New autism strategy must deliver change for autistic people

24 Nov 2025 01:21 PM

This is the key conclusion reached by the House of Lords special inquiry committee on the Autism Act 2009 in its report ‘Time to deliver: The Autism Act 2009 and the new autism strategy’.

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The Autism Act says the Government must produce an autism strategy, backed up by statutory guidance for the NHS and local authorities. The House of Lords asked the Committee to look at how well the Autism Act has been working, how it could work better in the future, and what the current autism strategy has achieved.

Key recommendations

The Committee’s main recommendation is that the Government must now urgently develop and deliver the new autism strategy, so it is ready to launch when the current one expires in July 2026. 

The Government must identify priority outcomes, produce a costed, deliverable plan to achieve them, and make clear who is responsible and accountable for delivery. 

Too often, decisions about autistic people’s lives are made for them, not by them. This must change. Autistic people and those who support them must be meaningfully involved in every stage of the development and delivery of the new strategy. 

As part of the new strategy, the Government must:

The report finds that the Autism Act was a critical step forward in the recognition of autistic people, but successive Governments have failed to deliver real change. Sixteen years on, autistic people still face unacceptable inequalities. This holds them back from living fulfilling lives and society from an inclusive future. Statistics show that:

The Government autism strategy for 2021 to 2026 set ambitions reflecting the key priorities of autistic people and those who support them. However, after the first year, there was no plan to deliver or fund the strategy. It’s now time to deliver the real change that autistic people need.

Chair’s comments

Baroness Rock, Chair of the Autism Act 2009 Committee, yesterday said:

“We are indebted to the hundreds of people who shared their experiences with us, including nearly 400 written submissions—which we believe to be a record number for a House of Lords Select Committee. We were constantly struck by the moving, and at times painful, testimonies of autistic people and those who support them, but also by the passion and determination they showed.” 

“Our report draws on their evidence to set out a path to addressing the needs and aspirations of autistic people through the new autism strategy. To make the new strategy a success, the Government must set realistic goals, make a plan to deliver them, monitor progress, and work together with autistic people and those who support them to build change. 

“The Government must now use our findings to fulfil its commitment to bring forward the new autism strategy on time in July 2026. We will judge the Government’s response against that commitment. Autistic people deserve nothing less.”

Further information