Dimensions

Supported Living for Adults With Learning Disabilities and Autism


Dimensions’ advice to families investigating different models of supported living is to concentrate on finding support that will enable your loved one to gain choice and control over their life. This allows them to remain healthy and happy and to maintain the things that are important to them.

This page on supported living for adults with learning disabilities and autism aims to help families who are questioning their loved one’s living arrangements, particularly those thinking about a move away from the family home.


If you’d like to read some real life stories of supported living for adults with learning disabilities and autism, then Maggie and Doreen, Barbara and Jackie’s stories will help set the scene.

What is supported living?

Supported living is a service designed to help people with a wide range of support needs retain their independence by being supported in their own home. People in supported living have their own tenancy and are responsible for their own bills and cost of living. This may include full or part furnishing and repairing any damage – exact details will vary locally. To afford these, the person may be entitled to a wide range of benefits and grants. In single person supported living, they will also have their own front door.

In Supported Living, support provision is not dependent on provision of housing (and vice versa.) So if the support provider changes, this doesn’t affect the tenancy. The person has security of tenure in line with their tenancy agreement – they can only be made to leave under certain circumstances, usually by order of a court.

What is registered care?

Registered care, also known as residential care or a care home, supports adults with learning disabilities and complex needs. They are given a license to occupy a room or a flat in a larger complex and bills are covered by the care provider. This kind of care and support is commissioned by a Local Authority or health board and regulated by the CQC in England or the CIW in Wales.

What is the difference between supported living and residential care?

Supported living is suited to people who require support to gain more independence to help them live in their own home. Whereas, residential care is better suited for people who require specialist care around the clock.

People in supported living are responsible for their own bills and cost of living. To afford this, the person may be entitled to a wide range of benefits such as:

In supported living, people pay for their own holidays, including additional staff costs. Like anyone else, people in supported living pay their own domestic bills and shopping costs, together with costs incurred by staff in the course of the support they provide – such as bus fares and activities.

Supported living isn’t necessarily more expensive overall, but because families are often involved in seeing and managing the money for the first time, it can look quite alarming to those who have been used to the ‘all-inclusive’ deal in a care home.

How can I tell if a living arrangement is supported living or care home?

You may not be immediately able to. In fact, it is an indicator of quality that someone’s home looks and feels like an ordinary home rather than a workplace, regardless of the technicalities of the living arrangement.

But some registered care homes stand out for the wrong reasons. If you’re considering something that looks roughly like a university campus, or which has many people with a learning disability living on the same site, our advice is to be very cautious. Surroundings like this can be photogenic but are they real life?

Ask yourself – and the management – some tough questions about how they support people to become independent, to make their own decisions and control their own lives. Lives – those that are really lived – are messy, in normal houses in normal streets. Ordinary lives don’t happen in segregated communities.

What are the advantages of supported living?

The benefits of supported living are the choice, control and enfranchisement that come from holding one’s own tenancy and – in a single person service – one’s own front door.

In particular, by separating a person’s support and housing provider, the housing will remain constant even if a person’s support provider changes. That is essential; no-one should be forced to endure low quality support in order to keep living in their home. This is the case even with providers (such as Dimensions,) that provide both support and housing.

Supported Living arrangements, where the person’s rights are protected by their tenancy agreement, often offer greater security of tenure compared to residency in a care home which typically come with 28-day notice periods. That said, this security does depend on the terms of the tenancy agreement. With more and more supported living services being found through the private rented market rather than social housing, the old idea of a ‘home for life’ is dwindling.

What are the disadvantages of supported living?

The benefits of supported living are the choice, control and enfranchisement that come from holding one’s own tenancy. The resulting responsibilities include managing multiple costs, keeping to the tenancy agreement etc. For some people the benefits may not be meaningful or desirable and then the costs are an avoidable burden. So there are times when supported living may not be the right model of support.

That’s why all decisions about an individual’s support should always be made on person-centred grounds, not on any sort of ideology. For example, it may be that a registered care home is able to offer greater shared support. It may be that a tenancy becomes something of an anchor, if a person’s declining health requires considerable adaptation to be made to his or her living environment. It could be that a single person supported living arrangement leads to the person becoming more socially isolated (though note that in this case the issue is the ‘single person’ not the supported living per se.)

Who is supported living suitable for?

Supported living used to be thought of as primarily for more able people and those who wish to live alone. Whilst both those groups of people can certainly benefit from supported living, so can people with more complex needs, and those who prefer to live with housemates. Both supported living and registered care can provide support 24/7 support if required; we support many people with profound and multiple learning disabilities and complex needs in supported living environments.

We also support people in smaller care homes and larger supported living services as well as the opposite. The decision about whether someone lives alone or with housemates should be based on their assessed needs, personal wishes, compatibility and the opportunity to pool budgets to deliver shared support.

Is shared support a good thing?

In principle, yes. Sharing elements of someone’s support (for example, night support) can lead to more resources being made available for daytime support hours. However, it does incur some risk: There’s a risk that everyone will end up doing what the strongest personality in the house wants to do.

Conversely, excess compromise can leave everyone dissatisfied. And if someone needs to change where they live it can be laborious to carve up the shared hours, ensuring everyone retains the support they are individually assessed to need – notwithstanding the full reassessment that would occur naturally.

In austere times, there is always a temptation for local authorities to use shared support as a means of cutting individual budgets – this can occur equally in both supported living and residential care. Families can use the Care Act to challenge such decisions and Dimensions is part of a coalition offering a free legal support service to help families in this position.

Click the question to show the answer for these additional FAQs:

Will my loved one gain or lose friendships? What if they don’t get on with the person they live with?

A good support package should always include the means to support friendships and relationships, including if a large group of people is being split into smaller households. People should be well matched and offered the opportunity to get to know each other before living together. It is a big decision for anyone and very stressful if it doesn’t work out.

It is important to make sure that the environment suits a person’s needs as well. If someone likes to spend a lot of time on their own then they might be better suited to living in a flat with some opportunity to socialise and share support with people in other flats.

Everyone has the right to request a move or a change of housemates. The reality is that changes are often slow and difficult, so planning for ‘right first time’ is vital. Note that in supported living accommodation where the local or health authority holds ‘nomination rights’ over other rooms in the house, the authority will have the power to choose who occupies that room. They will usually consult about compatibility as it is in no-one’s interest to create an incompatible household.

We know of several cases where a cost-conscious local authority has tried to get people to live in larger group living arrangements, without providing appropriate advocacy support or care needs reassessments. This sort of poor practice is much harder to get away with when the individual is a tenant in his or her own home.

Is it easy to transition from care home to supported living arrangements?

It depends. A simple deregistration from a person-centred care home to a supported living arrangement should be smooth and simple, from the point of view of the person supported at least. However, our experience is that transitioning from a more traditional care home can be a bigger step. A steady, considered approach is required here to avoid the scale of change becoming overwhelming. If a person goes to sleep in a care home and wakes up in the morning, following deregistration, in a supported living environment – it is important to think through what will practically be changing? Will he or she have their own food cupboard, for example? Where will medicines, paperwork etc be kept? Who will open the front door?

How much does Supported Living cost?

The total cost is entirely dependent on an individual’s assessed needs. But there are important differences between supported living and registered care in who pays for what. In a care home, the individual’s local authority or health board is responsible for the costs of both support and accommodation.

In supported living, the person is a tenant in their own home and therefore is liable to pay their own rent and other housing costs. People are often eligible for housing benefit (paid by central government) or other benefits to cover the costs of the tenancy. So supported living is usually a much cheaper option for the local authority or health board.

Local Authorities have been accused of pushing for care homes to deregister to become supported living arrangements on cost grounds. In general, we think that is unfair. Supported Living offers a range of advantages, especially for people living on their own or as a couple. For others, it is the principle of choice and control that is key. We’re aware of cases where supported living actually costs the Local Authority more money, but remains the preferred living arrangement.

The worst case is that people are ‘placed’ in supported living with the same disregard for their own and others’ wishes, as can happen in residential care. Of course, this is not a disadvantage of supported living but a question of poor commissioning.

Should I listen to those people who advocate a cautious, step-by-step approach to building my relative’s independence?

Our overwhelming experience is that people with learning disabilities are underestimated, including sometimes by their own families. Irrespective of their background or complexity, it is rare that a person we support in an ordinary house or an ordinary street needs to leave our support through some sort of crisis – though yes, this does happen from time to time.

But how many people with the potential to lead an ordinary life are denied the chance to do so by being wrapped up in cotton wool, by those around them preferring the cautious approach? How many people can never choose what time they get up, eat and bathe? When and where they go out – and who with? Which passions to pursue?

Good environments and approaches will support a person to build their independence. But bad living environments and approaches will make the same claim. Ask yourself how the support will promote your relative’s independence – and compare different approaches.

Are there risks associated with lone working?

A myth about supported living is that there is a greater risk of abuse due to staff working alone in the property. Our experience of delivering support across care home, group supported living and single person supported living arrangements is that if anything, single person services tend to have lower colleague sickness levels, more consistent staffing and fewer accidents and incidents. All of which indicate that in general, single person services are not riskier working environments.

All care environments carry a degree of risk of abuse but we believe that the greatest risk occurs in larger sites with little values-based leadership. It is worth bearing in mind that the major abuse scandals of recent years – Winterbourne View, Veilstone, Mendip House, Whorlton Hall – were hospitals or large registered care homes, not small supported living arrangements.

That said, we acknowledge that the risks of 1:1 support can be very scary for families, especially if their relative can’t talk. As with any good provider, we have a series of protections in place to minimise the risk such as values-based recruitment, training, supervision, team meetings, practice observation, strong engagement mechanisms, regular quality reviews and robust whistle-blowing and complaints processes.

Is Supported Living regulated by the CQC?

We believe that the supported living model does pose a problem in respect of regulation and inspection.

All registered care homes receive a periodic inspection, sometimes unannounced. But because in supported living, people are tenants in their own homes, the Care Quality Commission (CQC) and Care Inspectorate Wales (CIW) do not have the right to enter and inspect the property. They can request to do so and thus a sample of supported living environments do get an in-person inspection. The rest are reviewed through reports kept in the registered office and the CQC is thus reliant on providers proactively reporting issues.

A further point is that if personal care or medication are not being provided in the supported living service, then the service would not fall under CQC/CIW regulation.

Whilst external inspection is not a guarantee, it does give families and the public assurance by putting positive pressure on support providers to deliver a high-quality service. At Dimensions, we support calls for a new inspection model for supported living.

Because of this regulatory problem, both providers and local authorities put their own inspection procedures in place:

Our in-house inspection team, for example, includes nearly 50 people we support, employed as quality consultants, who  often pick up things other auditors might miss. Our senior management teams are frequently out visiting services. Our whistleblowing processes are prominent, anonymous and robust. And we encourage all visitors to anyone we support to contribute by not being afraid to ask questions if anything seems awry.

Finally, in the very rare event that someone absolutely refuses visitors to their house, or where a Best Interests meeting determines that such visits cannot happen, we would usually try to meet the person outside his or her home or in some other bespoke way that allows us to be confident in the support being delivered.

What about Shared Ownership and HOLD mortgages?

More and more people are choosing a shared ownership approach for their (or their loved one’s) supported living arrangement. The advantages in terms of long term financial security – not to mention security of tenure – are obvious. And HOLD mortgages (Home Ownership for People with Long-Term Disabilities) is a government initiative that could help you buy on a shared ownership basis.

Dimensions is working in partnership with MySafeHome to support people to consider whether they could become property co-owners.

How can Dimensions help with supported living or other housing option needs?

Over 80 local authorities and numerous parts of the NHS trust Dimensions to support people with learning disabilities and autism to live fulfilling lives. We offer a mix of services to meet individuals’ needs. Why not speak to your local authority to find out if we are one of their preferred support providers?

And our housing brokerage team are experts at finding and securing homes for people.

Alternatively, use our postcode search to see where we currently work:

Our Transitions Guide

Dimensions have a range of helpful guides for families, including transitions. Find them here

Useful External Resources

NDTI guidance on the differences between supported living and residential care

NHS Guide on Supported Living Services

ChallengingBehaviour.org Pack – 8 Ways to Get a House

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