Management information on persons placed into temporary accommodation and rough sleepers for May 2022.
This is not the latest release in the series: Homelessness accommodation provision and rough sleeping
This monthly collection replaces the weekly gathering of intelligence during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
It covers temporary accommodation and provision of long-term accommodation for people who present to local authorities for housing support as they are at risk of homelessness.
This data has not undergone the same level of quality assurance as official statistics and the data may be revised in future.
The figures for the latest month should be treated as provisional. Not all local authorities have been able to provide comprehensive data and this is reflected, where relevant, in the footnotes.
For the estimates of rough sleeping, we publish a breakdown by local authority (from November 2020). For data on use of accommodation, we are initially publishing data at the Wales-level only.
Ability to compare with statutory homelessness statistics and the rough sleeper count
It is important to note the following differences between this new monthly collection and our existing data collections and publications on statutory homelessness:
- This monthly data relates to the number of individuals experiencing homelessness and being supported by local authorities into temporary accommodation or suitable long-term accommodation.
- Our quarterly and annual collections on statutory homelessness capture data on number of households, not individuals. That data relates to homelessness as defined by the Housing (Wales) Act 2014.
In addition, we do not recommend comparisons between the rough sleeping estimates from this monthly collection and the annual rough sleeper count (up to November 2019). In this monthly collection, local authorities are asked to base their estimates on local intelligence. The annual rough sleeper count has a different methodology: a two-week information gathering exercise, followed by a one-night snapshot count.
Main points
Comparisons over time
At this stage, it is important not to put too much emphasis on data for an individual month or comparisons with previous months. This monthly collection of management information and the guidance provided is continuing to be refined and improved.
Use of temporary accommodation
- Throughout Wales, 1,563 people presenting as homeless were placed into temporary accommodation during the month, 263 more than in April 2022. Of these, 462 were dependent children aged under 16, an increase of 106 from April 2022. [footnote 1] [footnote 2] [footnote 3]
- At 31 May 2022, 8,134 individuals were in temporary accommodation, an increase of 135 from 30 April 2022. 2,336 of these were dependent children aged under 16, an increase of 154 from 30 April 2022. [footnote 3] [footnote 4]
- Between the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic and the end of May 2022, over 23,200 people who were previously homeless have been supported into emergency temporary accommodation. [footnote 1] [footnote 2] [footnote 3]
Homeless individuals moved into suitable long-term accommodation
- 635 homeless individuals were moved into suitable long-term accommodation, 130 more than in April 2022. Of the individuals moved into suitable long-term accommodation, 240 were dependent children aged under 16, an increase of 57 from April 2022. [footnote 2] [footnote 3]
Rough sleeping
- At 31 May 2022, there were an estimated 101 individuals sleeping rough throughout Wales. This is an increase of 15 from the 86 individuals sleeping rough at 30 April 2022. [footnote 3] [footnote 5]
- As at 31 May 2022, Newport (17), Pembrokeshire (13), Cardiff (12), Monmouthshire (11) and Denbighshire (10) were the local authorities reporting the highest numbers of individuals sleeping rough. All other local authorities reported 7, or fewer, individuals sleeping rough, with seven local authorities reporting zero. [footnote 3] [footnote 5]
Footnotes
[1] One local authority did not include ‘homeless at home’.
[2] One local authority reported households, not persons. Therefore, there will be a small undercount in the total figures presented.
[3] One local authority was unable to supply the figure for April 2022 in time for publication. For that local authority, the figure for 31 March 2022 has instead been used.
[4] Two local authorities were unable to obtain data from women’s refuges in their local authority.
[5] Local authorities are asked to base these estimates on local intelligence, not a one-night count.
Data
Datasets and interactive tools
Homelessness accommodation provision and rough sleeping: May 2022 , file type: ODS, file size: 15 KB
Contact
Craig Mcleod
Email: stats.housing@gov.wales
Rydym yn croesawu gohebiaeth yn Gymraeg / We welcome correspondence in Welsh.
Media
Telephone: 0300 025 8099
Rydym yn croesawu galwadau yn Gymraeg / We welcome calls in Welsh.