Spinnaker Tower Abseil, Portsmouth
11 July 2026
Could you offer short-term support to a young person who needs it? Respite foster care is a flexible way to make a real difference, offering stability and care at the times it matters most.
Contact Our TeamIf you have ever thought about fostering but are unsure about the level of commitment, respite foster care could be the right place to start. It can also be the right choice if you know you want to make a difference in a more flexible, short-term way.
At Step by Step, respite foster care in the UK offers a flexible, supported way to care for children and young people, while fitting around your life. Whether you have time occasionally or are exploring fostering for the first time, this can be a practical and meaningful next step.
Respite foster care provides short-term support for children and young people aged 0 to 18.
This may involve caring for a young person for a few days, a weekend, or during specific periods when their usual carers need additional support.
Respite care plays an important role in strengthening existing placements. It helps other foster carers continue their work and gives young people a safe, stable environment when it is needed most.
Respite fostering can suit a wide range of people, particularly those who want to make a meaningful difference in a young person’s life but need that commitment to fit around their existing circumstances.
You may already have experience supporting young people, or you may simply feel that now is the right time to give something back. What matters most is not having all the answers, but having the space, stability and willingness to provide a safe and supportive home, even for short periods.
For many people, respite foster care becomes a way to take that first step with confidence. For others, it is the right fit in its own right, offering a way to provide consistent, meaningful support without moving into full-time fostering.
If your home feels a little quieter than it once did, or you find yourself with space that could be used to support someone else, respite fostering can be a way to turn that space into something powerful.
It offers the opportunity to contribute in a way that is realistic, manageable and genuinely impactful.
If you are unsure about becoming a full-time foster carer, respite foster care offers a realistic and supported way to begin. You can build experience gradually, learning what fostering involves in practice rather than theory.
You will still go through the full assessment and training process, which means you are properly prepared from the start. This gives you the confidence to care for a young person, while also helping you understand whether fostering is right for you in the longer term.
Starting with respite care can remove some of the pressure. It allows you to take that first step knowing you are supported, informed and able to grow into the role.
Respite fostering can work well if your home is not always available. For example, you may have children who return during university holidays, or you may have periods in the year where your routine is quieter.
Rather than needing to offer a placement all year round, you can open your home when it suits your circumstances. This means your spare room can still make a meaningful difference, even if it is not available all the time.
This flexibility makes respite care a practical option for people who want to help, but need that help to fit around their existing home life.
Respite foster care is designed to fit alongside your current commitments. Whether you are working, semi-retired, or balancing family responsibilities, you can choose when you are available and which placements you accept.
There is no expectation to say yes to every opportunity. You remain in control of your time, which helps you protect your routine, your relationships and your own wellbeing.
For many people, this balance is what makes respite fostering possible. It allows you to offer stability and care to a young person, without needing to completely change your lifestyle.
You can choose when you are available, and you are never required to accept a placement. This means you stay in control and can take part in a way that works for you.
Many carers begin with respite fostering before moving into longer-term placements, but this is not the only path.
Respite care can also be a long-term choice in its own right, providing vital short-term support that helps sustain other fostering arrangements and offers stability to young people when it is needed most.
As part of the process, you will complete the full fostering assessment and panel approval. This means you are approved to foster more broadly, giving you the flexibility to shape your role in a way that works for you, now and in the future.
You will receive full training before you begin, along with ongoing support from our experienced fostering team.
Support is available 24 hours a day, so you are never alone when you need advice or reassurance.
Respite foster carers receive financial allowances to cover the cost of caring for a young person, including food, utilities and day-to-day expenses.
Our team will talk you through the details so you know exactly what to expect.
When you foster with Step by Step, you become part of a wider network of carers.
You will have access to peer support, events and resources through organisations such as The Fostering Network, helping you feel connected and supported.
Respite foster care is designed to be flexible and predictable. It is one of the most flexible ways to foster part time. It focuses on short, planned periods of care rather than full-time placements.
Typically, respite foster carers look after a young person for short, planned periods such as:
In many cases, these arrangements are agreed in advance, so you know when you are needed and can plan around your existing routine.
For many people, this means you can support a young person without changing your day-to-day life or long-term commitments.
For example, you might choose to offer one weekend a month on a regular basis, providing consistent support to the same young person while still maintaining your own routine.
This kind of structure helps both you and the young person build familiarity and trust over time, while keeping the commitment manageable.
Some placements are more occasional or arranged for specific situations, but even then, you will usually have clear communication and the opportunity to prepare.
Understanding this structure can help you picture how respite fostering would work in your day-to-day life, making it easier to decide whether it feels like the right fit.
While each placement is different, respite foster care is centred around providing a stable, welcoming home for short periods of time.
Before a placement begins, you will usually have the opportunity to meet the young person and understand their needs, routines and preferences. This helps everyone feel more comfortable and sets clear expectations from the start.
During their stay, your role is to provide consistency and care in a home environment. This may include:
Because placements are shorter, the focus is often on creating a sense of stability and familiarity. Even over a weekend, that consistency can make a meaningful difference.
Respite fostering does not require you to change your entire lifestyle. Instead, it builds around your existing routine, allowing you to offer care in a way that feels natural and manageable.
No. You are always in control of when and how you offer respite care.
There is no minimum number of placements you need to accept. You can say yes or no depending on your availability, your circumstances, and what feels right for you at the time.
You might choose to offer regular support, such as one weekend a month, or prefer more occasional placements depending on your availability. Both approaches are valuable.
This flexibility is a key part of respite fostering. It allows you to make a difference in a way that works for your life, not the other way around.
To become a respite foster carer, you will need to:
While the process is thorough, you will be supported at every stage.
Respite foster carers receive financial allowances for each placement.
These payments are designed to cover the cost of caring for a young person, including food, utilities and day-to-day expenses.
Our team can explain the full structure of payments and answer any questions you may have.
Choosing to become a respite foster carer is a significant decision. Our role is to make sure you feel prepared, supported and confident at every stage, not just at the beginning, but throughout your time fostering.
From your first conversation with us, we take the time to understand your circumstances, your home, and what you feel able to offer. You will receive clear guidance through the assessment process, along with training that prepares you for real-life situations, not just theory.
Once you begin respite fostering, you will have a dedicated member of the team who knows you and your situation. They will be there to talk through placements in advance, answer questions, and support you in making decisions that feel right for you.
You will also have access to 24-hour on-call support, so if something unexpected happens, you are never dealing with it alone. Regular check-ins, advice and ongoing development opportunities help you build confidence over time.
Just as importantly, you become part of a wider network. Through peer support, events and shared learning, you are connected to others who understand what fostering involves and can offer encouragement and perspective.
Respite fostering is not just about supporting one young person for a short period of time. It plays a wider role in helping the entire fostering system work more effectively.
By offering short breaks, you are helping other foster carers continue in their role, preventing placements from breaking down and ensuring more young people can stay in stable, supportive homes.
At the same time, the allowances provided for respite care ensure that the practical costs are covered, so your focus can remain on creating a safe, welcoming environment.
This means your impact reaches further than you might expect. You are supporting young people directly, strengthening other placements, and helping create a more stable system of care overall.
As part of Step by Step, fostering is also connected to a wider mission. Any surplus generated through Step by Step Fostering Ltd is reinvested back into the charity, helping to support young people who are at risk of homelessness or already experiencing it.
This means your role contributes not only to the young person staying with you, but to a much broader network of support for vulnerable young people across our communities.