided by the Home Office and is agreed by the UK Parliament on an annual basis, through a process referred to as the “police funding settlement”. The scope of the police funding settlement includes this Police Grant Report and an accompanying Written Ministerial Statement.

1.2 The police grant report is prepared by the Secretary of State for the Home Department (the Home Secretary) under section 46(3) of the Police Act 1996 (the 1996 Act). This Report sets out the Home Secretary’s determination for 2026-27, made under section 46(2) of the 1996 Act, of the aggregate amount of grants for police purposes that she proposes to pay under section 46, and the amount of grants she proposes to pay each local policing body[footnote 1] under the same section. The aggregate amount of grants for police purposes under section 46 comprises:

  • Home Office Police Main Grant (the Police Main Grant);

  • Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) (now Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG)) Formula Funding;

  • Legacy Council Tax Grants;

  • National and International Capital City Grants;

  • Welsh Top-Up Grant;

  • Precept Grant.

1.3 As well as summarising the grants set out within the police grant report, the Written Ministerial Statement confirms wider grant funding paid to local policing bodies which does not fall under section 46 of the 1996 Act and in some cases is not provided by the Home Office. In 2026-27 this includes:

  • The Neighbourhood Policing Grant paid to local policing bodies by the Home Office under section 169 of the Criminal Justice & Public Order Act 1994, in order to deliver growth within neighbourhood policing teams.

  • Pensions grant funding paid to local policing bodies by the Home Office under section 31 of the Local Government Act 2003.

  • The National Insurance Contribution grant paid to local policing bodies by the Home Office under section 31 of the Local Government Act 2003.

  • The Common Council of the City of London (on behalf of the City of London Police) and the Greater London Authority (on behalf of the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime) receive funding from the MHCLG Local Government Finance Settlement in recognition of legacy council tax grant funding paid to these authorities.

  • Grants paid to local policing bodies in Wales by the Welsh Government.

1.4 The Written Ministerial Statement also sets out the assumed income that will be raised locally by policing bodies in 2026-27 through the council tax police precept. As the police funding settlement precedes policing bodies’ decision making on their actual precept levels, this is based on the referendum limit for policing bodies in England which determines the level of increase in Council Tax Band D bill levels above which a local referendum must be held. While policing bodies in Wales are not subject to the referendum principles that apply in England, a £15 increase has been assumed for all policing bodies based on the referendum limits set out in MHCLG’s Provisional Local Government Finance Settlement.

1.5 The Ministerial Statement also includes additional information on Home Office funding for counter-terrorism policing, as well as Home Office investment in the wider territorial policing system.

Determination under the 1996 Act

1.6 The Report states the considerations which the Home Secretary took into account in making her determination under section 46 of the 1996 Act. In determining the allocation among local policing bodies of the whole or any part of the aggregate amount of grants for police purposes, the Home Secretary may, under section 46(4) of the 1996 Act, exercise her discretion in applying such formulae or other rules as she considers appropriate.

1.7 The Home Secretary has decided to continue to apply damping in a way that ensures every local policing body receives the same percentage increase in the totality of formula funding. Therefore, the allocations of Police Main Grant and DCLG Formula Funding that were provided to local policing bodies in 2025-26 have been increased in line with the total overall increase of these grant streams in 2026-27. The Home Secretary gave consideration to whether a departure from the approach adopted since 2013-14 would promote the efficiency and effectiveness of the police but concluded that any such departure needed prior engagement with the sector. Funding allocations for both financial years are based on the Police Allocation Formula distribution from 2013-14. This Report sets out information on the formula that was applied to the Police Main Grant in 2013-14 as well as referencing separate documentation which sets out the method used to allocate 2013-14 DCLG Formula Funding.

1.8 The Home Secretary’s determination under the 1996 Act reflects her statutory duty to promote the efficiency and effectiveness of the police. Alongside this determination, the Home Secretary has prioritised the Government’s broader commitments to improve Neighbourhood Policing, reform the police to make them more productive and efficient and restore public confidence in policing.

1.9 The Home Office is delivering a Police Efficiency and Collaboration Programme, with a target of making £354 million of savings by 2028-29. These savings are to be reinvested into policing, supporting them to mitigate financial pressures and invest further in the front line.

1.10 The Government also remains committed to taking a more active role to drive improvement in police performance across forces and to uphold the highest standards across the service to ensure the public is effectively protected. A new performance function in the Home Office has been established which will use appropriate quality police data to spot trends, drive up standards, support performance improvements and consistency, and help raise public confidence in policing.

1.11 This determination has been approved by the Treasury as required by section 46(2) of the 1996 Act.

2. Aggregate amount of grants

2.1 Pursuant to section 46(2)(a) of the 1996 Act, the Home Secretary hereby determines that the aggregate amount of grants for police purposes to be made under section 46 is £10,789,643,852 comprising:

  • £5,950,010,518 in Police Main Grant;

  • £3,723,210,322 in DCLG Formula Funding;

  • £507,388,388 in Legacy Council Tax Grants;

  • £263,472,782 under an Additional Rule 2 allocation;

  • £255,173,525 in National and International Capital City Grants;

  • £81,396,440 in Welsh Top-Up Grant;

  • £8,991,877 in Precept Grant.

3. Allocation of aggregate amount of grants to be made under section 46

3.1 Pursuant to section 46(2)(b) of the 1996 Act, the Home Secretary hereby determines the aggregate amount of grants for police purposes to be paid to each local policing body in 2026-27[footnote 2] is the amount shown against its name in column (h) of the table below.

Table 1 - Allocation of grants (£) under section 46 of the 1996 Act

Police Force (a)[footnote 3],[footnote 4] (b)[footnote 5] (c)[footnote 6] (d)[footnote 7] (e)[footnote 8] (f)[footnote 9] (g)[footnote 10] (h)
Police Main Grant DCLG Formula Funding Legacy Council Tax Grants Additional Rule 2 National and International Capital City Grants Welsh Top-Up Grant Precept Grant Overall Total (a)+(b)+(c)+(d)+(e)+(f)+(g)
Avon & Somerset 150,899,131 74,727,944 14,708,861 7,798,888 - - - 248,134,824
Bedfordshire 57,703,417 30,895,811 4,637,335 3,074,025 - - - 96,310,588
Cambridgeshire 69,416,212 32,238,942 6,524,727 3,520,383 - - - 111,700,264
Cheshire 88,673,808 59,492,095 8,256,300 5,130,364 - - - 161,552,567
City of London 26,541,169 45,033,518 79,505 2,512,285 6,486,343 - 8,991,877 89,644,697
Cleveland 66,696,527 51,290,075 7,668,210 4,089,095 - - - 129,743,907
Cumbria 42,137,015 41,130,198 4,849,759 2,875,110 - - - 90,992,083
Derbyshire 89,146,491 49,985,599 8,699,994 4,820,579 - - - 152,652,664
Devon & Cornwall 147,933,230 83,678,286 15,461,371 8,008,228 - - - 255,081,116
Dorset 58,455,246 22,815,286 7,918,574 2,828,053 - - - 92,017,159
Durham 61,875,592 49,222,355 6,110,124 3,847,091 - - - 121,055,161
Dyfed-Powys 40,506,234 - - 2,414,907 - 21,112,011 - 64,033,152
Essex 147,944,189 74,003,917 13,125,335 7,663,776 - - - 242,737,217
Gloucestershire 49,019,877 25,861,694 6,082,168 2,603,708 - - - 83,567,448
Greater Manchester 328,980,433 241,321,229 25,713,688 19,701,445 - - - 615,716,794
Gwent 60,607,553 - - 3,500,804 - 14,199,450 - 78,307,807
Hampshire 172,360,080 83,489,629 12,944,122 8,843,750 - - - 277,637,582
Hertfordshire 102,778,534 48,062,197 10,228,363 5,203,526 - - - 166,272,620
Humberside 97,109,265 61,845,197 10,040,945 5,495,703 - - - 174,491,110
Kent 153,146,186 88,318,115 13,297,595 8,347,864 - - - 263,109,760
Lancashire 144,832,900 105,291,979 12,826,739 8,677,574 - - - 271,629,192
Leicestershire 93,588,999 52,553,157 8,930,921 5,069,795 - - - 160,142,871
Lincolnshire 54,968,425 26,878,365 6,833,553 2,835,766 - - - 91,516,108
Merseyside 178,348,564 150,365,967 15,640,992 11,362,307 - - - 355,717,830
Metropolitan Police 1,262,553,035 998,516,597 119,675,912 329,918 248,687,182 - - 2,629,762,643
Norfolk 72,339,946 38,104,548 9,304,523 3,814,293 - - - 123,563,310
North Wales 58,662,308 - - 3,512,592 - 26,847,881 - 89,022,781
North Yorkshire 59,905,682 35,877,655 7,897,884 3,318,389 - - - 106,999,610
Northamptonshire 61,673,412 32,008,058 6,644,453 3,252,109 - - - 103,578,032
Northumbria 161,023,445 143,154,962 8,167,709 10,502,226 - - - 322,848,342
Nottinghamshire 112,232,773 63,802,173 9,726,194 6,086,714 - - - 191,847,853
South Wales 140,558,894 - - 7,708,410 - 19,237,098 - 167,504,402
South Yorkshire 145,839,415 103,016,186 10,860,180 8,597,979 - - - 268,313,761
Staffordshire 95,541,723 52,927,365 11,964,555 5,138,835 - - - 165,572,478
Suffolk 58,666,045 30,271,613 6,785,775 3,070,568 - - - 98,794,000
Surrey 89,299,075 38,552,362 9,219,330 4,412,566 - - - 141,483,333
Sussex 140,454,059 71,319,005 13,201,621 7,326,030 - - - 232,300,714
Thames Valley 202,691,010 97,695,884 15,278,329 10,386,984 - - - 326,052,207
Warwickshire 44,711,870 23,067,371 5,154,144 2,339,991 - - - 75,273,376
West Mercia 95,486,024 57,574,157 11,975,126 5,298,780 - - - 170,334,087
West Midlands 362,818,962 239,530,308 19,025,734 20,816,278 - - - 642,191,282
West Yorkshire 248,409,530 171,918,570 16,692,905 14,526,383 - - - 451,547,388
Wiltshire 53,474,233 27,371,951 5,234,833 2,808,711 - - - 88,889,728
Total England & Wales 5,950,010,518 3,723,210,322 507,388,388 263,472,782 255,173,525 81,396,440 8,991,877 10,789,643,852

4. Considerations taken into account

4.1 Pursuant to section 46(3) of the 1996 Act, the considerations which the Home Secretary took into account in making her determination are set out in paragraphs 4.2 to 4.12 below.

Police Main Grant

4.2 In 2013-14, the distribution of the Police Main Grant to each local policing body was determined by application of the needs-based Police Allocation Formula described in Appendix A. In every year since then, each local policing body has received the same pro rata change in the Police Main Grant. The same approach is applied this year, with each local policing body receiving an equal percentage increase on their 2025-26 Police Main Grant allocations. The definitions of indicators used to calculate Police Main Grant are described in Appendix B.

DCLG Formula Funding

4.3 As in each year since 2013-14, DCLG Formula Funding will be paid to local policing bodies by the Home Secretary under section 46 of the Police Act 1996. It is therefore included in this Report. This is as a result of the previous Government’s decision that local policing bodies should be funded from outside the business rates retention scheme.

4.4 The method of distribution of the DCLG Formula Funding between local policing bodies in 2013-14 was set out in ‘Calculating the 2013-14 Formula Funding’ made by the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, which accompanied the Provisional Local Government Finance Report (England) 2013-14.[footnote 11] In every year since then, each local policing body has received the same pro rata change in the DCLG Formula Funding. The same approach is applied this year with each local policing body receiving an equal percentage increase on their 2025-26 DCLG Formula Funding allocations.

Legacy Council Tax Grants

4.5 This funding comprises Council Tax Freeze Grants from the 2011-12, 2013-14, 2014-15 and 2015-16 schemes, payable to local policing bodies (formerly police authorities) in England who chose to freeze or lower precept in those years and the Local Council Tax Support Grant which is paid to local policing bodies in England from 2013-14 following the localisation of council tax support schemes. These funding streams were previously paid to local policing bodies by DCLG under section 31 of the Local Government Act 2003. The basis for allocating these funds is the same as in previous years. The aggregate amount of these funding streams is shown in column (c) of the table in Annex E.

Additional Rule 1

4.6 The Home Secretary has decided that Police Main Grant allocations for local policing bodies in Wales shall be varied to ensure they shall receive, in Police Main Grant and local authority general grants, the same change (increase or decrease) as that applicable to local policing bodies in England. On this basis, an Additional Rule 1 adjustment has not been made for this year, as all Welsh Forces require additional funding to meet the increase applicable to policing bodies in England, which is met through the Welsh Top-Up described in paragraph 4.10. As a result, this is not included above in Table 1.

Additional Rule 2

4.7 As a first step in her ambition to simplify the current funding arrangements for policing bodies, the Home Secretary has decided to amalgamate three grants made in previous police settlements (the Officer Maintenance Ringfenced Grant, the Additional Recruitment Top-Up Grant and the Neighbourhood Policing Grant) into a single amalgamated provision for each policing body. The funding that was formerly provided under the Officer Maintenance Ringfenced Grant and Neighbourhood Policing Grant in 2025-26 has been distributed to local policing bodies in line with the funding received by local policing bodies under these grants in 2025-26. The funding that was formerly provided under the Additional Recruitment Top-Up Grant has been distributed to local policing bodies in line with their percentage share of core funding.[footnote 12]

4.8 To advance the Government’s objective of increasing Neighbourhood Policing, a proportion of the amalgamated allocation has been used to establish a Neighbourhood Policing Grant ringfence in 2026-27 (paragraph 1.3). The residue of the amalgamated funding is the additional rule 2 allocation, which is allocated over and above the core funding set out above, and over which policing bodies will have flexibility to use as they choose.

Special Payment to the Greater London Authority, on behalf of the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime and the Common Council of the City of London, on behalf of the City of London Police

4.9 The Home Secretary has decided that both the Greater London Authority, on behalf of the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime, and the Common Council of the City of London, on behalf of the City of London Police, should receive additional funding in recognition of both police forces’ distinct national and international capital city functions. These grants shall total £248,687,182 for the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime and £6,486,343 for the City of London Police.

Welsh Top-Up

4.10 The Home Secretary has further decided that in order that they shall receive the same increase in Police Main Grant and local authority general grants as that applicable to local policing bodies in England, a specific Welsh Top-Up grant shall be paid to local policing bodies in Wales. The Police and Crime Commissioner for Dyfed-Powys shall receive an additional £21,112,011, the Police and Crime Commissioner for Gwent shall receive an additional £14,199,450, the Police and Crime Commissioner for North Wales shall receive an additional £26,847,881 and the Police and Crime Commissioner for South Wales shall receive an additional £19,237,098.

Special Payment to the Common Council of the City of London, on behalf of the City of London Police

4.11 The Home Secretary has decided that the Common Council of the City of London, on behalf of the City of London Police, should receive additional funding in recognition that the Common Council of the City of London does not have a police precept and therefore will not benefit from any flexibility in council tax referendum principles in 2026-27. This Precept grant shall be £8,991,877.

Transfer of Special Branch Funding

4.12 As of 2022-23, funding for Special Branch functions in local policing bodies was transferred out of the Police Main Grant to the Counter-Terrorism Policing Grant (paid out for the safeguarding of national security made under section 48(1) of the 1996 Act). In total, £43,907,717 was transferred out of the Police Main Grant, with costs met via the Counter-Terrorism Policing Grant. To ensure fairness, each policing body will have their Police Main Grant reduced by the amount they budgeted on their Special Branch function in 2021-22. This is done through a manual adjustment to their Police Main Grant allocations and the result is shown in column (a) of Table 1, after the consideration in paragraph 4.2 has been taken into account. This adjustment is not being made public for security reasons.

5. Conclusion

5.1 This Report is made by the Home Secretary under section 46 of the Police Act 1996.

5.2 The financial year for which the Report operates is that beginning on 1 April 2026.

Rt Hon Shabana Mahmood MP

Secretary of State for the Home Department

21 January 2026

The approval of His Majesty’s Treasury has been obtained for the making of the determination specified in paragraph 2.1 and paragraph 3.1 of this Report.

Gen Kitchen and Christian Wakeford

Two of the Lords Commissioners of

His Majesty’s Treasury

26 January 2026

Appendix A Formula applied by the Home Secretary in 2013-14

A.1 The formula used for distributing Home Office Police Main Grant is the same as the Police Relative Needs Formula used to calculate allocations of DCLG Formula Funding in England and by the Welsh Government in Wales.

A.2 The first stage of the formula is to divide funds between the different activities that the police undertake. These activities, or workloads, can be broken down into five key areas:

  • Crime (of which there are seven sub-categories)

  • Incidents (e.g. public disorder)

  • Traffic (e.g. assistance at road traffic accidents)

  • Fear of Crime (e.g. public reassurance)

  • Special Events (e.g. football matches)

A.3 A portion of total funding is also distributed according to population sparsity, to address the specific needs of rural forces.

A.4 The second stage is to divide funding for each of these workloads between the 43 local policing bodies of England and Wales. In order to do this, ‘workload indicators’ are calculated to estimate how much work each police force is expected to have in each of the key areas compared to other forces. These estimates are calculated using socio-economic and demographic indicators that are correlated with each workload. Indicators of workload are used rather than data on actual recorded crime levels to account for known variations in recording practices and to avoid creating perverse incentives.

A.5 The formula consists of a basic amount per resident and a basic amount for special events, and top-ups for the five key areas, sparsity and area costs (which takes account for regional differences in costs). These are detailed below:

Basic amount

Police Basic Amount: 14.1412

Special Events Basic Amount: 0.7356

Top-ups

Police Crime Top-up 1

2.1917 multiplied by DAYTIME NET INFLOW PER RESIDENT POPULATION; plus

0.2444 multiplied by LOG OF WEIGHTED BARS PER 100 HECTARES; plus

13.4246 multiplied by INCOME SUPPORT/INCOME BASED JSA/GUARANTEE ELEMENT OF PENSION CREDIT CLAIMANTS; plus

28.2485 multiplied by SINGLE PARENT HOUSEHOLDS

Police Crime Top-up 2

0.0262 multiplied by POPULATION DENSITY; plus

84.1901 multiplied by LONG-TERM UNEMPLOYMENT-RELATED BENEFIT CLAIMANTS

Police Crime Top-up 3

0.0653 multiplied by LOG OF WEIGHTED BARS PER 100 HECTARES; plus

0.0071 multiplied by POPULATION DENSITY; plus

3.2761 multiplied by RESIDENTS IN ROUTINE/SEMI ROUTINE OCCUPATIONS OR NEVER WORKED/LONG-TERM UNEMPLOYED; plus

8.0731 multiplied by SINGLE PARENT HOUSEHOLDS; plus

0.6104 multiplied by DAYTIME NET INFLOW PER RESIDENT POPULATION

Police Crime Top-up 4

0.1430 multiplied by LOG OF WEIGHTED BARS PER 100 HECTARES; plus

6.2961 multiplied by SINGLE PARENT HOUSEHOLDS; plus 19.4672 multiplied by STUDENT HOUSING; plus

0.8907 multiplied by HARD PRESSED

Police Crime Top-up 5

0.2690 multiplied by LOG OF WEIGHTED BARS PER 100 HECTARES; plus

29.8811 multiplied by STUDENT HOUSING; plus

117.5751 multiplied by YOUNG MALE UNEMPLOYMENT-RELATED BENEFIT CLAIMANTS

Police Crime Top-up 6

4.7041 multiplied by DAYTIME NET INFLOW PER RESIDENT POPULATION; minus

0.4326 multiplied by LOG OF POPULATION SPARSITY; plus

1.1052 multiplied by LOG OF OVERCROWDED HOUSEHOLDS

Police Crime Top-up 7

3.5191 multiplied by DAYTIME NET INFLOW PER RESIDENT POPULATION; plus

22.1112 multiplied by STUDENT HOUSING; minus

2.6187 multiplied by WEALTHY ACHIEVERS

Police Incidents Top-up

35.2832 multiplied by INCOME SUPPORT/INCOME BASED JSA/GUARANTEE ELEMENT OF PENSION CREDIT CLAIMANTS; plus

9.4106 multiplied by RESIDENTS IN TERRACED ACCOMMODATION

Police Fear of Crime Top-up

0.2982 multiplied by LOG OF WEIGHTED BARS PER 100 HECTARES; plus

2.9150 multiplied by HARD PRESSED

Police Traffic Top-up

1.1149 multiplied by POPULATION SPARSITY

Police Sparsity Top-up

0.8098 multiplied by POPULATION SPARSITY

A.6 The full Police Allocation Formula used to calculate the amount of Police Main Grant for a local policing body is given below:

Police Allocation Formula to be applied by the Home Secretary

(a) PROJECTED POPULATION IN 2013 multiplied by the result of:

POLICE BASIC AMOUNT; plus

POLICE CRIME TOP-UP 1; plus

POLICE CRIME TOP-UP 2; plus

POLICE CRIME TOP-UP 3; plus

POLICE CRIME TOP-UP 4; plus

POLICE CRIME TOP-UP 5; plus

POLICE CRIME TOP-UP 6; plus

POLICE CRIME TOP-UP 7; plus

POLICE INCIDENTS TOP-UP; plus

POLICE FEAR OF CRIME TOP-UP; plus

POLICE TRAFFIC TOP-UP; plus

POLICE SPARSITY TOP-UP.

(b) PROJECTED DAYTIME POPULATION IN 2013 multiplied by SPECIAL EVENTS BASIC AMOUNT;

(c) The results of (a) and (b) are added together and the result is multiplied by AREA COST ADJUSTMENT FOR POLICE;

(d) The result of (c) is then multiplied by POLICE GRANT RATE;

(e) The result of (d) is then multiplied by the scaling factor given in Appendix C.

(f) The result of (e) is multiplied by the result of £4,540,433,501 divided by the sum for all local policing bodies of the result of (e).

A.7 A fuller explanation of the Police Allocation Formula can be found in the ‘Guide to the Police Allocation Formula’ on the Home Office website.[footnote 13]

Appendix B Definition of indicators used to calculate Police Main Grant

Unless otherwise stated, data used to construct indicators for the calculation of Police Main Grant are those available to the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government (‘the Secretary of State’) on 1 October 2012 concerning the constituent authorities of the local policing body providing policing services relevant to the calculation of Police Main Grant.

Constituent authorities for this purpose, and in the definition of population density below, are the relevant billing authorities (in whole or in part) whose area is contained within the area of the local policing body providing policing services. Each of the following is a billing authority a) in England, a district council, a London Borough Council, the Common Council of the City of London, the Council of the Isles of Scilly and a county council which has the functions of a district council; and b) in Wales, a county council and a county borough council.

Data used to construct indicators for this purpose for constituent authorities which are reorganised authorities comprise such data available, unless otherwise stated, on 1 October 2012 concerning the predecessor authorities, or parts of the predecessor authorities, as the Secretary of State considers appropriate. A reorganised authority is an authority subject to a structural, or a structural and boundary change which came into effect on 1 April 1995, 1 April 1996, 1 April 1997, 1 April 1998, 1 April 1999, or 1 April 2000 and which is made by an order under section 17 of the Local Government Act 1992 or under the Local Government Act 1972, as amended by section 1 of the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994, or those where boundaries have been altered under section 323 of the Greater London Authority Act 1999.

In this section a reference to “the local policing body” is to be read, in the case of the Metropolitan Police District, as a reference to the Greater London Authority.

PROJECTED POPULATION IN 2013

The projected total resident population in 2013, as estimated by the Office for National Statistics and published on 28 September 2012 for England and by the Welsh Government and published on 27 May 2010 for Wales.

DAYTIME NET-INFLOW PER RESIDENT POPULATION

THE DAYTIME NET-INFLOW (as defined below) divided by the total resident population of the local policing body, calculated using information from the 2001 Census.

DAYTIME NET-INFLOW

The number of persons working but not resident in the local policing body’s area minus the number of persons resident in but working outside the body’s area, as estimated by the Secretary of State using information from the 2001 Census.

LOG OF WEIGHTED BARS PER 100 HECTARES

The natural logarithm[footnote 14] of:

The number of units that are bars (defined as Standard Industrial Classification 2007 (SIC) 56.30- beverage serving activities), measured at the Community Safety Partnerships (CSP) level, as estimated by the Secretary of State, based on information provided by the Office for National Statistics from the March Inter-departmental Business Register; divided by the number of hectares in the CSP, using information from the 2001 Census which is divided by 100; the result is then multiplied by the number of units that are bars within CSP level;

the above is then divided by the number of bars within the force level area and then summed to the force level area.

INCOME SUPPORT/ INCOME BASED JOBSEEKER’S ALLOWANCE / GUARANTEE ELEMENT OF PENSION CREDIT

The average number of Income Support/ Income based Jobseekers Allowance/ Guarantee Element of Pension Credit claimants, over a period between:

May 2009 and February 2012, using twelve quarterly scans for this period for Income Support/ Guarantee Element of Pension Credit claimants, and

August 2009 and August 2011, using scans made at the end of August of each year for Income based Jobseekers Allowance claimants,

as estimated by the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, divided by the resident population at 30 June 2011, as estimated by the Office for National Statistics.

SINGLE PARENT HOUSEHOLDS

The proportion of households which are lone parent households with dependant children, calculated using information from the 2001 Census.

POPULATION DENSITY

The resident population at 30 June 2011, as estimated by the Office for National Statistics, divided by the area of the local policing body in hectares, using information from the 2001 Census.

The number of claimants of unemployment-related benefits, currently Jobseeker’s Allowance and National Insurance credits, with a duration of unemployment of more than one year, averaged over the period between May 2009 and April 2012, calculated using monthly information provided by the Office for National Statistics through NOMIS, divided by the sum of the number of resident males aged 18-64 years and the number of resident females aged 18-59 years at 30 June 2011, as estimated by the Office for National Statistics.

RESIDENTS IN ROUTINE/ SEMI-ROUTINE OCCUPATIONS OR NEVER WORKED/ LONG-TERM UNEMPLOYED

The proportion of residents in routine or semi-routine occupations or who have never worked or are long-term unemployed (National Statistics – Socio Economic Classifications (NS-SEC) 6, 7 and 8), calculated using information from the 2001 Census.

STUDENT HOUSING

The proportion of households that contain all students, calculated using information from the 2001 Census.

HARD PRESSED POPULATION

The proportion of household residents living in areas classified as ACORN category ‘Hard Pressed’, as defined in ACORN data produced by CACI Limited, based upon information from the 2001 Census and updated lifestyle data, and released in 2012.

The number of claimants of unemployment-related benefits, currently Jobseeker’s Allowance and National Insurance credits, who were male and aged under 25 years, averaged over the period between May 2009 and April 2012, calculated using monthly information provided by the Office for National Statistics through NOMIS, divided by the sum of the number of resident males aged 18-64 years and the number of resident females aged 18-59 years at 30 June 2011, as estimated by the Office for National Statistics.

LOG OF POPULATION SPARSITY

The natural logarithm of POPULATION SPARSITY (as defined below).

POPULATION SPARSITY

The population sparsity of each local policing body measured at Output Area level.

The sum of:

(i) 2 multiplied by the resident population of those Output Areas within the area of the local policing body at the 2001 Census with 0.5 or less residents per hectare, divided by the total resident population of the body, calculated using information from the 2001 Census; and

(ii) The resident population of those Output Areas within the area of the local policing body at the 2001 Census with more than 0.5 but less than or equal to 4 residents per hectare, divided by the total resident population of the body, calculated using information from the 2001 Census.

Output Areas were introduced by the Office for National Statistics as the smallest units of output for the 2001 census. In England and Wales they have a minimum size of 100 residents and 40 households. They are based on census day postcodes and fit within the boundaries of 2003 statistical wards (and parishes).

LOG OF OVERCROWDED HOUSEHOLDS

The natural logarithm of:

The proportion of overcrowded households with an occupancy rating of “-1 or less”, calculated using information from the 2001 Census.

WEALTHY ACHIEVERS POPULATION

The proportion of household residents living in areas classified as ACORN category ‘Wealthy Achievers’, as defined in ACORN data produced by CACI Limited, based upon information from the 2001 Census and updated lifestyle data, and released in 2012.

TERRACED HOUSEHOLDS

The proportion of households which are terraced, including end terraced, calculated using information from the 2001 Census.

PROJECTED DAYTIME POPULATION IN 2013

PROJECTED POPULATION IN 2013 (as defined above) plus DAYTIME NET-INFLOW (as defined above).

POLICE GRANT RATE

The proportion of police revenue expenditure in England and Wales for 2013-2014, as estimated by the Home Secretary, which is to be met directly by the aggregate of police grant calculated under Appendix A of the Police Grant Report (England and Wales) 2013-2014.

AREA COST ADJUSTMENT FOR POLICE

A factor calculated to reflect differences in the cost of providing police services across the country. The factor is given in Appendix D. It is generally based on information derived from the following sources: the 2009, 2010 and 2011 Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings provided by the Office for National Statistics; Subjective Analysis Return 2005-06 and 2007-08; Base Estimate Returns 1992-93; rateable values per square metre for offices in administrative areas in England and Wales from the VOA statistical release Business Floorspace 2012; gross non-domestic rates and increases and reductions in rate yields, as supplied by authorities to the Secretary of State on the National Non-Domestic Rates Provisional Contributions Return 2012-2013; and the total resident population as at 30 June 2011, as estimated by the Office for National Statistics.

Appendix C Scaling factor

The scaling factor used in paragraph 6(e) of Appendix A of this report is:

1.000009572949550

Appendix D Area Cost Adjustment factors

Area Cost Adjustment Factor[footnote 15]

Local Policing Body Factor
Avon and Somerset 1.032
Bedfordshire 1.0507
Cambridgeshire 1.0424
Cheshire 1.0137
Common Council of the City of London 1.5203
Essex 1.035
Gloucestershire 1.0223
Greater London Authority 1.177
Greater Manchester 1.0194
Hampshire 1.0461
Hertfordshire 1.0924
Kent 1.0133
Merseyside 1.006
Northamptonshire 1.0131
Nottinghamshire 1.0115
Suffolk 1.0027
Surrey 1.1336
Sussex 1.0128
Thames Valley 1.0971
Warwickshire 1.0245
West Midlands 1.0134
West Yorkshire 1.0031
Wiltshire 1.025

Appendix E Legacy Council Tax Grants

Allocation of legacy council tax grants (£)

Police Force (a)[footnote 16] (b) (c)
  Allocation from Legacy Council Tax Freeze Grants Allocation from Local Council Tax Support Grant Total Legacy Council Tax Grants (a) + (b)  
Avon & Somerset 3,330,966 11,377,895 14,708,861  
Bedfordshire 750,940 3,886,395 4,637,335  
Cambridgeshire 1,702,271 4,822,456 6,524,727  
Cheshire 1,946,950 6,309,350 8,256,300  
City of London - 79,505 79,505  
Cleveland 799,988 6,868,222 7,668,210  
Cumbria 857,812 3,991,947 4,849,759  
Derbyshire 1,354,010 7,345,984 8,699,994  
Devon & Cornwall 2,392,253 13,069,118 15,461,371  
Dorset 1,909,168 6,009,406 7,918,574  
Durham 727,984 5,382,140 6,110,124  
Essex 2,132,981 10,992,354 13,125,335  
Gloucestershire 1,603,689 4,478,479 6,082,168  
Greater Manchester 4,158,007 21,555,681 25,713,688  
Hampshire 2,519,945 10,424,177 12,944,122  
Hertfordshire 3,685,064 6,543,299 10,228,363  
Humberside 1,699,837 8,341,108 10,040,945  
Kent 2,203,492 11,094,103 13,297,595  
Lancashire 1,714,097 11,112,642 12,826,739  
Leicestershire 1,910,530 7,020,391 8,930,921  
Lincolnshire 1,058,666 5,774,887 6,833,553  
Merseyside 1,537,588 14,103,404 15,640,992  
Metropolitan Police - 119,675,912 119,675,912  
Norfolk 1,427,896 7,876,627 9,304,523  
North Yorkshire 2,151,776 5,746,108 7,897,884  
Northamptonshire 1,591,048 5,053,405 6,644,453  
Northumbria 1,301,034 6,866,675 8,167,709  
Nottinghamshire 1,332,100 8,394,094 9,726,194  
South Yorkshire 1,268,941 9,591,239 10,860,180  
Staffordshire 3,541,087 8,423,468 11,964,555  
Suffolk 1,894,846 4,890,929 6,785,775  
Surrey 2,460,826 6,758,504 9,219,330  
Sussex 3,061,988 10,139,633 13,201,621  
Thames Valley 3,372,417 11,905,912 15,278,329  
Warwickshire 1,244,413 3,909,731 5,154,144  
West Mercia 2,775,206 9,199,920 11,975,126  
West Midlands 1,991,344 17,034,390 19,025,734  
West Yorkshire 2,225,828 14,467,077 16,692,905  
Wiltshire 1,392,837 3,841,996 5,234,833  
Total 73,029,825 434,358,563 507,388,388  
  1. Police and Crime Commissioners, the Greater Manchester, York and North Yorkshire, South Yorkshire and West Yorkshire Mayors with PCC functions, the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime and the Common Council of the City of London (which retains its role in providing governance of the City of London Police) are referred to collectively as “local policing bodies”, and that term is used in this Report – see section 101(1) of the Police Act 1996. 

  2. Under section 46(2) of the 1996 Act any determination may be varied by further determinations under that subsection. 

  3. Under section 46(2) of the 1996 Act any determination may be varied by further determinations under that subsection. 

  4. The basis for this allocation is set out under paragraphs 4.2 and 4.12 below. 

  5. This is an amount calculated under paragraph 4.3 below. 

  6. The basis for this allocation is set out under paragraph 4.5 below. 

  7. This is an amount calculated under paragraph 4.7 below. 

  8. This is an amount calculated under paragraph 4.9 below. 

  9. This is an amount calculated under paragraph 4.10 below. 

  10. This is an amount calculated under paragraph 4.11 below. 

  11. https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20140505105851mp_/http://www.local.communities.gov.uk/finance/1314/CalcFFs.pdf 

  12. Core funding for local policing bodies consists of the Police Main Grant, DCLG Formula Funding Grant and Welsh Top-Up Grant noted in Section 4, and the grants paid to local policing bodies in Wales by the Welsh Government noted in Section 1. 

  13. https://www.gov.uk/guidance/guide-to-the-police-allocation-formula 

  14. The natural logarithm is also known as the Napierian log or log to the base e. 

  15. All local policing bodies listed have Area Cost Adjustment Factors of greater than 1 which indicates labour (and materials) are more expensive than the national average. Those local policing bodies not included have Area Cost Adjustment Factors of 1 or lower. 

  16. The Common Council of the City of London (on behalf of the City of London Police) and the Greater London Authority (on behalf of the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime) receive funding from the MHCLG Local Government Finance Settlement in recognition of legacy council tax grant funding paid to these authorities.