SUPPORTED LIVING STARTUP

How to Start a Supported Living Service in England

We build your entire CQC-registered supported living business in 16 weeks, while you keep working.

Supported living sits where housing meets care, and getting the registration boundary right is where most providers go wrong. A dedicated team of 13 builds the whole business and gets your CQC registration right the first time.

Last reviewed: 04 June 2026

CQC registration · Right Support, Right Care, Right Culture · England-wide

What a supported living service actually is

Supported living helps people with learning disabilities, autism, mental health needs, or physical disabilities to live as independently as possible in their own home. The person has their own tenancy, in their own flat or a shared house, and receives the support they need to live there, rather than moving into a care home.

That distinction matters. In a care home, the accommodation and the care come bundled together under one roof and one registration. In supported living, the housing and the care are separate: the person rents their home, and a care provider supports them in it. The model is built around independence, choice, and being part of the community, not around being looked after in an institution.

It is a growing and meaningful sector, with strong demand from local authorities looking to move people out of residential and hospital settings into community living. For the right provider, it is a sustainable business that genuinely improves lives. What you have to get right, before anything else, is whether and how you register with the CQC.

Do you need CQC registration for supported living?

This is the question that catches most new supported living providers out, and getting it wrong is costly. The answer depends on one thing: whether your staff provide personal care.

The CQC does not regulate housing. It regulates personal care. If your staff help people with washing, dressing, continence, or taking medication, you are providing the regulated activity of personal care, and you must register with the CQC before you start. If your service is genuinely support-only, helping people maintain their tenancy, manage their money, build life skills, and access the community, without any hands-on personal care, you may not need to register.

Here is the trap. The CQC looks at what your staff actually do day to day, not at what you call the service. A provider who describes their service as “housing support only” but whose staff are, in practice, helping people wash and dress is providing personal care and must register. The label does not decide it. The activity does.

The boundary is simple to state and easy to get wrong: personal care needs CQC registration, housing support alone may not. We confirm exactly which side of the line your service sits on, before you build anything on the wrong assumption.

Right Support, Right Care, Right Culture

If your supported living service is for people with a learning disability or autistic people, the CQC assesses you against specific statutory guidance: Right Support, Right Care, Right Culture. It shapes how you are registered and how you are inspected, and your whole model has to reflect it. Here is what it means in practice.

Right Support

Your model of care and your setting should maximise people’s choice, control, and independence. Support is tailored to the individual, promotes their personal goals, and helps them access their community, rather than restricting their lives. The CQC wants to see that your service is designed around the person, not around your convenience as a provider.

Right Care

Your care should be person-centred and promote dignity, privacy, and human rights. People are supported to be involved in decisions about their own lives, and your staff understand and uphold those rights every day. Your policies, your care planning, and your culture all have to demonstrate this.

Right Culture

The ethos, values, and attitudes of your leaders and staff should ensure people lead confident, inclusive lives. This is about the culture you build, one where people are empowered, not controlled. The CQC increasingly looks at culture as closely as it looks at paperwork.

Genuine supported living, not a care home in disguise

The CQC pays close attention to whether a service is genuinely supported living or whether it is, in reality, a care home being presented as supported living to avoid care-home registration. For it to be genuine supported living, the person must have a real tenancy, and their housing must be genuinely separate from their care, they should not lose their home if they change care provider. We make sure your model is structured correctly and stands up to that scrutiny.

What you need to register and operate

Beyond getting the registration boundary right, several things have to be in place before the CQC will register your supported living service. We build or coordinate all of them.

A registered manager with the right qualifications, typically a Level 5 Diploma in Leadership and Management for Adult Care
A nominated individual responsible for governance (can be the same person in some cases)
A main office location in England to manage operations
A care model built around Right Support, Right Care, Right Culture
A full set of CQC-compliant policies and procedures, and a Statement of Purpose
Your CQC application for the personal care regulated activity

The CQC assesses your supported living service against the same Single Assessment Framework and the same thirty-four Quality Statements as every other adult social care provider, under the five key questions: is your service safe, effective, caring, responsive, and well-led. We build your documentation and your model to meet all of it, and to reflect Right Support, Right Care, Right Culture throughout.

DONE FOR YOU

How we build and register your supported living service

A dedicated team of 13 builds your entire supported living business and handles your CQC registration, five regulation professionals, four administration officers, and three technical specialists, coordinated end to end. Here is how the work runs.

1

Compliance & Regulatory Pathway Assessment

We confirm whether your service needs CQC registration by examining what your staff will actually do, structure your model as genuine supported living, and assess you and your proposed registered manager against the fit and proper person criteria, flagging any barrier upfront.

2

Legal & Business Structure Setup

We form your company at Companies House with the right structure, separate housing from care correctly, and prepare the legal and HR foundation a supported living provider needs.

3

Complete Compliance Documentation

We write every policy and procedure the CQC expects, safeguarding, medication, person-centred care planning, and the rest, built around Right Support, Right Care, Right Culture and mapped to the five key questions.

4

Professional Branding & Web Presence

We check your trading name against CQC’s appropriateness guidelines, then build your branding and a professional website, so commissioners and families see a credible provider.

5

Accountancy & Financial Structure

We brief an accountant from our network and align your financial structure with your CQC documentation, keeping housing and care finances correctly separated.

6

Regulatory Registration & Interview Support

We complete your full application for the personal care regulated activity, write your responses to the five key questions in the CQC’s expected format, submit through the route CQC is currently accepting, and prepare you for the registered manager interview with structured mock sessions.

7

Post-Registration Launch Support

Once registered, we help you launch: operations, staff onboarding, the systems to run a compliant service, and a blueprint for winning your first local authority supported living contracts.

What it costs to start a supported living service

Supported living costs less to start than a care home, because you are not buying or running residential premises, the people you support have their own tenancies. But it is still a regulated business with real setup costs. Here is the honest picture.

£0
CQC application fee

No upfront fee for the personal care activity; an annual provider fee follows, set by size.

Level 5
Registered manager qualification

Diploma in Leadership and Management for Adult Care, or working towards.

England
Office location required

A main operating base in England, not a PO box alone.

Beyond the CQC registration fee, your main costs are the things any care provider needs: a registered manager and nominated individual, an office base, enhanced DBS checks and training for your support staff, insurance, care management systems, and recruitment. Because the people you support hold their own tenancies, you avoid the large property costs of a care home, which makes supported living one of the more accessible adult care models to start.

Our service is separate from these regulatory and staffing costs: we build the entire business and the registration around them, delivered by a team of 13. On your free consultation we give you a clear, honest picture of the full cost for your specific plan.

CQC fees correct as of 04 June 2026. Always confirm current fees on the CQC website before budgeting.

How long it takes to start a supported living service

We build and submit your complete application in 16 weeks. That covers confirming your registration requirement, structuring your model as genuine supported living, the company setup, the full documentation, your registered manager and nominated individual preparation, and the application itself.

After submission, the timeline belongs to the CQC. The regulator’s assessment periods vary, and processing times have been affected by system changes and a backlog. The CQC now rejects incomplete applications rather than holding them in a queue, so a complete, correctly structured application, one that clearly demonstrates genuine supported living and Right Support, Right Care, Right Culture, is what keeps yours moving rather than being sent back.

We manage the whole assessment period for you: we respond to CQC queries, prepare you for your registered manager interview, and keep you updated every week until a decision. Then we help you launch. Sixteen weeks to a complete, submitted application, then a regulator-dependent period we manage from start to finish.

Supported living startup questions, answered

It depends on whether your staff provide personal care. If they help people with washing, dressing, continence, or medication, that is the regulated activity of personal care and you must register. If your service is genuinely support-only, helping with tenancy, finances, and life skills without hands-on care, you may not need to. The CQC judges this on what your staff actually do, not what you call the service. We confirm exactly where you stand.

In a care home, the accommodation and care are bundled under one registration and one roof. In supported living, the person has their own tenancy and the housing is separate from the care, they keep their home even if they change care provider. The CQC scrutinises whether a service is genuinely supported living or a care home being mislabelled. We structure yours correctly.

It is the CQC’s statutory guidance for services supporting people with a learning disability and autistic people. It shapes how you are registered and inspected, your model has to maximise independence and choice (Right Support), be person-centred and dignified (Right Care), and be built on an empowering culture (Right Culture). We build your service around it.

Both deliver personal care in people’s homes and both need CQC registration for it. The difference is the model: domiciliary care visits people in their existing homes, while supported living is built around supporting people, often with learning disabilities or autism, to live independently in their own tenancy, frequently with Right Support, Right Care, Right Culture at its centre. We specialise in both.

Yes, if you are CQC-registered. You need a registered manager, typically with a Level 5 Diploma in Leadership and Management for Adult Care and relevant experience, and a nominated individual responsible for governance. In some cases the same person can hold both roles. We help you structure this.

The CQC does not charge an upfront application fee for the personal care regulated activity; once registered you pay an annual provider fee based on the number of people you support. Beyond that, your main costs are your registered manager, an office base, staff DBS checks and training, insurance, and systems. Because the people you support hold their own tenancies, you avoid the property costs of a care home. We give you a full breakdown on your consultation.

Yes. We build and submit your complete application over 16 weeks while you stay employed. You make the key decisions; we handle the regulatory build.

You need a main office location in England to manage operations, a PO box alone is not enough. You do not need residential care premises, because the people you support live in their own tenancies. Getting the housing and care genuinely separated is part of what makes it supported living.

Most supported living work comes through local authority contracts, secured by tendering, often through frameworks, dynamic purchasing systems, and preferred-supplier lists, and increasingly requiring partnership working. Our launch support includes a blueprint for finding and winning these contracts.

Supported living has a registration boundary that is genuinely easy to get wrong, and a model the CQC scrutinises closely for whether it is real supported living. Getting either wrong costs you months. We confirm your requirement, structure your model correctly, build the whole business, and get your registration right the first time.

Related guides

Want more detail before you book? These guides go deeper.

How much does CQC registration cost?

The honest cost of registering a care business, beyond the regulator’s fee.

Read the guide →

How long does CQC registration take?

The honest timeline, and what decides how fast you’re registered.

Read the guide →

How to become a registered manager

The Level 5 Diploma, the fitness test, and the interview.

Read the guide →

How much does it cost to start a supported living service?

Lower than a care home, because residents hold their own tenancies. The honest breakdown.

Read the guide →

Do you need CQC registration?

Whether you need to register comes down to one thing: the personal care boundary.

Read the guide →

Ready to start your supported living service?

Book a free 30-minute consultation. We will confirm your registration requirement, answer your questions, and show you exactly how we would build and register your supported living service in 16 weeks.

No obligation. 100% confidential.