How to Access Supported Living in Birmingham: A Complete Guide
There are multiple agencies, different funding streams, confusing terminology, long waiting lists, and a creeping sense that you need to already know the system to get into the system.
We hear this constantly. A parent of a young adult with learning disabilities who's been going in circles for two years. A GP's surgery unsure which pathway to use for a patient with dual diagnosis. A landlord who wants to offer their property but doesn't know where to start.
This guide cuts through the noise. Here's exactly how supported living works in Birmingham — and how to access it.
First, Let's Define "Supported Living"
Supported living (sometimes called "supported accommodation" or "supported housing") refers to housing arrangements where a person lives in their own home — whether a flat, house, or shared property — and receives support from paid workers to help them live as independently as possible.
This is different from:
Residential care homes (where staff are present 24/7 and residents don't hold tenancies)
Nursing homes (medically led care)
Standard private rentals (no support element)
In supported living, the tenancy and the support are legally separate — a key distinction that protects residents' rights and determines funding.
Who Can Access Supported Living in Birmingham?
Supported living is available to adults (18+) who have assessed support needs arising from:
Learning disabilities
Autism spectrum conditions
Mental health conditions
Physical disabilities
Acquired brain injuries
Substance misuse recovery
Offending histories
Homelessness or housing instability
Domestic abuse
Care leaver status (18–25)
There is no single eligibility threshold. What matters is that there is an assessed need for support to live independently — and that the appropriate funding pathway exists.
The Key Pathways Into Supported Living
Pathway 1: Via Birmingham City Council (Adult Social Care)
This is the most common route for adults with learning disabilities, autism, mental health conditions, or physical disabilities.
How it works:
Request a Care Act needs assessment from Birmingham City Council's Adult Social Care team — call: 0121 303 1234
A social worker assesses your needs and determines eligibility for a personal budget or direct payment
If eligible, a support plan is developed, and you can choose a supported living provider
Relevant legislation: Care Act 2014 — this is the primary legal framework for adult social care in England.
Important: Birmingham City Council has been under significant financial strain. Assessments may take time. Push for a timescale when you first make contact, and keep a record of all communications.
Pathway 2: Via the NHS (Mental Health or Hospital Discharge)
If someone is being discharged from hospital — inpatient mental health, acute hospital, or detox — the NHS has a legal duty to ensure a safe discharge to suitable accommodation.
What to request:
Ask the ward or discharge team for a Housing, Health and Care Plan
Request involvement from the hospital social work team
Specifically mention supported accommodation if standard discharge housing is not appropriate
Useful contacts:
Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust — for mental health services
NHS Discharge to Assess (D2A) pathways — ask the ward sister or discharge coordinator
Pathway 3: Via a Homelessness Service or Council Housing Team
Adults who are homeless or at risk of homelessness can access supported accommodation through:
Birmingham City Council Housing Options — 0121 303 7410
St Basils (for young people 16–25) — www.stbasils.org.uk
YMCA Birmingham — www.ymcabirmingham.org.uk
Shelter West Midlands — www.shelter.org.uk/get_help/local_advice/west-midlands
A Section 184 assessment under the Housing Act 1996 determines whether the council has a legal duty to house you. Those with a priority need (which includes vulnerability due to mental illness, disability, pregnancy, or having dependents) are more likely to be found full housing duty.
Pathway 4: Via Probation or the Criminal Justice System
For adults leaving prison or on licence, supported accommodation is often part of a Licence Condition and arranged through:
Your Offender Manager / Probation Officer
Birmingham Changing Futures — multi-agency support for adults with complex needs
St Giles Trust West Midlands — www.stgilestrust.org.uk
Nacro Housing — www.nacro.org.uk
HMPPS and probation services can refer directly to supported accommodation providers. Landlords operating in this space — like MKM Housing — often have established referral relationships with probation teams.
How Is Supported Living Funded?
This is the question that derails more conversations than any other. Here's a clear breakdown:
Most supported living arrangements involve at least two funding streams working together.
For residents: You will generally not be expected to fund the full cost yourself. The assessment process determines your financial contribution (usually a means-tested personal contribution toward support costs).
What Happens After Placement?
Once placed in supported living:
An initial support plan is created — usually within the first two weeks
Key worker sessions begin — frequency depends on assessed need (could be daily, weekly, or fortnightly)
Regular reviews are held — typically every three to six months — to assess progress and adjust the support package
Outcome monitoring tracks progress against agreed goals (independent living skills, community participation, employment, etc.)
Move-on planning begins when the resident is ready to progress to more independent housing
Common Problems (and How to Overcome Them)
Problem: "I've been waiting months and nothing has happened." Solution: Request a formal review of your case, ask for your social worker's manager's contact, and consider consulting Shelter or a local law centre for advice on your rights under the Care Act.
Problem: "I was told I don't qualify, but I'm struggling." Solution: You have the right to appeal assessments. Get a second opinion from an independent advocate — POhWER provides free advocacy services across Birmingham.
Problem: "The available properties don't seem right for me." Solution: You should be involved in choosing your placement. Request to see all available options and provide feedback. Placement matching is not a "take it or leave it" situation.
Problem: "I can't afford the top-up costs." Solution: Welfare rights advisors can often find additional benefits or discretionary payments. Contact Birmingham Citizens Advice for a full benefit check.
How MKM Housing Can Help
MKM Housing works directly with referral agencies, social workers, probation teams, and NHS discharge coordinators across Birmingham. We offer:
Supported accommodation in well-managed, compliant properties
Fast response to referrals — we understand that timing matters
An established network of support providers we work alongside
Transparent communication with all stakeholders throughout a placement
If you're a professional looking to refer, or an individual seeking accommodation, reach out directly. We'll be honest with you about what we can offer and what the next steps look like.

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