Care Leavers at University UK 2026: Full Funding Rights and Bursaries
Radu Danila • 28 May 2026
If you have been in care at any point before your 18th birthday and you are now thinking about university, the funding system is set up to give you more support than most students see. The problem is that almost none of it is automatic. Each piece is a separate application, often to a different organisation, and the offers vary by where you grew up.
This is the consolidated picture: who counts as a care leaver in 2026, what you are entitled to from your local authority and your university, how Student Finance treats you differently, and the order to apply for everything before your course starts. Nothing here is theoretical. Every figure traces to either statute or published policy. The barriers are usually paperwork and timing, not eligibility.
Quick answer: what does care leaver status unlock for university in 2026?
In 2026, care leavers going to university in England qualify for:
- A statutory £2,000 Higher Education Bursary from their local authority (paid on top of Student Finance)
- Independent student status with Student Finance, so your maintenance loan is assessed on your own income only
- A care leaver bursary from your university (typically £1,000 to £3,000 a year for the duration of your course)
- A pathway plan with your local authority until age 25, including ongoing accommodation support
- Priority access to university hardship funds, often with dedicated care leaver pots
- Year-round accommodation (not just term-time), where the university provides it
The total support stack can reach £20,000 a year for a care leaver studying away from home, before counting any of the standard Student Finance package.
Who counts as a care leaver
The definitions matter because each benefit attaches to a specific category. The three main groups are:
- Eligible child: a young person aged 16 or 17 who has been looked after by the local authority for at least 13 weeks since the age of 14, and is still in care
- Relevant child: a young person aged 16 or 17 who meets the same care criteria but has left care
- Former relevant child: a person aged 18 to 25 who was a relevant child, an eligible child, or in care at age 16
Most university-bound care leavers fall into the former relevant child category by the time they apply. This is the category that triggers the Higher Education Bursary and most of the related support.
You also qualify as a care leaver if you were:
- Adopted from care
- Placed for foster care or kinship care with a parental responsibility order
The Stand Alone Pledge and the Buttle UK Quality Mark are voluntary commitments universities make to support estranged students and care leavers. They are useful signposts to find supportive institutions, but they are not the same as the statutory rights.
The £2,000 Higher Education Bursary from your local authority
Every English local authority is legally required to pay a Higher Education Bursary of at least £2,000 to a former relevant child who starts a higher education course. The bursary is paid as a one-off lump sum at the start of the course, on top of the standard Student Finance package.
Some local authorities pay more than the statutory £2,000. The variation across England is wide. Examples in 2025/26:
| Local authority approach | Typical bursary |
|---|---|
| Statutory minimum (most LAs) | £2,000 lump sum |
| Enhanced bursary (large city LAs) | £2,000 to £3,000 per year |
| Annual top-up across years | £2,000 plus £500 to £1,000 each subsequent year |
| Additional moving-in grant | £500 to £1,500 one-off for setting up accommodation |
Your specific bursary depends on the local authority that originally took you into care, not the one where you currently live. If you moved between local authorities while in care, the duty usually sits with the last one to have looked after you for at least 13 weeks.
To claim, contact your Personal Advisor or your local authority's Leaving Care Team. Ask in writing for confirmation of your eligibility and the amount you are entitled to. Apply at least three months before your course starts.
Independent student status with Student Finance
Care leavers automatically qualify as independent students for Student Finance purposes. This is a significant practical advantage. Independent student status means:
- Your maintenance loan is assessed on your own income only, not on any parent or guardian income
- You qualify for the full maintenance loan if you meet the band criteria
- You do not need to provide parental income evidence on the application
For 2026/27, this means a care leaver studying outside London and not living with parents can qualify for the full £10,227 maintenance loan, with no income taper applied for parental earnings. In London, the figure rises to £13,762.
The application requires you to tick the "I am an independent student" box on the standard 2026/27 Student Finance form and provide evidence. Standard evidence includes a letter from your local authority confirming care leaver status, dates of care, and the legal category you fall into.
For the broader picture on living arrangements and the maintenance loan, the Maintenance Loan If You Live With Parents UK 2026/27 guide sets the bands in context.
University care leaver bursaries and support
Most UK universities offer a dedicated care leaver bursary or scholarship on top of the local authority Higher Education Bursary. The amounts and structures vary, but the most common shapes are:
- A renewable annual bursary of £1,000 to £3,000 for each year of your course
- A one-off welcome grant of £500 to £1,500 for setting up at university
- Free or subsidised year-round accommodation (term-time and vacation)
- Priority access to the university's hardship fund
- A named Care Leaver Champion or dedicated support contact
Year-round accommodation is one of the most practical benefits. Most undergraduate accommodation contracts run for 40 to 44 weeks. Care leavers often have nowhere obvious to return to during vacations. Universities with strong care leaver support fill this gap by offering 52-week contracts at the standard rate, or by providing the vacation weeks for free.
Applying for the university bursary is a separate process from the Student Finance application. Most universities ask you to register your care leaver status with the student support office during the offer-holder period, often six months before the course starts. Late registration is usually accepted but may reduce the bursary amount or the accommodation options.
How to actually apply for everything, in order
Care leaver funding is a stack of separate applications. The recommended order is:
At least six months before your course starts: contact your local authority Personal Advisor and request confirmation of care leaver status in writing, with a copy of your dates of care.
Five to six months before: apply for the local authority Higher Education Bursary. The form is short. Submit the supporting documents your Personal Advisor provides.
Five to six months before: complete the Student Finance England application for 2026/27. Tick the independent student box. Upload your care leaver status confirmation as evidence.
Four to five months before: contact the student support office at your offer-holder university. Register your care leaver status and ask about:
- The university's named care leaver bursary or scholarship
- Year-round accommodation eligibility
- Priority access to the hardship fund
- A named contact for ongoing support
Two to three months before: confirm everything in writing. Make sure each amount, deadline, and contact name is logged.
First week of term: introduce yourself to the named Care Leaver Champion at your university. Most universities run a small care leaver welcome session in the first fortnight.
First term: if there is a shortfall, apply for the university hardship fund. The Hardship Fund UK Universities 2026 guide covers the application in detail. Care leaver status is treated as a priority category.
The whole process takes around 15 to 20 hours across six months. The combined funding is in the range of £15,000 to £25,000 a year depending on your local authority, university, and accommodation needs, before factoring in your maintenance loan.
What support continues during the course
Care leaver support does not end at enrolment. The Children Act 1989 (and subsequent amendments) requires local authorities to keep providing support to former relevant children until age 25 through the pathway plan.
Practical implications for the duration of your degree:
- Your Personal Advisor remains available for guidance until age 25
- The local authority can support specific course-related costs (a laptop, a placement deposit, exam fees) on top of the bursary
- Some local authorities pay an annual allowance during term-time vacations to cover housing or living costs when university accommodation is closed
- The pathway plan can include support for retaking a year if your studies are interrupted
If your Personal Advisor changes during your degree (a common situation), ask your local authority to confirm the new contact in writing. Continuity gaps are the most common reason care leavers lose access to support that is technically still available.
The biggest mistake care leavers make at university
The biggest mistake is not declaring care leaver status until after the first term, sometimes never declaring it at all. This usually happens for two reasons: a belief that it is no longer relevant once university starts, or a worry about being treated differently.
Universities cannot apply the care leaver support package without knowing you are a care leaver. The named bursary, the year-round accommodation, the dedicated support contact, the priority hardship route, all require registration. Most of this support is opt-in. The default is that the standard package applies and nothing more.
The second mistake is treating the £2,000 local authority bursary as the only support available. The bursary is the floor, not the ceiling. The full stack (bursary plus university support plus independent student status plus hardship priority) is the real picture. Universities expect care leaver applicants to claim every layer.
What estranged students should know
If you are not technically a care leaver but you have no contact with your parents and no parental financial support, you may qualify as an estranged student. The funding routes overlap heavily.
Estranged student status with Student Finance unlocks the same independent student assessment as care leaver status. Many universities offer estranged student bursaries alongside care leaver bursaries, with similar amounts and structures.
The evidence requirement differs. For estranged students, Student Finance England typically asks for a written declaration plus supporting evidence such as a letter from a teacher, social worker, or charity confirming the estrangement. The Stand Alone charity provides templates and advocacy support specifically for this process.
If you were briefly in care but do not meet the formal "former relevant child" criteria, the estranged student route is often the practical alternative.
Instead of asking "Am I a real care leaver?", ask this
| Instead of | Better question |
|---|---|
| Am I a real care leaver? | What category does my actual history fall into (eligible child, relevant child, former relevant child)? |
| Will the bursary stigmatise me? | Are care leaver bursaries paid discreetly, separately from public records? |
| Should I just apply as a normal student? | What support am I giving up if I do not declare? |
| What if my local authority is difficult? | Who do I escalate to if my Personal Advisor is not responsive? |
If you have been in care for any period before 18, you almost certainly qualify for at least the statutory Higher Education Bursary. The forms are short. The cost of not asking is high.
Before you apply, build the support map
Care leaver funding works best when every layer is applied for in advance, in writing, and with the right paperwork. Universities and local authorities expect to see the same evidence multiple times, in slightly different forms. Having a single folder of confirmation letters saves weeks of back and forth.
With UniStart, you can:
- Confirm your eligibility for care leaver funding routes
- See which local authorities pay above the statutory minimum
- Understand how Student Finance treats independent students
- Get free one-to-one support before applying
Explore care leaver funding routes at unistart.app/funding
Important
Care leaver entitlements, statutory bursary amounts, and local authority pathway plan rules depend on your residency, your care history, and the year you became eligible. The figures and rules here are based on the published Children Act 1989 framework and current Student Finance England policy for 2026/27. This guide is general information only and is not legal or financial advice. Always check your specific position with your Personal Advisor, your local authority Leaving Care Team, and on gov.uk before making decisions.
Sources
- GOV.UK Help if you're a care leaver: financial support
- GOV.UK Apply for student finance if you are a care leaver
- Children Act 1989, Schedule 2 (statutory care leaver duties)
- Department for Education: Promoting the education of looked-after children and previously looked-after children
FAQ
I was in care for less than a year. Do I still count as a care leaver?
It depends on when you were in care and for how long in total. The 13-week statutory threshold applies to periods of care after age 14, with at least one day after 16. Any period in care that meets that test gives you the legal status. Even shorter periods may unlock university support if you can show you were in care during your teenage years.
Will my university tell my parents I am studying there?
No. Universities operate strict confidentiality on student records. Your enrolment, your bursary, and your contact details are not shared with parents or any family members without your consent.
What if my local authority will not confirm my care leaver status?
Ask in writing for a specific reason. Most local authorities will provide the standard care leaver confirmation letter on request. If you are refused, escalate to the Leaving Care Team manager or the Director of Children's Services. The Coram Voice helpline provides advocacy support.
Can I claim Universal Credit while studying as a care leaver?
Care leavers under 22 in full-time higher education can claim Universal Credit under specific rules. The standard rule that excludes most full-time students does not apply to care leavers in the same way. Check with your work coach and bring your care leaver status confirmation.
Does care leaver status affect my Student Finance after my degree?
No. Your loan is repaid on the same terms as any other graduate, based on your post-graduation income. The care leaver support package is for the period of your studies, not after.
Can I apply for the care leaver bursary if I am over 25?
The local authority pathway plan duty ends at 25. If you start your course before age 25, the local authority support typically continues for the duration of the course. If you start your course after 25, you may lose access to the £2,000 statutory bursary but can still apply for university-specific care leaver support.
What if I am from Scotland, Wales, or Northern Ireland?
Each devolved nation has its own care leaver support framework. Scotland operates the Care Experienced Bursary (currently £9,000 a year for eligible students). Wales has the Care Leaver Bursary through the Welsh Government. Northern Ireland has equivalent provisions through Health and Social Care trusts. The specifics differ from the English system covered here.