People without decent homes

Published

1. Main facts and figures

  • in the 2 years to March 2023, an average of 14% of households in England lived in a home with no modern facilities, no effective insulation or heating, or in a state of disrepair (a ‘non-decent home’)

  • 15% of White British households lived in a non-decent home

  • 24% of Mixed White and Black African households lived in a non-decent home – the highest percentage out of all ethnic groups.

  • 8% of households from the White Irish and 6% of households from the Bangladeshi ethnic groups lived in a non-decent home- the lowest percentage out of all ethnic groups.

2. Things you need to know

What the data measures

The data measures the percentage of households in England living in a ‘non-decent’ home, by ethnicity.

A home is non-decent if any of the following apply:

  • it does not meet the basic legal health and safety standards for housing
  • it is not in a reasonable state of repair
  • it does not have reasonably modern facilities and services
  • it has insulation or heating that is not effective

Read more about the definition of a decent home.

The information relates to households of either one person or a group of people sharing cooking facilities and a living room or dining area. It must be their main or only home.

Percentages are rounded to the nearest whole number. They have been worked out using unrounded values.

Not included in the data

Estimates based on fewer than 5 households have not been included. This is to protect people’s confidentiality, and because it is harder to make reliable generalisations from smaller numbers of survey respondents.

The ethnic groups used in the data

Data is shown for the 18 ethnic groups from the 2011 Census.

Data is based on the ethnicity of the 'household reference person'. This is usually the person responsible for the tenancy or mortgage. If there are joint owners or tenants, it is the person with the highest income. If they have the same income, it is the oldest person.

The data does not account for people of different ethnic backgrounds who live in the same household.

Ethnicity was known for 99.9% of households.

Methodology

Read the detailed methodology document for this data.

The data is an average for the 2 years from April 2021 to March 2023. This is to make sure there are enough households to be able to make reliable generalisations. You can read more about combining multiple years of data and some of the issues involved.

The figures are based on survey data. Find out more about:

In the data file

Download the data for:

  • figures rounded to one decimal place
  • data from previous years
  • sample sizes
  • weighted figures for the numerator and denominator

3. By ethnicity

Percentage and number of households (in thousands) living in non-decent homes, by ethnicity
Ethnicity % Number of non-decent homes ('000s) All households ('000s)
All 14 3,490 24,310
Asian 12 177 1,474
Bangladeshi 6 6 103
Chinese 15 20 137
Indian 11 65 618
Pakistani 13 53 396
Asian other 15 33 220
Black 18 147 821
Black African 20 112 556
Black Caribbean 12 27 224
Black other withheld because a small sample size makes it unreliable withheld because a small sample size makes it unreliable 41
Mixed 14 66 472
Mixed White/Asian withheld because a small sample size makes it unreliable withheld because a small sample size makes it unreliable 99
Mixed White/Black African 24 27 112
Mixed White/Black Caribbean 11 11 96
Mixed other 13 21 165
White 14 3,048 21,205
White British 15 2,900 19,720
White Irish 8 11 149
White Gypsy/Traveller withheld because a small sample size makes it unreliable withheld because a small sample size makes it unreliable 12
White other 10 134 1,324
Other 15 52 337
Arab withheld because a small sample size makes it unreliable withheld because a small sample size makes it unreliable 56
Any other 16 46 281

Download table data for ‘By ethnicity’ (CSV) Source data for ‘By ethnicity’ (CSV)

Summary of People without decent homes By ethnicity Summary

The data shows that:

  • in the 2 years to March 2023, an average of 15% of White British households lived in a non-decent home

  • 24% of Mixed White and Black African households lived in a non-decent home – the highest percentage out of all ethnic groups.

  • 8% of households from the White Irish and 6% of households from the Bangladeshi ethnic groups lived in a non-decent home- the lowest percentage out of all ethnic groups.

4. Data sources

Source

Type of data

Survey data

Type of statistic

National Statistics

Publisher

Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government

Note on corrections or updates

Information published in the English Housing Survey headline report and other annual reports is usually based on a 12-month period, rather than the 2 years’ combined data used here. As a result, the statistics shown here may not match those in the English Housing Survey reports.

Publication frequency

Yearly

Purpose of data source

The English Housing Survey is a continuous national survey. It collects information about people’s housing circumstances and the condition and energy efficiency of housing in England.

5. Download the data

People living in non-decent homes data - Spreadsheet (csv) 6 KB

measure time time_type ethnicity ethnicity_type geography nssec income_band region age_group tenure value numerator_000s denominator_000s sample_size