Official Statistics

Main findings: childcare providers and inspections as at 31 August 2025

Published 19 November 2025

Applies to England

This release marks the final official statistics based on Ofsted’s previous inspection frameworks, which made an overall effectiveness judgement. Following our recent consultation on improving the way we inspect education, all future official statistics will reflect the renewed framework.

Reports and data produced under the previous frameworks will remain available on the Ofsted statistics website for reference.

This is the main findings report for the childcare providers and inspections as at 31 August 2025 release. The following are also available:

  • underlying data

  • methodology

  • pre-release access list

Summary

This release includes:

  • the number of Ofsted-registered childcare providers on 31 August 2025 and their most recent inspection outcomes

  • data on inspections and regulatory activity carried out until 31 August 2025

Summary of findings

On 31 August 2025:

  • 60,000 childcare providers were registered with Ofsted, down by 1,270 (2%) since 31 August 2024. Most of this decline was due to a continued fall in the number of childminders.

  • The number of childcare on non-domestic premises providers had increased by 260 (1%) since 31 August 2024, to 27,500 providers. This is the second successive academic year in which there has been an increase.

  • 1.29 million childcare places were offered by providers registered on the Early Years Register (EYR), up by 17,700 (1%) since 31 August 2024. Most of this increase was due to a rise in the number of places offered by childcare on non-domestic premises providers, such as nurseries and pre-schools.

  • 98% of childcare providers had been judged good or outstanding at their most recent inspection, an increase of less than 1 percentage point since 31 August 2024.

Introduction

The early years and childcare sector is primarily made up of private nurseries, pre-schools and childminders. The majority of childcare provision is registered directly with Ofsted, and the aggregated figures represent this. Data on provision registered with childminder agencies can be found in the childminder agencies section of this page.

In this publication, we refer to 4 types of early years provision:

Childminders

These are people who look after children for payment or reward. Childminders have the option to register either with Ofsted or with a childminder agency.

In this report, ‘childminders’ includes childminders both with and without domestic premises; they are called ‘childminders’ and ‘childminders without domestic premises’ respectively in data files.

Childcare on non-domestic premises

These are nurseries, pre-schools, holiday clubs and other group-based settings.

Home childcarers

These are individuals who care for children wholly or mainly in the child’s own home (for example, nannies).

Childcare on domestic premises

These are providers where 5 or more people look after children together in a home that is not the child’s. Providers of childcare on domestic premises have the option to register either with Ofsted or with a childminder agency.

Further information about provider types is available in the glossary.

Childcare in early years is also provided in the schools sector. It is offered in state-funded schools and independent schools. For more information, see the early years provision in the schools sector section of this page.

Providers, places and registers

Number of providers

There were 60,000 childcare providers registered with Ofsted on 31 August 2025, down by 1,270 (2%) since last year.

The percentage decrease in the number of providers in 2024/25 is consistent with the previous academic year (2023/24).

Figure 1: Childcare providers registered with Ofsted as at 31 August 2025, by provider type

1. See Notes for rounding guidelines.
View data in an accessible table format.

Joiners and leavers in the childcare sector over time

The number of active providers on our registers has been falling for over a decade. This is because more providers are leaving the childcare sector than joining (see Figure 2) and is mainly due to a fall in the number of childminders.[footnote 1]

In 2024/25, 7,240 childcare providers left the sector and 5,980 joined, giving a net decrease of 1,270 providers. Most of this decline was due to a continued fall in the number of childminders.

In 2024/25, 1,640 childminders joined Ofsted’s registers while 2,640 left, giving a net decrease of 1,000 (4%), which was similar to the decrease seen last year.

The number of childcare on non-domestic premises providers registered has increased by 260 (1%) since 31 August 2024.

Figure 2: Joiners and leavers in the childcare sector, by academic year

1. Most leavers are provider resignations, and most joiners are new provider registrations. Some will be providers moving registers from the EYR to the Childcare Register (CR) or resigning from one register but remaining on the other.
View data in an accessible table format.

Places

On 31 August 2025, there were 1.29 million childcare places offered by providers registered on the EYR, up by 17,700 (1%) since last year.

1.14 million of these childcare places were offered by providers of childcare on non-domestic premises, up by 24,000 (2%) since last year.

Data on places is reported for the 46,600 providers registered on the EYR and is first gathered at registration and updated at inspection.

The number of childcare places has not changed at the same rate as the number of providers. This is because the declining number of providers is mostly due to the falling number of childminders, and childminders offer fewer childcare places than other providers on average. While the number of providers has decreased by 2% since 31 August 2024, the number of places has increased by 1%.

For methodological notes on places data, see the methodology and quality report that accompanies this release.

Figure 3: Number of childcare places offered by providers on the EYR as at 31 August 2025, by provider type

1. See Notes for rounding guidelines.
2. Places include children up to their eighth birthday where providers are registered on both the EYR and the CR.
View data in an accessible table format.

Registers

On 31 August 2025, 46,600 (78%) of Ofsted-registered childcare providers were on the EYR. The remaining 22% were only registered on the CR.

Childcare providers can be registered on one or more of the following registers:

  • Early Years Register (EYR)

  • Childcare Register (CR), which is divided into 2 parts:

    • compulsory

    • voluntary

Further information about these registers is provided in the glossary.

Inspections and regulatory activity between 1 September 2024 and 31 August 2025

Around 9,540 events were full inspections of providers registered on the EYR. The remaining 1,640 inspections of providers registered on the EYR were inspections of out-of-school settings or of providers with no children on roll at the time of inspection.

Figure 4: Inspections and regulatory activity between 1 September 2024 and 31 August 2025

1. See Notes for rounding guidelines.
2. Our agreement with the government is to inspect 10% of providers on the CR each financial year. The number of CR inspections reported above is by academic year and it may therefore not equal 10%. The regulatory events include face-to-face events as well as remote events via telephone call.
View data in an accessible table format.

Outcomes of full EYR inspections between 1 September 2024 and 31 August 2025

Of the 9,540 full inspections of providers registered on the EYR carried out since 1 September 2024, 90% resulted in a judgement of good or outstanding.

Of the inspections that were previously judged requires improvement or inadequate, 78% improved to good or outstanding at their next full inspection.

Key judgements

As part of a full inspection under the education inspection framework (EIF), an early years provider is graded on 4 key judgements:

  • quality of education

  • behaviour and attitudes

  • personal development

  • leadership and management

Of the full EYR inspections carried out since 1 September 2024, 90% resulted in a judgement of either good or outstanding overall. All these inspections were good or outstanding for their quality of education and behaviour and attitudes.

Figure 5: Overall effectiveness and key judgement outcomes of full EYR inspections carried out between 1 September 2024 and 31 August 2025

1. Percentages are rounded and may not add to 100.
View data in an accessible table format.

Providers’ inspection outcomes are likely to vary, depending on their previous overall effectiveness judgement. Providers that were previously judged good or outstanding were more likely to receive a good or outstanding judgement at their next inspection. Therefore, the overall effectiveness profile of providers may vary year on year, depending on which have been selected for inspection in the year to date.

Of the full EYR inspections carried out, 2,490 (26%) were first inspections, and 820 (9%) were inspections of providers previously judged requires improvement or inadequate.

Safeguarding

Of the 9,540 full EYR inspections carried out since 1 September 2024, 9,160 (96%) resulted in a judgement of effective for safeguarding.

While inspectors do not give a separate grade for safeguarding practice, there is a written judgement in the inspection report on whether arrangements for safeguarding children are effective.

Most recent inspections of providers on the EYR

Of the EYR providers that have received a full inspection, 98% were judged good or outstanding at their most recent one. This is an increase of less than 1 percentage point since 31 August 2024.

Changes to the proportion of providers judged good and outstanding are influenced by providers previously judged requires improvement or inadequate:

  • improving at their next inspection to good or outstanding

  • ceasing to provide childcare, through resignation or cancellation

On 31 August 2025, 36,000 (77%) of eligible providers on the EYR had received a full inspection.

Childminder agencies

Childminders and childcare on domestic premises providers can choose to register with Ofsted or with a childminder agency.

Ofsted inspects childminder agencies. The childminder agencies are responsible for carrying out annual quality assurance visits to the providers who are registered with them.

Childminder agencies are only eligible for inspection when they have providers on roll. There are only 2 overall effectiveness inspection outcomes: effective and ineffective. On 31 August 2025, there were 8 childminder agencies registered with Ofsted. Of these, 4 had providers on roll at the time and were therefore eligible for inspection. Of these, all have been inspected and were judged to be effective.

Early years provision in the schools sector

Early years provision can also be offered by state-funded and independent schools. For more information on school inspections and outcomes, see our statistics on state-funded school inspections and outcomes. For more information on non-association independent school inspections and outcomes, see our statistics on non-association independent schools.

Please note that Ofsted only inspects non-association independent schools. The Independent Schools Inspectorate inspects association independent schools.

Notes

We explain the main uses of this data and the arrangements for quality assurance, and provide further contextual information, in the methodology and quality report accompanying this release.

The methodology and quality report also provides information on the strengths and limitations of the statistics.

Rounding

Numbers in this report are rounded as follows:

  • numbers under 100 are not rounded

  • numbers between 100 and 1,000 are rounded to 2 significant figures

  • numbers over 1,000 are rounded to 3 significant figures

Education inspection framework

On 1 September 2019, we began inspecting under the EIF. The EIF helps to support consistency across inspections of early years and childcare providers, maintained schools, academies, non-association independent schools, and further education and skills providers in England. We evaluate the overall quality and standards of the early years provision in line with the principles and requirements of the early years foundation stage statutory framework. Inspectors judge the overall effectiveness of the early years provision, taking into account 4 judgements:

  • quality of education

  • behaviour and attitudes

  • personal development

  • effectiveness of leadership and management

Glossary

Definitions of terms are in our statistical glossary.

Further information

We publish the following information on the inspection of early years providers:

Contact for comments or feedback

If you have any comments or feedback on this publication, contact Alison Merrett on 03000 130729 or Alison.Merrett@ofsted.gov.uk, or the early years data and analysis team at childcaredataqueries@ofsted.gov.uk.

Annual report

We will publish findings from our forthcoming annual report on 3 December 2025.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to the following for their contribution to this statistical release: Richard Smith, Chloe Ainger, Nustret Hoxia, Adam Sutton and Venkata Madupuru.

Annex: data tables for figures

This section contains the underlying data in an accessible table format for all figures.

Data for Figure 1: Childcare providers registered with Ofsted as at 31 August 2025, by provider type

Provider type Number of providers on 31 August 2025 Change since 31 August 2024
Childcare on non-domestic premises 27,500 +260
Childminders 25,000 -1,000
Home childcarers 7,230 -530
Childcare on domestic premises 210 -2

See Figure 1.

Data for Figure 2: Joiners and leavers in the childcare sector, by academic year

Year Joiners Leavers Total number of providers
2020/21 6,990 11,300 71,000
2021/22 5,690 11,100 65,600
2022/23 6,330 9,650 62,300
2023/24 6,490 7,520 61,200
2024/25 5,980 7,240 60,000

See Figure 2.

Data for Figure 3: Number of childcare places offered by providers on the EYR as at 31 August 2025, by provider type

Provider type Number of places on 31 August 2025 % of total places on the EYR
All providers 1.29 million 100%
Childcare on non-domestic premises 1.14 million 88%
Childminders 152,000 12%
Childcare on domestic premises 5,140 less than 1%

See Figure 3.

Data for Figure 4: Inspections and regulatory activity between 1 September 2024 and 31 August 2025

Activity type Number of events Details
EYR inspections 11,200 9,540 (85%) of these were full inspections. 1,010 (9%) were visits to providers providing out-of-school day care. 640 (6%) were visits to providers with no children on roll.
CR inspections 1,160 Approximately 5 out of 10 of these were visits to home childcarers.
Registration visits 3,000 56% of these were visits to prospective childminders intending to register on the EYR or CR. 26% were visits to childcare on non-domestic premises providers. 17% were visits to home childcarers. 1% were visits to childcare on domestic premises providers.
Regulatory events 9,620 63% of these related to childcare on non-domestic premises providers.

See Figure 4.

Data for Figure 5: Overall effectiveness and key judgement outcomes of full EYR inspections carried out between 1 September 2024 and 31 August 2025

Number of inspections % providers judged outstanding % providers judged good % providers judged requires improvement % providers judged inadequate
Overall effectiveness 9,540 10 80 5 4
Quality of education 9,540 10 81 6 3
Behaviour and attitudes 9,540 11 81 5 3
Personal development 9,540 10 80 5 4
Effectiveness of leadership and management 9,540 10 80 5 4

See Figure 5.

  1. A focus on childminders, Ofsted, September 2023.