English local authorities are facing mounting financial strain as rising demand, escalating deficits and structural pressures erode already stretched budgets, reveals the latest edition of the CIPFA and Infoshare+ Financial Resilience Index. 

Now in its sixth year, the Index provides a comparative snapshot of councils’ financial health, assessing risk across several core indicators. The 2025 data highlights the ongoing challenges, particularly in social care, SEND (Special Educational Needs and Disabilities) finance, and homelessness. 

The Index underscores the growing urgency for both local and national action. While CIPFA welcomes forthcoming funding reforms, it emphasises the importance of robust local financial planning as the sector undergoes structural changes, including organisation mergers and the introduction of multi-year settlements. 

At a time when financial resilience is more important than ever, the Index is a critical evidence base to support leaders as they navigate reform, manage risk and protect services for residents. 

Key findings from the Financial Resilience Index 2025:

  • External debt across English local authorities rose 11%, reaching £106.9bn: As a share of net revenue expenditure, reserves dropped by 4 percentage points (from 43.7% to 39.6%). This leaves the system more leveraged overall, with councils holding higher levels of debt against a reserve base that is broadly stable in cash terms but has declined as a proportion of spend. As a result, councils have less resilience to manage new pressures or unexpected cost increases. Borrowing pressures have also been heightened by the use of Exceptional Financial Support (EFS).
  • Social care dominates local authority budgets: County councils allocate an average of 86% of their net revenue expenditure (NRE) to adult and children’s social care, which is above the national average of 78%. This severely limits flexibility to resource other local priorities. 
  • SEND deficits reach critical levels: SEND-related Dedicated Schools Grant (DSG) deficits have hit record highs, with councils now holding more than 20 times the value of their unallocated reserves in accumulated deficits. 
  • Growing homelessness pressures: London boroughs and non-metropolitan districts face the most acute pressures, spending a record 12% of NRE on homelessness – compared to just 2–3% in metropolitan districts and unitary authorities.