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Every year in the UK, thousands of children are unable to live safely with their birth families. When that happens, they need foster carers who can provide safety, stability and consistent care during what is often a confusing and emotional time.
Children who need fostering are not defined by labels or statistics. They are babies, children and teenagers who, for a variety of reasons, cannot remain at home. Some stay in foster care for a short period while their family situation is resolved. Others require longer-term stability.
What they all have in common is this:
They need adults who can offer calm, structure, reassurance and patience.
Foster care is not about “rescuing” children. It is about providing the secure base they need to rebuild confidence and feel safe enough to grow.
The decision for a child to enter care is never taken lightly. Local authorities must prioritise safety and wellbeing, and foster care is only used when children cannot remain at home safely.
Some of the reasons children come into care include:
Neglect
Domestic abuse within the household
Parental mental or physical health difficulties
Substance misuse
Family breakdown
Imprisonment of a parent
Bereavement
Situations where parents are temporarily unable to cope
It is important to understand that children are never to blame for the circumstances that bring them into care.
For many young people, entering foster care can feel frightening and uncertain. They may not fully understand what is happening. Foster carers provide stability during this transition — offering everyday routines, clear expectations and consistent reassurance.
Children of all ages require foster carers.
Some babies enter care shortly after birth. They may need short-term care while court proceedings take place, or longer-term care if they cannot return home.
Caring for very young children requires availability, patience and an understanding of early attachment needs.
Children aged 5–11 are one of the largest groups in foster care.
At this stage, stability in school, friendships and daily routines is especially important. Many children at primary age respond well to structure, encouragement and positive reinforcement.
There is a particularly strong need for foster carers willing to support teenagers.
Older children may have experienced more disruption or placement moves. They are at a critical stage of development — navigating identity, education and independence.
Teenagers often benefit greatly from calm, consistent adults who:
Set clear boundaries
Stay emotionally steady
Encourage independence safely
Provide reassurance without judgment
Caring for teenagers can feel daunting, but with the right training and support, it can also be incredibly rewarding.
Yes — and this is a significant need.
When safe and appropriate, keeping siblings together can provide emotional continuity during a difficult time. Brothers and sisters often rely on one another for reassurance.
Carers who have:
More than one spare bedroom
Flexible space
Emotional capacity for sibling dynamics
can make a meaningful difference by keeping families together.
This is a question many prospective carers quietly wonder.
The reality is this:
Many children who come into care have experienced uncertainty, disruption or trauma. Their behaviour may reflect anxiety, fear, hypervigilance or difficulty trusting adults.
But behaviour is communication.
Children in foster care are not “bad” or “difficult.” They are responding to experiences that may have left them feeling unsafe or unsure.
With:
Trauma-informed understanding
Consistent routines
Clear and calm boundaries
Predictable responses
Emotional availability
many children settle and begin to thrive.
At Fostering Hearts, we provide ongoing training and 24/7 support to ensure carers feel confident responding to children’s needs.
Beyond practical care, children need:
Consistent routines, regular mealtimes, predictable mornings and evenings.
Adults who remain calm even when behaviour is challenging.
Clear expectations delivered with warmth and consistency.
Praise for small achievements. Support with school. Belief in their abilities.
Perhaps most importantly, children need adults who don’t give up on them.
You do not need to be perfect.
You need to be consistent.
Children’s needs vary, and so do placement types.
This may last a few weeks or months while longer-term decisions are made.
Carers provide stability during uncertainty.
Some children cannot return home and need ongoing stability into adulthood.
Long-term carers often become a significant and lasting part of a young person’s life.
These can happen at short notice and require flexibility and emotional steadiness.
Short breaks for other foster carers or families in need.
Supporting a parent and baby together while assessments are completed.
You do not need specific qualifications.
You do need:
Patience
Emotional resilience
A spare bedroom
A stable home environment
Willingness to learn
Empathy
The ability to stay calm under pressure
Many excellent foster carers come from diverse backgrounds — including single carers, couples, renters and people changing careers.
Training is provided. You are not expected to know everything from the start.
Supporting children who have experienced trauma requires strong professional backing.
At Fostering Hearts, we provide:
24/7 support
Supervising social workers supporting around six families
Ongoing trauma-informed training
Regular supervision visits
Peer support and community
Clear, careful matching
You are never expected to manage alone.
Foster carers receive weekly fostering fees to cover the cost of caring for a child and recognise the professional commitment involved.
At Fostering Hearts:
£479.50 per week for children aged 0–10
£507.50 per week for young people aged 11+
Financial stability allows carers to focus fully on providing care without additional pressure.
Across the Midlands, East of England, Yorkshire and Greater Manchester, there is a particular need for:
Carers for teenagers
Carers who can support siblings
Carers willing to consider children aged 8+
Carers able to provide long-term stability
Every region’s needs evolve, and we are always open about the types of placements currently required.
Children who come into foster care do not need extraordinary people.
They need steady people.
They need:
A calm presence
Structure
Someone who believes in them
A home where they feel safe
Right now, there are children waiting for stability.
If you are considering fostering and would like to understand more about the types of children currently needing placements in your area, we would be happy to have an informal and confidential conversation.
You don’t need to commit today.
You simply need to explore whether you could provide the stability a child deserves.
Children of all ages, including babies, primary school children, teenagers and siblings, may require foster care due to family breakdown, neglect or safeguarding concerns.
Some children may display behaviours linked to trauma or disruption. With stable, consistent care and professional support, many children settle and thrive.
Yes, many foster carers have birth children. Each situation is carefully assessed to ensure it is appropriate for everyone involved.
Yes. Your approval will specify an agreed age range based on your experience, preferences and circumstances.
“At Fostering Hearts, we want foster parents to know that they’re not alone when it comes to raising a child in care. Our team of dedicated professionals is here to provide unwavering support and resources every step of the way, so they can ensure their foster children have the best future possible.”
Emma Rawlinson, Registered Manager