Plans to transform social care across Scotland will be progressed after the Scottish Parliament approved the Care Reform (Scotland) Bill.
Thousands of people with experience of accessing, delivering and receiving social care, social work and community health services have helped co-design the legislation, putting people at the heart of reform.
The Bill will bring forward a number of enhancements to social care that include:
Alongside the Bill, an advisory board will be established to drive progress and scrutinise reform, replacing an interim board that met for the first time in May.
More than 200,000 people across Scotland access care each year.
SOCIAL CARE MINISTER MAREE TODD
Anyone may need care during their lives, and that care should be high quality and delivered consistently across Scotland. That is why we have been so determined to bring forward much-needed reform, alongside the work we are already doing through the near ÂŁ2.2 billion total investment in social care and integration in 2025-26.
Reform is not easy to deliver and it is being made more challenging by recent UK Government changes to Employer National Insurance Contributions and changes to migration. These will undoubtedly impact on care delivery.
However, we have remained steadfast in our commitment to deliver the sustainable change to social care that people urgently need.
This is a significant step that will strengthen the rights of people living in care homes, support unpaid carers and social workers and improve experiences for the many people who access social care across Scotland.
The Scottish Parliament has just approved the Care Reform (Scotland) Bill.
— Scottish Government (@scotgov) June 10, 2025
It will transform social care, social work and community health services for people across Scotland, putting lived experience at the heart of the system.
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