Information

John Swinney has been selected by the Scottish Parliament as their nominee for First Minister. He will be appointed by His Majesty the King and sworn in at the Court of Session.

Children's Social Work Statistics: Looked After Children - 2024-25

Looked After Children Statistics for Scotland for 2024-25 that cover data on children who are looked after, young people in continuing care, and young people eligible for aftercare services.


Headline Statistics

Looked after children

  • On 31 July 2025, 11,824 children were looked after, compared to 11,780 on 31 July 2024, and down 23% since 2014-15 (15,400).
  • The rate of children looked after per 1,000 children slightly increased to 11.8 in 2025 from 11.6 per 1,000 children in 2024. This represents a marginal rise since the previous year, up to which there had been a steady decline since a peak in 2011.
  • A total of 2,411 looked after children were looked after at home on 31 July 2025. This is a 5% increase since 2024 (2,298) but down 39% overall since 2014-15. This accounts for 20% of looked after children, consistent with the previous two years but an overall decrease from 25% in 2015.
  • On 31 July 2025, the most common placements away from home were kinship care (35%), foster care (28%), and residential accommodation (12%). Since 2022, there has been a higher proportion of looked after children in kinship care than foster care, and kinship care has been the most common placement type.
  • During 2024-25, 3,195 children started to be looked after – down 1% since 2023-24 (3,242) and down 24% since 2014-15 (4,198).
  • A total of 3,279 children ceased to be looked after during 2024-25 – down 8% since 2023-24 (3,548) and down 25% since 2014-15 (4,371).
  • Of those children whose home postcode at the time of becoming looked after was recorded, a little below half (46%) have a home address in one of the 20% most deprived areas in Scotland, whereas 4% were from one of the 20% least deprived areas in Scotland.

Care leavers

  • During 2024-25, 958 young people aged 16 years or over ceased to be looked after and were eligible for continuing care. Of these, 38% (367) entered continuing care. This is compared to 32% (327) entering continuing care in 2023-24.
  • On 31 July 2025, 1,155 young people were in continuing care, 23% of those who were eligible for continuing care at the time of ceasing to be looked after (4,927). This is a similar proportion to the previous year when 22% of those eligible were in continuing care (1,115).
  • On 31 July 2025, an estimated 9,386 young people were eligible for aftercare services. 4,545 (48% of those eligible, compared to a revised estimate of 51% for the previous year) were receiving aftercare services.
  • 1,951 (54%) of those in aftercare were in education, training or employment - a similar proportion to the previous year when 2,049 young people were in education, training or employment (54%).

Contact

Email: childrens.statistics@gov.scot

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