The Supported Housing (Regulatory Oversight) Act 2023 marks an important step forward in how supported living and care services are structured, delivered and regulated.
At its core, the Act is about clarity. Clarity for providers, for housing partners and most importantly, for the people receiving care.
For too long, the lines between housing and care have been blurred. In some cases, this has created confusion, limited choice and reduced transparency for individuals relying on these services. The Act introduces a clearer separation between accommodation and care provision, reinforcing accountability and strengthening the rights of those being supported.
For care providers, this isn’t just a regulatory change. It’s a shift in mindset.
One of the key principles of the Act is the clear distinction between landlords and care providers. On the surface, this may appear operational. In reality, it’s deeply personal.
When housing and care are delivered by the same organisation, it can create an imbalance of power. Individuals may feel less able to raise concerns, make changes or challenge decisions, particularly if those decisions impact both where they live and how they are supported. By separating these responsibilities, the Act creates a more transparent and empowering system.
Individuals now have a clearer pathway:
This distinction matters. It gives people more confidence to speak up. It creates accountability on both sides. And it ensures that care decisions are made in the best interests of the individual, not influenced by housing considerations.
For providers, it reinforces a simple but powerful principle: care should always be person-led.
The Act also highlights a broader issue within the sector, the tendency to standardise care models in ways that don’t always reflect individual needs.
Supported living is, by definition, about independence. But independence isn’t achieved through rigid structures or fixed approaches. It’s built through flexibility, understanding and the ability to adapt.
By separating housing from care, providers are encouraged to focus more clearly on what they do best, delivering tailored support that evolves with the individual.
This means:
In practice, this leads to better outcomes.
Because when care is designed around the person, not the system, progress becomes possible.
For many providers, the impact of the Act will be felt in the detail of how services are delivered.
It requires:
But beyond structure, it also demands a more joined-up way of working.
Care providers will need to collaborate more closely with housing partners, ensuring that individuals receive consistent, coordinated support across both areas of their lives.
This includes:
It’s a more transparent model but also a more accountable one.
The introduction of the Act also raises the bar for what “good” looks like in supported living.
Compliance is, of course, essential. But regulation alone doesn’t define quality. The real opportunity lies in how providers respond.
This is a moment to move beyond minimum standards and rethink how care is delivered:
The Act creates the conditions for improvement, but it’s up to providers to act on it.
Those who embrace this shift will not only meet regulatory expectations, but they’ll also exceed them.
At its heart, the Supported Housing Act 2023 is about people.
It’s about ensuring that individuals living in supported housing:
This aligns with a broader movement across the sector, one that places dignity, choice and independence at the centre of care.
For providers, this means listening more, adapting faster and being willing to challenge outdated approaches.
Because empowering individuals isn’t just about giving options. It’s about making those options real.
The care sector is evolving and regulation is playing a key role in shaping that evolution.
The Supported Housing Act 2023 is not about adding complexity. It’s about removing ambiguity.
By clearly defining the roles of housing providers and care providers, it creates a system that is:
For care providers, the challenge is clear.
It’s not enough to adapt processes. The real opportunity is to rethink how care is delivered, ensuring that every decision, every interaction and every support plan is built around the person, not the system.
At Tao, this approach isn’t new, it’s how we believe care should work.
We support a model where housing and care are deliberately separate, giving individuals greater clarity, control and confidence. We work in partnership with housing providers, while focusing entirely on what we do best: delivering specialist, person-led support.
Because care should never limit people.
It should move them forward.
And the systems around it should do the same.