Recent UK Changes to DoLS: What Care Homes Need to Know
- 16 Jun 2026
- News
The legal landscape around Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards
(DoLS) has shifted significantly following the Supreme Court judgment handed
down on 2 June 2026. For care homes, this matters because DoLS has long been a
key part of how residents’ rights are protected when they lack capacity to
consent to their care arrangements. The ruling changes how deprivation of
liberty should be considered and moves practice away from relying solely on the
well-known Cheshire West “acid test”.
Since 2014, many care home DoLS decisions have been guided
by the Cheshire West test: whether a resident is under continuous supervision
and control and is not free to leave. The 2026 Supreme Court ruling has now
rejected that approach as too broad and too inflexible. Instead, deciding
whether a resident is deprived of their liberty now requires a more rounded,
person-centred assessment of their circumstances, care arrangements, wishes,
feelings and the practical reality of day-to-day life in the home.
This does not mean that DoLS, the Mental Capacity Act 2005
or safeguarding duties have disappeared. Care homes must still consider
capacity, best interests, restrictions, risk, least restrictive options and
whether formal authorisation is required. However, the ruling does mean that
registered managers and care teams will need to use more professional
judgement, keep clearer records and pay close attention to each resident’s
communication, presentation, preferences and level of objection or acceptance.
What has changed?
The key change is the move away from an automatic or
formulaic approach. Previously, if a person lacked capacity, was subject to
continuous supervision and control, and was not free to leave, the situation
was generally treated as a deprivation of liberty. Following the Supreme Court
decision, practitioners must look at the full context. This includes the
person’s expressed wishes and feelings, whether they appear to accept or resist
the arrangements, the nature and intensity of restrictions, the purpose of the
care plan, and whether the arrangements are proportionate.
This is a significant cultural shift. It places greater
emphasis on individualised assessment rather than applying a single test to
every situation. It may reduce the number of DoLS applications over time, but
it also introduces uncertainty while national guidance and policy catch up with
the judgment.
What does this mean for care homes?
Care homes should not assume that fewer DoLS applications
automatically means fewer responsibilities. In practice, the responsibility to
protect residents’ rights may become more important. Homes will need to
evidence that they have considered each resident’s situation carefully and that
any restrictions are necessary, proportionate and the least restrictive option
available.
- Review
current DoLS authorisations, applications and residents awaiting
assessment, focusing on whether the resident’s wishes, feelings,
presentation and day-to-day responses are clearly recorded.
- Strengthen
care plans so any restrictions, such as locked doors, sensor mats,
one-to-one supervision, covert medication or limits on leaving the home,
are linked to assessed risks and individual needs.
- Make
sure nurses, senior carers, care assistants and activity staff understand
that the Mental Capacity Act 2005 still applies in full.
- Continue
to apply best interests decision-making where a resident lacks capacity
for a specific decision, including decisions about care, treatment,
residence and safety.
- Seek
advice from the local authority, safeguarding team, GP, mental health
professionals or legal advisers where there is uncertainty about whether
authorisation is still required.
Why recording matters more than ever
Good records will be essential. If the assessment is now
more holistic, care homes must be able to show how they reached their view.
This should include evidence of conversations with the resident, family
members, advocates, visiting professionals and staff who know the person well.
Records should also explain why particular restrictions are in place, what
alternatives were considered and how the resident’s rights are being protected.
For care home teams, this is an opportunity to refresh
everyday practice around person-centred care. The question is no longer simply
whether a resident meets a fixed legal test. It is whether the overall
arrangements amount to a deprivation of liberty when viewed in the context of
that resident’s life, needs, preferences, communication, routines and
protections.
The wider reform picture: Liberty Protection Safeguards
The Government has already announced plans to consult on
Liberty Protection Safeguards (LPS), the long-delayed replacement for DoLS. LPS
is intended to create a more streamlined and person-centred system, with wider
application across settings and to people aged 16 and over. For care homes, the
key message is to keep following current DoLS and Mental Capacity Act
requirements while preparing for further national guidance and possible future
reform.
Practical steps to take now
- Brief
registered managers, deputy managers, nurses and senior carers on the
Supreme Court decision and what it may mean for day-to-day care planning.
- Review
policies, staff training, audits and dependency tools that still rely only
on the Cheshire West acid test.
- Check
that care plans clearly explain restrictions, risks, alternatives, best
interests decisions and least restrictive options.
- Improve
daily notes and reviews so they capture the resident’s wishes, feelings,
communication, objections, distress, contentment or signs of agreement.
- Maintain
communication with supervisory bodies, local authorities, safeguarding
teams and advocates while further guidance develops.
Final thoughts
The recent UK changes to DoLS mark a major turning point for
care homes. The removal of the Cheshire West acid test may reduce unnecessary
bureaucracy over time, but it also requires homes to exercise careful judgement
and maintain strong safeguards for residents who may be unable to protect their
own rights. Until further government guidance is published, the safest approach
is to keep practice person-centred, evidence-based and firmly grounded in the
Mental Capacity Act.
For further information on this new ruling, please use the
links below:
Deprivation of
Liberty Safeguards
Cheshire West
overruled: DoL reshaped for health and social care
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