Crime and Policing Act 2026: factsheets
Why linked: Crime and Policing Act 2026 factsheets index, directly on primary legislation
These factsheets provide more information about the Crime and Policing Act 2026.
The policing policy thread covers the legal and institutional framework for how police forces in England and Wales (and, in places, the wider UK) are organised, funded, held accountable and empowered — anchored by the Crime and Policing Act 2026, the January 2026 police-reform White Paper, and the vetting/conduct SIs.
The Act overhauls police powers and integrity rules while the White Paper proposes the most significant governance change in over a decade — abolition of Police and Crime Commissioners and creation of a National Police Service — against a backdrop of contested funding and productivity scrutiny.
The Crime and Policing Act 2026 received Royal Assent on 29 April 2026 after extended Lords/Commons ping-pong; the White Paper governance reforms are at proposal stage and commencement of Act provisions (e.g. s.47) is being probed by PQs.
Principal new statute on antisocial behaviour, offensive weapons, police powers and policing integrity; received Royal Assent 29 April 2026.
January 2026 White Paper proposing a National Police Service, stronger national standards, a new police performance framework and abolition of PCCs.
Parliamentary record of the Bill that became the Act, including the full passage and ping-pong stages.
Requires every police officer to hold and maintain vetting clearance — central to the post-misconduct integrity reforms.
Amends the Police Regulations 2003 and Conduct Regulations 2020 to reform misconduct and complaints handling.
Sets out how government will measure performance across policing activity, launched alongside the White Paper.
Home Secretary's WMS laying the vetting regulations and setting out the accountability reform package.
Government news announcing abolition of PCCs, projected to save at least £100m to fund frontline officers.
Final 2026-27 funding allocations to PCCs, confirming total funding of up to £19.6bn.
Late-stage ping-pong document on FPN incentivisation guidance (ASBCPA 2014 ss.52/68) and Iran proscription-review amendments (Terrorism Act 2000 s.3).
National Audit Office report finding forces reduced reserves by £276m and borrowed £632m in 2024-25; baseline for the PAC inquiry.
Public Accounts Committee concluded the Home Office does not understand how wider policy changes affect police demand and criticised piecemeal funding.
Library briefing analysing the January 2026 White Paper and the structural reform options.
HM Inspectorate of Constabulary annual assessment of policing in England and Wales.
Lords DPRRC scrutiny of the delegated powers in the Bill.
Independent review identifying productivity savings; recommendations tracked by NAO/PAC scrutiny.
Stop and search APP is core operational policing guidance and within thread scope (police powers/duties).
Operations/response APP is core operational policing guidance within scope.
Funding allocation is a recurring governance/resourcing element of the thread.
Police and crime commissioners (PCCs) will be abolished, saving the taxpayer at least £100 million and helping to fund frontline officers
Why linked: Central governance reform announced via the White Paper and the November 2025 oral/written statement.
This act supports the government's Safer Streets Mission to halve knife crime and violence against women and girls in a decade
Why linked: Stated rationale for the Crime and Policing Act 2026 in the GOV.UK collection.
Why linked: Crime and Policing Act 2026 factsheets index, directly on primary legislation
These factsheets provide more information about the Crime and Policing Act 2026.
Why linked: Crime and Policing Bill 2025 factsheets index, directly on primary legislation
These factsheets provide more information about the Crime and Policing Bill, which was introduced in the House of Commons on 25 February 2025.
Why linked: The primary legislative vehicle implementing the government's policing and Safer Streets Mission commitments; now enacted as law.
A Bill to make provision about anti-social behaviour, offensive weapons, powers of the police, and the police; received Royal Assent on 29 April 2026 and is now the Crime and Policing Act 2026.
Why linked: Crime and Policing Bill 2025 impact assessments, directly on primary legislation analysis
Impact assessments relating to the Crime and Policing Bill 2025.
Why linked: Crime and Policing Bill 2025 equality impact assessments, directly on primary legislation
Equality impact assessments relating to the Crime and Policing Bill 2025.
Why linked: Crime and Policing Bill 2025 economic notes, directly on primary legislation
Economic notes relating to the Crime and Policing Bill 2025.
Why linked: Crime and Policing Bill 2025 ECHR supplementary memoranda, directly on primary legislation
Information relating to the Crime and Policing Bill, which was introduced in the House of Commons on 25 February 2025.
Why linked: Crime and Policing Bill 2025 Keeling Schedules, directly on primary legislation
Keeling Schedules for Crime and Policing Bill introduced into the House of Commons on 25 February 2025.
Why linked: Crime and Policing Bill 2025 delegated powers memoranda, directly on primary legislation
Information relating to the Crime and Policing Bill, which was introduced in the House of Commons on 25 February 2025.
Why linked: College of Policing consultation on stop and search APP - directly implements police operational guidance in scope
The College of Policing is seeking views on updated guidance that will help police officers across the country conduct stop and searches.
Why linked: Accessible version of the 'From local to national' White Paper — the central governance-reform document.
Accessible version of the 'From local to national' White Paper — the central governance-reform document.
In response to: From local to national: a new model for policing
Why linked: Filled the "Police workforce strategy and recruitment" gap via web research
This white paper sets out comprehensive reforms to policing in England and Wales to enable policing to better deliver for the public.
Why linked: College of Policing annual report and accounts 2024-25 - institutional performance and governance
An overview of work done by the College of Policing between 1 April 2024 and 31 March 2025, and a summary of the college’s 2024 to 2025 accounts.
Why linked: Police and crime panels guidance - PCC accountability framework
Police and crime panels provide support and scrutiny to locally elected police and crime commissioners, ensuring this information is available to the public.
Why linked: Police grant report 2026-27 (accessible) - police funding allocations and governance
Police grant report 2026-27 (accessible) - police funding allocations and governance
In response to: Police grants in England and Wales: 2026 to 2027
Why linked: Police grants 2026-27 - police funding allocations to PCCs, core resource governance
Final allocations of grants to police and crime commissioners in England and Wales for 2026 to 2027.
Why linked: Police Performance Framework; core framework for measuring police governance and performance
The framework shows how the government will measure performance across a broad range of policing activity.
Why linked: College of Policing annual report and accounts 2023-24 - institutional performance and governance
An overview of work done by the College of Policing between 1 April 2023 and 31 March 2024, and a summary of the college’s 2023 to 2024 accounts.
Why linked: State of Policing 2024 to 2025 — HMICFRS annual assessment directly relevant to policing governance and accountability
His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Service's Annual Assessment of Policing in England and Wales 2024 to 2025.
Why linked: College of Policing consultation on operations and response guidance - police operational guidance
The College of Policing is consulting on updated guidance that will help police forces respond to emergencies and major incidents.
Why linked: Police Conduct, Performance and Complaints Regulations 2025 - statutory instrument governing police misconduct and discipline
These Regulations amend the Police Regulations 2003 (S.I. 2003/527) (“the Police Regulations”), the Police (Conduct) Regulations 2020 (S.I. 2020/4) (“the Conduct Regulations”), the Police (Performance) Regulations 2020 (S.I. 2020/3) (“the Performance Regulations”), the Police (Complaints and Misconduct) Regulations 2020 (S.I. …
Why linked: Police Vetting Regulations 2025 - statutory instrument on police personnel vetting
These Regulations make provision for the vetting of police officers. They require every police officer to hold and maintain vetting clearance. They also establish a procedure for withdrawing vetting clearance where there is evidence that a police officer may no …
Why linked: Police Vetting Regulations 2025 - statutory instrument on police personnel vetting
These Regulations make provision for the vetting of police officers. They require every police officer to hold and maintain vetting clearance. They also establish a procedure for withdrawing vetting clearance where there is evidence that a police officer may no …
Why linked: Announces the laying of statutory vetting regulations — a concrete implementation step in the police accountability reform programme.
The Home Secretary laid new regulations requiring all serving police officers to hold appropriate vetting status, describing this as long overdue action to remove officers who fail vetting.
Why linked: Criminal Appeals consultation paper on policing - policy consultation on policing-related criminal justice
Project: Criminal appeals
Why linked: Policing inspection programme and framework 2025-29 - police accountability and performance framework
An inspection programme and framework under Schedule 4A to the Police Act 1996.
Why linked: IOPC annual report and accounts, directly relevant to police accountability regulator publication
Details of the work of the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) from 2023 to 2024.
Why linked: Police grant report 2025-26 accessible version; substantive funding allocation document
Police grant report 2025-26 accessible version; substantive funding allocation document
In response to: Police grant report: 2025 to 2026
Why linked: Police grant report 2025-26 final allocations; core policy document on police resourcing
Final allocations of grants to police and crime commissioners in England and Wales for 2025 to 2026.
Why linked: Police grant allocations consultation outcome 2025-26; policy consultation within funding scope
We are seeking views on the provisional police grant report for England and Wales.
Why linked: Policing inspection programme and framework under Police Act 1996; institutional accountability framework
An inspection programme and framework prepared under Schedule 4A to the Police Act 1996
Why linked: State of Policing 2023 (HMICFRS) is the prior-year annual assessment within the inspection strand.
The Annual Assessment of Policing in England and Wales 2023.
Why linked: The Government response to the Policing Productivity Review is directly on the productivity/value-for-money strand of this thread.
The government’s response to the recommendations of the Policing Productivity Review.
Why linked: Police (Conduct) Amendment Regulations 2024; statutory instrument on police discipline and misconduct
These Regulations amend the Police (Conduct) Regulations 2020 (S.I. 2020/4) (“the 2020 Regulations”).
Why linked: Independent review of IOPC under Public Bodies Review Programme, directly relevant to accountability framework governance
An independent review of the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) under the Public Bodies Review Programme.
Why linked: IOPC Public body review outcome, directly relevant to accountability regulator governance
The outcome of an independent review of the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) under the Public Bodies Review Programme.
Why linked: PCC Elections (Local Returning Officers' Charges) Order 2024; statutory instrument on police and crime commissioner governance
Under section 55 of the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011 (c. 13), a returning officer may recover charges in respect of services rendered, or expenses incurred, for or in connection with an election if the services were necessarily …
Why linked: Defending democracy policing protocol; police operational policy on public order and protest policing
Defending democracy policing protocol; police operational policy on public order and protest policing
In response to: Defending democracy policing protocol
Why linked: PCC Elections (Designation) Order 2024; statutory instrument on police and crime commissioner electoral arrangements
This Order makes provision in relation to elections in England and Wales of police and crime commissioners under Chapter 6 of Part 1 of the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011 (c. 13) (“the 2011 Act”).
Why linked: IOPC annual report and accounts, directly relevant to police accountability regulator publication
Details of the work of the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) from 2022 to 2023.
Why linked: A national advisory body for ethics in policing — relevant to professional standards frameworks
Summary report from a forum on ethics in policing hosted by the Biometrics and Forensics Ethics Group (BFEG) in September 2023.
Why linked: Police grant report 2024-25 accessible version; substantive funding allocation
Police grant report 2024-25 accessible version; substantive funding allocation
In response to: Police grants in England and Wales: 2024 to 2025
Why linked: Provisional police grant report 2024-25; funding policy document
Provisional police grant report 2024-25; funding policy document
In response to: Police grant allocations: 2024 to 2025
Why linked: Police grant allocations consultation outcome 2024-25; policy consultation within funding scope
We are seeking views on the provisional police grant report for England and Wales.
Why linked: The Policing Protocol Order 2023 — statutory instrument implementing Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011, core governance framework
Section 79 of the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011 (c. 13) requires the Secretary of State to issue a Policing Protocol. This Order replaces the Policing Protocol, issued under the Policing Protocol Order 2011 (S.I. 2011/2744), which it …
Why linked: State of Policing 2022 (HMICFRS) is a directly relevant annual inspectorate assessment.
The Annual Assessment of Policing in England and Wales 2022
Why linked: Policing front line review — directly relevant to policing workforce strategy and operational improvement
Report from the review inviting police officers, PCSOs and staff in operational roles in England and Wales to share their ideas for change and improvement in policing.
Why linked: Police and Crime Commissioner Elections Order 2020 - statutory instrument on PCC governance framework
This Order makes provision in relation to elections in England and Wales of police and crime commissioners under Part 1 of the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011 (c. 13).
Why linked: Policing and Crime Bill: overarching documents - policy documents on core policing governance
These documents relate to the Policing and Crime Bill.
Why linked: Policing for the future: government response to HASC report — substantive government response to policing reform inquiry
Response to the Home Affairs Select Committee's report on policing for the future.
Why linked: Policing and Crime Bill: police powers and commissioners - policy documents on core policing governance
These documents relate to the provisions on police powers and police and crime commissioners in the Policing and Crime Bill.
Why linked: 2010-2015 government policy: policing; historical policing policy overview
2010-2015 government policy: policing; historical policing policy overview
In response to: 2010 to 2015 government policy: policing
Why linked: Government policy paper on 2010-2015 policing policy including police accountability to communities - substantive policing policy statement
How the government is making the police more accountable to the communities they serve.
Why linked: Policing and Crime Bill as introduced - primary legislation in scope
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Policing policy in England and Wales is now governed by a multi-layered framework that changed materially in 2025-26. The Crime and Policing Act 2026 (c. 20) received Royal Assent on 29 April 2026 [75040], delivering new police powers, offensive-weapons measures and policing-integrity provisions under the Government's Safer Streets Mission 1. Running alongside it, the January 2026 White Paper 'From local to national: a new model for policing' proposes the most significant governance change in over a decade — abolition of Police and Crime Commissioners and a new National Police Service 2, announced as PCC abolition saving 'at least £100 million' 3. The Police (Vetting) Regulations 2025 require every officer to hold vetting clearance 4. Independent scrutiny is sharp: the National Audit Office found forces cutting reserves and borrowing to balance 5, and the Public Accounts Committee concluded the Home Office does not understand demand on police resources 6.
The Crime and Policing Act 2026 is now in force as primary legislation but its provisions are commencing in stages; a May 2026 PQ asked the Home Secretary for a timeline to bring section 47 into force 1, signalling a live commencement gap. The Act's final shape was settled through extended Lords/Commons ping-pong: the HL Bill 194 disagreement document shows the two Houses contesting (a) guidance duties on fixed penalty notices issued under sections 52 and 68 of the Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014, where the Lords pressed for an explicit duty to disincentivise financially-motivated FPN issuing within six months of passing, and (b) a Lords amendment requiring a review of proscribing Iran-related entities under section 3 of the Terrorism Act 2000, which the Commons countered with a duty to publish a statement about the proscription regime [74949]. On governance, the White Paper 2 and the November 2025 abolition announcement 3 remain at policy stage and will need fresh primary legislation to dismantle the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011 PCC architecture. The operational-standards estate continues under the College of Policing and IOPC framework documents 45, with the College consulting on stop and search authorised professional practice (APP) 6. Funding runs through the annual Police Grant Report, with the 2026-27 settlement confirming total funding of up to £19.6bn 7.
The headline development is Royal Assent on 29 April 2026 [75040], confirmed on the Parliament Bill page (Bill 3938) 1 and reflected in the updated GOV.UK collection 2. In the run-up, the Lords and Commons exchanged a sequence of insistence and amendment-in-lieu motions on the FPN guidance and Iran proscription questions through late April 2026 [74949]3. Post-Assent, the Home Office published the Crime and Policing Act 2026 factsheets (19 May 2026), including an overarching factsheet, police-powers factsheet and policing-integrity factsheet 4567. On 4 June 2026 the Home Office published the second edition of police use-of-force statistics for England and Wales (April 2024 to March 2025) 8. The College of Policing opened a consultation on stop and search APP on 27 April 2026 9. The independent-scrutiny cycle peaked in January 2026 with the PAC report drawing on the NAO's November 2025 productivity report 1011, and the final 2026-27 police funding settlement was laid on 28 January 2026 by the Minister of State for Policing and Crime 12.
Three strands dominate the next twelve months. First, commencement: the Act is on the statute book but the May 2026 PQ on the section 47 timeline 1 confirms provisions are awaiting commencement SIs — analysts should watch for the commencement stream and whether contested measures arrive on schedule. Second, the proscription/FPN duties from the ping-pong settlement: if the FPN guidance duty was enacted, the Home Secretary faces a six-month deadline from passing to issue guidance disincentivising financially-motivated FPN issuing under Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014 sections 52 and 68, with a designation-revocation consequence for breach [74949]; equally, the duty to publish a statement about the proscription regime under section 3 of the Terrorism Act 2000 falls due within six months of passing [74949]. Third, and most consequential commercially and politically, is whether the Government brings forward legislation to abolish PCCs and stand up the National Police Service 23 — this is currently policy, not law, and PCCs remain the statutory budget-holders for the ~£19.6bn settlement 4 until Parliament acts. The fiscal credibility question is acute: the Home Office's £354m savings target by 2028-29 is challenged by the PAC's finding that the data to monitor it does not exist and that forces are drawing down reserves (£276m) and borrowing (£632m) to balance 56. Watch too for the College's stop and search APP outcome 7 and any Government response to the PAC productivity report.
Several uncertainties qualify this briefing. The exact final wording of the enacted Crime and Policing Act 2026 on the contested FPN-guidance and Iran-proscription provisions is not fully resolvable from the ping-pong document alone [74949] — the legislation.gov.uk enacted text [75040] would need to be read to confirm which formulation prevailed. Inferred from corpus gap: the corpus contains no Government response to the January 2026 PAC police-productivity report 1, so the Department's reaction to those value-for-money findings is unknown. The White Paper's PCC-abolition timetable and legislative vehicle are not specified in the corpus beyond the announcement 2. Legislative-consent positions for Scotland and Wales on the enacted provisions were 'sought' during Lords stages 3 but the final consent outcomes are not in the events list. The NAO/PAC findings on reserves and borrowing 45 are firm, but their read-across to the 2026-27 settlement's adequacy is contested rather than settled.
This thread is framed around policing governance, accountability, resourcing and powers. Counter-terrorism content (e.g. the proscription provisions and youth diversion orders in the Crime and Policing Act 2026) is in scope only where it is framed as policing governance; broader counter-terrorism operations, criminal-justice sentencing, prisons, private security and immigration/border enforcement are out of scope even though the Act touches adjacent areas.
Bills and Acts this regime substantively depends on. Links go to the bill's own thread on this site (where available) and to bills.parliament.uk.
Principal new statute on police powers, anti-social behaviour, offensive weapons and policing integrity; received Royal Assent 29 April 2026 and inserts guidance duties into the Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014.
Policing policy in England and Wales sits on a layered statutory base rather than a single code. The Police Act 1996 supplies the durable architecture — the duties of chief officers, the HMICFRS inspection framework under Schedule 4A, and the Strategic Policing Requirement under s.37A. The Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011 added the elected-accountability layer: Police and Crime Commissioners, Police and Crime Panels and the statutory Policing Protocol (most recently the Policing Protocol Order 2023). Operational conduct sits in subordinate regulations — the Police Regulations 2003, the Police (Conduct) Regulations 2020 and the new Police (Vetting) Regulations 2025.
The Crime and Policing Act 2026 is the latest primary-law layer. It is a powers-and-offences statute (anti-social behaviour, offensive weapons, retail-worker assault, theft, terrorism-related youth diversion) rather than a governance statute, and it layers fresh duties onto pre-existing Acts. The ping-pong material shows this layering concretely: the contested amendments did not create a new FPN regime but inserted guidance duties into ss.56/73 of the Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014 to govern how ss.52/68 FPNs are issued, and inserted a duty on the Home Secretary either to review Iran-related proscription under s.3 of the Terrorism Act 2000 or to publish a statement of proscription policy.
The White Paper 'From local to national' is the governance-reform layer, and crucially it is policy not law: it proposes abolishing PCCs (an 2011-Act structure) and creating a National Police Service with stronger national standards, but it cannot itself change the 2011 Act — that requires further primary legislation. Until that legislation appears, PCCs and panels remain the statutory accountability mechanism.
The accountability/standards estate is split between the College of Policing (professional standards and authorised professional practice, e.g. stop and search APP) and the IOPC (conduct and complaints), each operating under a Home Office framework document. HMICFRS provides external inspection, and the NAO/PAC provide value-for-money scrutiny — the November 2025 NAO productivity report and the January 2026 PAC report are the independent baseline against which the funding settlements and reform claims should be read.
Funding is governed annually through the Police Grant Report (laid under the relevant Police Act powers and approved by motion), which sets PCC allocations — the 2026-27 settlement confirmed total funding of up to £19.6bn.
Directly elected office under the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011 holding the local force to account and setting the policing budget.
Operational guidance issued by the College of Policing setting expected standards for police activity such as stop and search and emergency response.
Requirement under the Police (Vetting) Regulations 2025 that every police officer hold and maintain vetting clearance.
A statutory duty (contested in ping-pong) requiring guidance on how to disincentivise financially-motivated issuing of fixed penalty notices under ASBCPA 2014 ss.52/68.
Commencement of section 47 of the Crime and Policing Act 2026 and the wider stream of commencement SIs following Royal Assent.
College of Policing response/outcome on the stop and search authorised professional practice (APP) consultation.
Government legislative vehicle to implement PCC abolition and the National Police Service proposed in the White Paper.
Within six months of the Act passing, the Home Secretary's compliance with the FPN guidance duty (if enacted) and publication of the proscription-regime statement.
On the reform package: the Home Office frames the Crime and Policing Act 2026 and the White Paper as restoring neighbourhood policing and public confidence, abolishing PCCs to fund frontline officers and centralising standards through a National Police Service.May 2026Nov 2025Mar 2026
Tension with Public Accounts Committee, National Audit Office
On police governance and funding: announced PCC abolition and stronger national governance (Nov 2025) and laid the £19.6bn 2026-27 settlement, presenting both as part of the Safer Streets reform agenda.Nov 2025Jan 2026
On the Crime and Policing Bill and funding: led Lords ping-pong motions resisting the more prescriptive Lords amendments while delivering the Lords funding-settlement and reform statements.Jan 2026Apr 2026
On police productivity and funding: concluded the Home Office does not understand how wider policy changes affect demand on police resources, called the funding approach outdated and piecemeal, and questioned whether the £354m savings target can be monitored.Jan 2026Jan 2026Jan 2026
Tension with Home Office
On police productivity: reported that forces responded to financial pressure by cutting reserves by £276m and borrowing £632m in 2024-25, providing the value-for-money baseline that challenges the funding settlement's adequacy.Nov 2025
Tension with Home Office
On misconduct and workforce: recommended the Home Office produce a comprehensive officer-retention strategy and reform misconduct/disciplinary processes (including concurrent running with criminal cases).Apr 2025Nov 2023
On operational standards: consulting on updated stop and search and operations/response authorised professional practice and engaging committees on policing culture and productivity.Apr 2026Dec 2025
On conduct oversight: publishes annual accountability reporting and engaged committees over contested decisions (Maccabi Tel Aviv ban) and the Cabinet Office/public-body review implementation.Jan 2026Feb 2025
On the state of policing: its 2024-25 annual assessment provides the independent inspectorate view of performance and standards across forces.Sep 2025
On PSNI funding: welcomed the rising policing budget and the ring-fenced funding for the PSNI workforce recovery as cause for optimism.May 2026
On productivity: argued in written PAC evidence that policing productivity must be assessed within an effective end-to-end criminal justice process, not in isolation.Jan 2026