New Policing Performance System to support improvements

17 Jul 2026 11:48 AM

Every police force in England and Wales has been assigned a performance level by the policing inspectorate for the first time, as part of a drive to support improvements across policing and increase public confidence and accountability.

Forces will now be able to access support and intervention earlier, helping to make communities safer.

Performance levels have been decided by His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS) and will be published online.

These range from Level One – the default level – to Level Four (Special Measures) for the most significant performance issues.

The Policing Performance System aims to strengthen how force performance is assessed and provide earlier support when improvements are needed. For the first time, the system brings together assessments made by HMICFRS, a new Police Performance Framework developed by the Home Office, and bespoke support provided to forces by the College of Policing.

Announced in the Police Reform White Paper, the new system will also see forces made accountable to the Home Secretary for performance. Ministers and the inspectorate will also have new powers to intervene directly in failing forces.

If there are performance concerns, such as poor police response times or victims not receiving the service they deserve, the Home Secretary, through the College of Policing, will send in experts from across policing to help them improve. Forces have also been set targets on neighbourhood policing levels, 999 response times and incident response times through the new police performance framework.

His Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Constabulary Michelle Skeer OBE QPM yesterday said:

“This strengthened system-wide approach will support all police forces in England and Wales.

“By using a range of data, evidence and insight to identify concerns earlier, the Policing Performance System will provide the correct level of support at the right time. This will assist forces in addressing any performance issues before they get worse and help make our communities safer.”

Crime and Policing Minister Sarah Jones yesterday said: 

“For too long, failings in policing have been identified too late, allowing poor performance to go unchecked.

“Our new system will catch problems earlier, ensuring forces are challenged, supported and held accountable for improving.

“We are strengthening our powers to ensure we drive up standards, to catch more criminals and cut crime.”

Chief Constable Sir Andy Marsh, College of Policing CEO, yesterday said: 

“This is a groundbreaking new approach for policing so that the public can see a consistency of performance regardless of where they live.

“Where required, a turnaround team from the College will go into forces and work with them to identify the causes for performance issues and create plans to deliver sustained improvement.

“Our approach will be collaborative, and we will work with forces in a partnership to deliver improved performance.”

Dedicated turnaround teams from the College of Policing will work directly alongside forces in higher levels to provide tailored support and co-design practical, evidence-informed improvement plans. All forces will also have access to additional guidance and resources through a Performance Support Toolkit.

His Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Constabulary is responsible for determining which level each police force is assigned to. The level a force is assigned reflects its current performance and the support needed:

Through proposed new powers, His Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Constabulary will be able to issue directions to police forces, subject to specific circumstances and safeguards being met. The Home Secretary will also be able to directly intervene with forces that persistently fail to improve or refuse to engage with support.

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