Ofsted Early Years Inspections Rise by Over 40% in Six-Month Period

Education Early Years
Ofsted Early Years Inspections Rise by Over 40% in Six-Month Period
Published July 9, 2026
New figures from Ofsted reveal a marked escalation in regulatory activity across early years settings, with the inspectorate carrying out 7,270 regulatory events between 1 September 2025 and 31 March 2026. This represents an increase of over 40 per cent compared to the 5,110 events conducted during the equivalent six-month period in the previous academic year. The surge in inspections reflects Ofsted's intensified focus on ensuring quality and compliance within the childcare sector. Early years providers, including nurseries and childminders, are facing heightened scrutiny as the inspectorate works through its regulatory calendar and monitors standards across the Early Years Foundation Stage. For local authorities and cabinet members with responsibility for children's services, this uptick in Ofsted activity signals the importance of supporting early years providers to maintain standards and prepare for inspection. The increased regulatory presence may also have implications for local sufficiency planning, workforce capacity and provider sustainability across the early years market.
Share this article:

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

Protected by Cloudflare

Related Articles

Jul 9, 2026

Early Years Workforce Under 'Significant' Pressure Despite Positive Ofsted Data

While the latest Ofsted data reveals fewer childminders are leaving the sector and those operating are achieving good inspection grades, Coram PACEY's chief executive Ka Lai Brightley-Hodges warns that positive headlines mask deep systemic strains. She argues that reliance on goodwill and dedication alone cannot sustain the early years profession amid mounting pressures.

Jul 8, 2026

Unsafe baby products remain on sale via Amazon and TikTok, Which? finds

An investigation by Which? has uncovered dozens of unsafe baby products, including pillows, sleeping bags and feeders subject to safety notices, still available for purchase on major online marketplaces such as Amazon and TikTok. The findings highlight significant gaps in consumer protection and raise urgent questions about the responsibility of digital platforms to safeguard vulnerable infants from potentially lethal items.