Yorkshire is one of the largest regions in England with thousands of children in care across its local authorities. From Leeds and Bradford to Sheffield, York, Doncaster, Wakefield, Harrogate and Hull, there are local authority and independent fostering agencies across the region ready to support you on your fostering journey.
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Yorkshire and the Humber is home to over 6,500 looked-after children across its 15 local authorities. The region spans from the industrial cities of West and South Yorkshire through the rural landscapes of North Yorkshire to the coastal communities of East Yorkshire and Hull. The demand for foster carers across every part of the region is significant and growing.
Each local authority runs its own fostering service, and alongside these, dozens of independent fostering agencies operate across Yorkshire. IFAs often offer higher allowances, smaller social worker caseloads and specialist therapeutic support models.
Think Fostering helps you compare fostering agencies across Yorkshire so you can find the right fit for you and your family. All enquiries are free, confidential and without obligation.
Compare Ofsted-registered fostering agencies covering Yorkshire and the Humber
Specialist foster care across Yorkshire with therapeutic placements and comprehensive carer support. Dedicated social workers and 24/7 helpline.
Become a Foster Carer →High-quality foster placements across Yorkshire with a focus on stability, matching and long-term outcomes for children and young people.
Become a Foster Carer →Yorkshire-based agency offering generous allowances, small social worker caseloads and tailored training programmes for new and experienced carers.
Become a Foster Carer →Supporting foster families across Yorkshire with specialist teen placements, parent and child fostering, and emergency care. Weekly peer support groups.
Become a Foster Carer →Therapeutic fostering agency with offices across Yorkshire. Trauma-informed care, attachment-focused training and dedicated clinical support for carers.
Become a Foster Carer →Leeds' own fostering service with direct links to local schools, health services and community support. Recruiting carers for children across the city.
Become a Foster Carer →Fostering agencies in Yorkshire cover towns and cities across the entire region
Yorkshire has over 6,500 looked-after children across its 15 local authorities and the need for foster carers continues to grow, particularly for teenagers, sibling groups and children with additional needs.
Independent agencies across Yorkshire offer competitive weekly allowances, typically between £400 and £575, with most fostering income effectively tax-free under Qualifying Care Relief.
Agencies across Yorkshire provide dedicated social workers, out-of-hours helplines, peer support groups and regular supervision to help you succeed as a foster carer.
Yorkshire is home to diverse communities across its cities and towns, and agencies actively seek carers from all backgrounds to better match children with families who understand their heritage.
Agencies across Yorkshire offer comprehensive induction programmes, specialist training and ongoing professional development to build your skills and confidence.
From emergency and short-term through to long-term and specialist therapeutic care, all types of fostering are in demand across Yorkshire and the Humber.
Foster carers in Yorkshire receive a weekly allowance to cover the cost of caring for a child, plus a skills-based fee that reflects your experience and training. Most fostering income is effectively tax-free under HMRC Qualifying Care Relief.
Average weekly fostering payments across independent agencies in Yorkshire range from roughly £450 to £860 per week per child, with higher payments for older children or specialist placements. Some agencies also provide extra payments for birthdays, festivals and holidays. Allowances vary between agencies, so comparing multiple agencies through Think Fostering can help you find the best package for your circumstances.

Yorkshire is one of the largest regions in England with thousands of children needing stable, loving foster homes. Explore fostering in your area.
North Yorkshire is the largest county in England, stretching from the Yorkshire Dales to the North Sea coast. With a mix of rural communities, market towns, and historic cities, North Yorkshire needs foster carers who can provide warm, stable homes for children across this beautiful region. Whether you live in York, Harrogate, Scarborough, or one of the many villages in between, there are agencies ready to support you.
South Yorkshire is home to over 1.4 million people across its four metropolitan boroughs. Sheffield, Doncaster, Rotherham, and Barnsley all have significant numbers of children in care who need loving foster families. The region has a strong sense of community and foster carers here benefit from excellent support networks, comprehensive training, and competitive fostering allowances.
East Yorkshire and the East Riding cover a vast area from the city of Hull to the rolling Wolds and the stunning Holderness coastline. Hull has one of the highest rates of children in care in England, and foster carers are urgently needed across the region. From the bustling streets of Hull to the quiet market towns of Beverley and Driffield, there are children waiting for someone to open their home.
West Yorkshire is one of the most densely populated regions in the UK, home to the major cities of Leeds, Bradford, and Wakefield alongside the towns of Huddersfield and Halifax. With a richly diverse population and a significant number of children needing foster care, West Yorkshire is actively seeking carers from all backgrounds, cultures, and walks of life. Your experience, your home, and your commitment could change a young person's future.
Explore fostering in your part of Yorkshire
Becoming a foster carer is a rewarding journey. Here are the key steps from your first enquiry to welcoming a child into your home.
Get in touch with a fostering agency. They will have an informal chat with you about fostering, answer your questions, and explain what happens next.
A social worker visits your home for an informal meeting. This is a chance to ask questions, discuss your motivation, and learn more about the types of fostering available.
You will attend Skills to Foster training where you will learn about child development, attachment, managing behaviour, and what daily life as a foster carer looks like.
A thorough assessment of your suitability to foster. Your assessing social worker will meet with you regularly over several months to complete your Form F.
Your assessment is presented to an independent fostering panel who will recommend whether you should be approved. The agency decision maker then confirms the recommendation.
Once approved, your agency will match you with a child who suits your skills and family. You will be fully supported as you welcome them into your home.
Find answers to the most common questions about fostering in Yorkshire. For more detailed information, visit our FAQs page or get in touch to speak with an agency directly — all enquiries are free and without obligation.
Yorkshire and the Humber has over 6,500 children looked after across its 15 local authorities, which includes children in foster care, kinship care, residential care and other placements. This makes it one of the regions with the greatest need for stable, nurturing foster homes in England.
Nationally, around 67% of looked-after children live with foster carers, with roughly 54,800 children in foster placements across England on 31 March 2025. Yorkshire continues to recruit carers because maintaining local placements helps children stay connected to their communities, schools and support networks. Local authorities across the region work actively with independent fostering agencies to meet demand and ensure children can be placed in suitable family environments rather than residential settings.
Choosing to foster with a local authority or with an independent fostering agency depends on the kind of support, structure and matching approach you prefer. Yorkshire has 15 local authorities, each running their own fostering service. Fostering directly with your local council means you work within the local children’s services team and may be prioritised for local placements, with direct access to community resources, educational and health professionals.
IFAs are regulated by Ofsted just like local authorities, and many offer strong support systems with their own training, social work teams and out-of-hours services. Some IFAs also have large networks useful if you are open to placements across neighbouring areas. The most practical way to decide is to speak to a few different providers and ask about support, training, supervision, respite arrangements and how placements are matched to carers’ strengths.
Foster carer payments in Yorkshire vary depending on the provider, the child’s age and individual needs, and whether you are approved through a local authority or an IFA. All foster carers receive weekly allowances to cover the cost of caring for a child, including food, clothing, pocket money and other day-to-day costs. Carers can also receive a professional fee as recognition of the work they do.
IFAs across Yorkshire often publish allowances ranging from roughly £450 to £860 per week per child, with higher payments for older children or specialist placements, and sometimes extra payments for birthdays, festivals and holidays. The UK government publishes minimum weekly fostering allowance bands across England; for example, for 2025–26 a child aged 5–10 has a minimum weekly allowance of about £194 and older teens £258–£267, with regional and provider variations.
Yorkshire needs foster carers across a range of fostering types because children come into care for many different reasons and at various ages. Local fostering recruitment across the region highlights the need for carers who can support infants, younger children and older children and teenagers, along with placements for siblings to stay together where possible.
IFAs operating across Yorkshire also recruit for a broad mix of placements, including short-term, long-term and specialist fostering. Placements for children with additional emotional or behavioural needs, respite care and short-notice emergency care are also commonly needed. Carers who are flexible on age and placement type are often in higher demand.
No, you do not need to own your home to foster in Yorkshire. What matters is that you have a secure and stable home environment with a spare bedroom suitable for a child or young person. Fostering services across Yorkshire ask prospective carers to have adequate accommodation, including space for a foster child’s personal bed and belongings.
Renting is usually acceptable provided the tenancy is secure and you can demonstrate that the foster child will have their own space and safety. Stability and suitability of the home are central to fostering approval, not ownership status itself. During your assessment, the fostering social worker will discuss your living arrangements in detail to ensure they meet the needs of the child.
To find a foster care agency in Yorkshire, start by using Ofsted’s provider search, which lists registered fostering services and their inspection reports so you can compare quality and ratings. You can search by location and the category “Fostering” to see all agencies that work in your area of Yorkshire.
You can also contact your local council’s fostering team directly for information about fostering through the local authority. Fostering comparison sites like Think Fostering allow you to filter by area and build a shortlist. Once you have that shortlist, speak with agencies about support, training, supervision and placement approaches to judge which is the right fit for your household.
There is no fixed published number of foster care agencies solely within Yorkshire, because fostering providers registered with Ofsted may operate across multiple local authority areas while still serving families in your part of the region. The most accurate way to determine how many agencies serve your area is to use Ofsted’s provider search filtered by location and fostering.
Because many agencies cover multiple local authorities, Yorkshire has a large number of independent fostering providers alongside 15 local authority services. A practical approach is to look at all relevant providers whose Ofsted report area covers your location and then compare their support offers, ratings and local presence.
Thousands of children across Yorkshire need safe, loving homes. Take the first step today — compare agencies, ask questions, and find the right fit for your family.
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