Cladding Safety Scheme – Information for leaseholders and residents
Why linked: May 2026 Cladding Safety Scheme information for leaseholders/residents — direct on regime.
In response to: Cladding Safety Scheme
The post-Grenfell building safety reform programme: a multi-Act regulatory regime built on the Fire Safety Act 2021 and Building Safety Act 2022, operationalised through the higher-risk buildings regime, leaseholder cost protections, the Cladding Safety Scheme and the Building Safety Regulator, and now structured around implementing the Grenfell Tower Inquiry Phase 1 and Phase 2 recommendations.
The regime governs life-safety risk in England's high-rise residential stock, allocates billions of pounds of remediation cost between developers, taxpayers and leaseholders, and is the test case for the Government's accountability against all 58 Phase 2 recommendations the Inquiry made on 4 September 2024.
As of 27 January 2026 the Building Safety Regulator has moved out of the HSE to become a standalone NDPB under SI 2026/20, with BSR's strategic plan for 2026-27 published 31 March 2026; ministers are simultaneously trying to clear a Gateway 2 application backlog, accelerate cladding remediation under hard 2029/2031 deadlines, and consult on Approved Document B and on rebalancing 'Category A/B' higher-risk building work.
The framework Act for the post-Grenfell regime: creates the BSR, higher-risk building gateways, accountable-person duties under Part 4, the Building Safety Levy and statutory leaseholder protections in ss.116-125 and Schedule 8.
Accepts all 58 Phase 2 recommendations and sets the regime's substantive direction on Approved Document B, the definition of higher-risk buildings, building control competence and construction product regulation.
Clarifies that the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 applies to the external walls (including cladding) and flat entrance doors of multi-occupied residential buildings — the immediate legislative response to Phase 1.
Establishes the BSR as a body corporate from 27 January 2026, transfers HSE's building-safety functions, amends HSWA 1974 to remove HSE's building functions and amends the Building Act 1984 and BSA 2022 to substitute 'Building Safety Regulator' for 'HSE'.
Sets the 18m / 7-storey, two-or-more residential units threshold that defines the scope of the higher-risk building regime.
Implements occupation-phase Part 4 BSA 2022 duties: safety case reports, mandatory occurrence reporting and resident engagement.
Operationalises ss.116-125 and Schedule 8 BSA 2022, defining qualifying leases and remediation cost protections.
Commences the building-control profession reforms from 6 April 2024, including transfer of approved inspectors to registered building control approvers and section 49 plans-certificate regime.
Free-of-charge corrective SI fixing defects in SI 2023/993 so amendment notices remain available for transitional higher-risk building work.
The Remediation Acceleration Plan — sets the policy framework for hard remediation deadlines, the Cladding Safety Scheme and social-housing acceleration.
Phase 2 update to the Remediation Acceleration Plan — sets hard 2029 / 2031 deadlines for completion of cladding remediation and over £1bn for social housing.
Impact assessment for the Building Safety Levy — a developer-side tax on residential developments requiring building control approval in England, funding remediation.
Operative response text accepting Inquiry Phase 2 recommendations on building control, AD-B, construction products and definition of HRBs.
Third progress report tracking implementation of Phase 2 recommendations alongside outstanding Phase 1 items.
First annual report (post-progress-report cycle) on implementation of all 58 Phase 2 recommendations.
BSR's first operational plan as a standalone NDPB.
Ministerial statement announcing the AD-B consultation that will address all outstanding GTI Phase 2 fire-guidance recommendations.
Summary update confirming acceptance of all Phase 2 Inquiry recommendations.
Substantive Lords scrutiny report on BSR capability, the Gateway 2 backlog and the regulator's transition to a standalone body.
Government's reply accepting the diagnosis on BSR capacity and undertaking process reforms.
PAC report citing 'insufficient capacity and capability' at the BSR — the original parliamentary diagnosis.
Library scrutiny of the building regulations and fire safety regime.
Library briefing on the cumulative fire-safety regulatory framework for blocks of flats.
Foundational pre-BSA select committee report that informed the legislative response.
BSR's initial review of the 18m / 7-storey HRB definition, addressing Phase 2 recommendation 113.13 on regime scope.
Consultation outcome on the design of the developer levy on new residential buildings.
Active consultation on rebalancing Category A and B work — the regulatory lever for clearing the Gateway 2 backlog.
The earlier acceptance of Phase 1 recommendations on evacuation, fire-and-rescue interaction and FRA duties — the conceptual hinge between immediate Fire Safety Act steps and the Building Safety Act.
Private Member's Bill (Liz Saville Roberts) amending HSWA 1974 to impose proactive employer duties on workplace violence and harassment — adjacent to the regime but not on the core fire/building safety pathway.
Direct ministerial response to the Gateway 2 backlog repeatedly flagged in PQs and the Lords I&R Committee report.
Operational delivery of consultation 62435.
Implements Phase 2 recommendations on construction products and competence.
Implements GTI Phase 2 recommendations on industry competence, addressing Hackitt Review gaps.
Operationalises building control competence reforms post-Grenfell.
Designs the developer levy that funds the regime's remediation cost obligations.
Underpins SI 2024/104 commencement of building-control profession reforms.
Underpins the Higher-Risk Buildings Procedures Regulations 2023 and Building Control SIs.
Implements Part 4 BSA 2022 statutory duty of resident engagement.
the government accepted all of the Inquiry's recommendations
Why linked: Government's published commitment in the third Progress Report (December 2025) to deliver all Phase 2 recommendations.
The government will set out tough new targets to fix unsafe buildings
Why linked: Set the Remediation Acceleration Plan (2 December 2024) as the operational commitment to accelerate cladding remediation.
Strict deadlines for landlords to fix unsafe cladding and over £1 billion allocated to make social tenants safe
Why linked: Phase 2 update to the Remediation Acceleration Plan (17 July 2025) committed to dated deadlines and quantified social-housing funding.
BSR becomes standalone body in landmark step towards single construction regulator
Why linked: Operative commitment delivered through SI 2026/20 and Dixon's HCWS1279 statement on 27 January 2026.
We will also bring forward a Remediation Bill as soon as parliamentary time allows, which will focus on accelerating the remediation of historical [defects]
Why linked: Norris's WMS (HCWS849, 17 July 2025) committed to a future Remediation Bill — the regime's pending primary-legislation pipeline.
Why linked: May 2026 Cladding Safety Scheme information for leaseholders/residents — direct on regime.
In response to: Cladding Safety Scheme
Why linked: May 2026 Cladding Safety Scheme applications guidance — direct on regime.
In response to: Cladding Safety Scheme
Why linked: May 2026 Cladding Safety Scheme overview — direct on remediation regime.
In response to: Cladding Safety Scheme
Why linked: Fire Safety Act 2021 factsheet on commencement - implementation information
In response to: Fire Safety Act 2021
Why linked: Fire Safety Act 2021 factsheet for lenders - implementation guidance
In response to: Fire Safety Act 2021
Why linked: Filled the "Cladding remediation schemes and funding announcements" gap via web research
Guidance for organisations taking part in the Homes England Cladding Safety Scheme to address fire risks.
Why linked: April 2026 building assessment certificate application guidance — operationalises Part 4 BSA 2022.
Use this service to apply for a building assessment certificate from the Building Safety Regulator.
Why linked: April 2026 BSR charging scheme guidance — direct on regime funding.
What the Building Safety Regulator (BSR) charges for building control, inspection, registration and other functions, and how BSR calculates these.
Why linked: April 2026 HRB building control application management guidance — direct on regime.
Use this service to apply for and manage building control applications for higher-risk buildings in England.
Why linked: April 2026 RBCA business registration guidance — direct on regime.
All private sector businesses that want to do building control work in England and Wales under the Building Act 1984 (as amended) must apply to register with the Building Safety Regulator (BSR).
Why linked: April 2026 building control approval for HRBs guidance — direct on regime.
How to apply for building control approval from the Building Safety Regulator to construct, or carry out building work on, a higher-risk building.
Why linked: Guidance on building assessment certificate applications—direct operational guidance for Building Safety Regulator implementation, core to thread scope
The information principal accountable persons must submit when applying for a building assessment certificate from the Building Safety Regulator.
Why linked: Guidance on remediation orders - implements Building Safety Act 2022 enforcement power
Guidance for local authorities and fire and rescue services on the use remediation orders, a Building Safety Act 2022 enforcement power.
Why linked: Grenfell Tower Inquiry Phase 2 recommendations guidance—explicitly named as adjacent material in scope
Recommendations made by the Grenfell Tower Inquiry in its report of 4 September 2024
Why linked: December 2025 preparing information for building control approval applications guidance — direct on regime.
Help with the information you must submit to the Building Safety Regulator when you apply to construct, or carry out building work on, a higher-risk building.
Why linked: Guidance for local authorities working in multi-disciplinary teams for the BSR — operational delivery of the regime.
What local authorities need to do when working in a multi-disciplinary team for the Building Safety Regulator (BSR).
Why linked: Building Safety Fund guidance for leaseholders - directly implements leaseholder protections and remediation funding mechanisms in scope
Information to support leaseholders and residents living in buildings in the Building Safety Fund (BSF).
Why linked: Social sector ACM cladding remediation fund guidance - directly supports remediation funding scheme (Cladding Safety Scheme) within explicit scope
Guide for social landlords who can apply for funding to assist with replacing Aluminium Composite Material (ACM) cladding systems on their social residential buildings.
Why linked: Private sector ACM cladding remediation fund prospectus - directly supports remediation funding scheme within explicit scope
Guide for responsible entities who can apply for funding to assist with replacing unsafe Aluminium Composite Material (ACM) cladding systems on private residential buildings.
Why linked: Building Safety Fund process guide for residents - implementation guidance for remediation funding scheme explicitly in scope
The Building Safety Fund (BSF) provides funding to fix life safety fire risks associated with cladding in buildings over 18 metres high. This guide explains the process.
Why linked: Building Safety Fund guidance for new applications 2022 - detailed remediation funding scheme guidance
Building Safety Fund for the remediation of fire risks associated with cladding in high rise buildings (England only): new applications from 28 July 2022.
Why linked: Tell Homes England about unsafe cladding - guidance on reporting mechanism for building safety concerns
If you live in or are responsible for a building you can tell Homes England if you have concerns about the safety of its cladding.
Why linked: Criteria for higher-risk buildings during occupation - Building Safety Act 2022 implementation guidance
This guidance relates to the legal criteria for determining whether a building is considered a higher-risk building under the Building Safety Act 2022 and the Higher-Risk Buildings (Descriptions and Supplementary Provisions) Regulations 2023. It relates to the definition of higher-risk …
Why linked: Criteria for higher-risk buildings during building work - Building Safety Act 2022 implementation guidance
This guidance relates to the legal criteria for determining whether a building is considered a higher-risk building under the Building Safety Act 2022 and the Higher-Risk Buildings (Descriptions and Supplementary Provisions) Regulations 2023. It relates to the definition of higher-risk …
Why linked: Criteria for new higher-risk buildings - Building Safety Act 2022 implementation guidance
This guidance relates to the legal criteria for determining whether a proposed new building is considered a higher-risk building under the Building Act 1984 (as amended by the Building Safety Act 2022) and the Higher-Risk Buildings (Descriptions and Supplementary Provisions) …
Why linked: Guidance on professional codes and standards for building control bodies—directly relevant to building control competence frameworks in scope
The codes and standards that building control bodies must follow.
Why linked: Building control contraventions and criminal offences under BSR investigation—directly relevant to building control enforcement mechanisms
What happens when the Building Safety Regulator investigates a registered building control approver in England or Wales, or a local authority in England.
Why linked: Amendments to BSA 2022 introduced through Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024 — directly on regime.
Amendments to the Building Safety Act 2022 were enacted through the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024.
Why linked: Investigation of building control professionals—BSR enforcement and oversight procedures directly relevant to thread
This page explains the Building Safety Regulator's procedure when investigating registered building inspectors, registered building control approvers and local authorities.
Why linked: Building control practice guidance on cancellation, transfers, reversions—building control operational framework
Guidance for local authorities, registered building control approvers, and persons carrying out building work.
Why linked: Non-determination applications for higher-risk buildings—Building Act 1984 amendment relevant to building safety reform
Changes to Section 30(A) of the Building Act 1984.
Why linked: July 2024 leaseholder protections guidance — direct on leaseholder regime.
This guidance provides leaseholders with a plain English explanation of the implications of the leaseholder protections in the Building Safety Act 2022.
Why linked: Making sure remediation work is done - Building Safety Act 2022 leaseholder protections
The Building Safety Act 2022 created legal protections for leaseholders from historical building safety costs.
Why linked: April 2024 transitional building control approval for new HRBs — operationalises SI 2024/104.
What documents clients need to submit to manage building control approval for higher-risk building work under transitional arrangements.
Why linked: April 2024 transitional building control approval for existing HRBs — operationalises SI 2024/104.
What documents clients need to submit to manage building control approval for higher-risk building work under transitional arrangements.
Why linked: April 2024 Building Safety Fund applications guidance from July 2022 — direct on remediation funding.
Information on the Building Safety Fund (BSF).
Why linked: Building Safety Fund guidance—core remediation funding scheme in scope
Information on the Building Safety Fund (BSF).
Why linked: RBCA assessment criteria—building control competence and registration standards
This guide will help you understand the assessment criteria needed when you apply to register your business as a building control approver.
Why linked: Inspection of building control bodies by BSR—building control oversight procedures
This page explains the Building Safety Regulator's inspection selection criteria and how it will prioritise the inspection of building control bodies.
Why linked: GOV.UK guidance on leaseholder protections on building safety costs - explains implementation of Building Safety Act protections
From 28 June 2022, the leaseholder protections on building safety costs in England have come into effect.
Why linked: BSR enforcement policy statement (December 2023) — direct on regulator approach.
The approach to enforcing legal duties to expect if you're working on or managing higher-risk buildings, or working as a building control professional.
Why linked: Already cited under section 156 guidance — direct on regime.
Understand your new duties as a responsible person under Section 156 of the Building Safety Act.
Why linked: October 2023 Building Safety Fund Leaseholder and Resident Service guidance.
Check the progress of your building’s application to the Building Safety Fund (BSF).
Why linked: Cost benefit analysis for amendment to Higher-Risk Buildings Regulations 2023.
This cost benefit analysis relates to an amendment being made to the Higher-Risk Buildings (Descriptions and Supplementary Provisions) Regulations 2023 through the Higher-Risk Buildings (Keeping and Provision of Information etc.) (England) Regulations 2023.
Why linked: September 2023 Fire Safety Act addendum guidance — direct on Fire Safety Act 2021 implementation.
The Fire Safety Act clarified the parts of a premises that apply under the Fire Safety Order (FSO). You should consider these changes when completing a fire risk assessment.
Why linked: August 2023 leaseholder protections amendments guidance — direct on regime.
This guidance provides stakeholders with a plain-English explanation of the implications of the latest leaseholder protections amendments in the Building Safety Act 2022.
Why linked: July 2023 Cladding Safety Scheme opening guidance — foundational on CSS.
The Cladding Safety Scheme will provide funding for the remediation of unsafe cladding in England where a responsible developer cannot be identified, traced, or held responsible.
Why linked: Filled the "Fire Safety Act 2021 implementation guidance" gap via web research
In response to: Fire Safety Act 2021
Why linked: Cost benefit analysis for Higher-Risk Buildings (Descriptions and Supplementary Provisions) Regulations 2023
This cost benefit analysis relates to the Higher-Risk Buildings (Descriptions and Supplementary Provisions) Regulations 2023 being made under the Building Safety Act 2022.
Why linked: Building Safety Fund glossary — operational guidance.
This glossary of terms has been created to aid leaseholders and residents to understand wording used in the Building Safety Fund guidance and Leaseholder and Resident Service.
Why linked: Companion guidance on BSA 2022 secondary legislation links.
Links to secondary legislation.
Why linked: July 2022 'The Building Safety Act' overview guidance — foundational framework guidance.
Information relating to the Building Safety Act, which was granted Royal Assent on 28 April 2022.
Why linked: Filled the "Building Safety Programme delivery and oversight documents" gap via web research
The programme was established to make sure that residents of high-rise buildings are safe – and feel safe – now, and in the future.
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The post-Grenfell building safety regime is now in its operational phase. The Building Safety Act 2022 (BSA 2022) and the Fire Safety Act 2021 12 provide the statutory architecture; the Building Safety Regulator (BSR) became a standalone non-departmental public body on 27 January 2026 under SI 2026/20 34, severing the regulator from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE). The Government accepted all 58 of the Grenfell Tower Inquiry's Phase 2 recommendations in February 2025 (CP 1248) 5 and is publishing six-monthly Progress Reports and an Annual Report 67 tracking delivery. Two live pressure points dominate the file: the BSR's Gateway 2 backlog (subject to the Lords Industry and Regulators Committee report 'Building a better regulator' 8 and a March 2026 'Proportionality in building control' consultation 9) and the Remediation Acceleration Plan's hard 2029/2031 deadlines 10. A Remediation Bill is committed but not yet introduced 11.
The regime sits at the operational/review boundary. The framework instruments are all in force: BSA 2022 Parts 2-4 and ss.116-125, the Fire Safety Act 2021 (sections 1 and 3 commenced 16 May 2022 for England) 12, and the principal operationalising SIs — the Higher-Risk Buildings (Descriptions) Regulations 2023 (SI 2023/275), the Management of Safety Risks Regulations 2023 (SI 2023/907) 3, and the Leaseholder Protections Regulations 2022 (SI 2022/711) 4. Building-control profession reforms commenced from 6 April 2024 via SI 2024/104 56, with SI 2024/850 fixing transitional defects on amendment notices 7. The single biggest recent structural change is SI 2026/20 8, which establishes the BSR as a body corporate with its own chair, members and chief executive (Schedule 1) and amends HSWA 1974 to remove HSE's building functions and substitute the BSR as 'the regulator' across the Building Act 1984 and BSA 2022 (Schedule 2). Operationally, the BSR's strategic plan 2026-27 9 commits to clearing the Gateway 2 backlog through a new batching model, an external remediation team and an external remediation improvement plan 10. Remediation funding runs in parallel through the Building Safety Fund 11, the Cladding Safety Scheme administered by Homes England 12, the Social Sector ACM Remediation Fund 13 and (when commenced) the Building Safety Levy 14. The Grenfell Tower Inquiry Phase 2 Annual Report (February 2026) is the most recent self-reported delivery snapshot 15.
The last six months have been dominated by structural and operational reform. On 27 January 2026 the BSR moved out of the HSE to become a standalone NDPB, with Minister Samantha Dixon announcing the change in HCWS1279 and Baroness Taylor of Stevenage delivering the parallel Lords WMS HLWS1279 123. On 11 February 2026 the Government accepted the Lords Industry and Regulators Committee's diagnosis of BSR capability gaps 45. The BSR published its 2026-27 strategic plan on 31 March 2026 6 and on 8 April 2026 announced its external remediation improvement plan 7. On 25 March 2026 Dixon announced (HCWS1460) the Approved Document B consultation covering all outstanding Phase 2 fire-guidance recommendations 8; the next day MHCLG opened the 'Proportionality in building control: categorisation of higher-risk building work' consultation aimed at clearing the Gateway 2 backlog through scope rebalancing 9. In parallel the Government published its third Progress Report on 17 December 2025 1011 with an implementation timeline for the 58 Phase 2 recommendations 12, and its first Annual Report on 2 March 2026 13. PQs on the Gateway 2 backlog, BSR staffing and remediation enforcement intensified through March-April 2026 141516.
Three watch-items dominate the next 12 months. First, the outcome of the March 2026 Category A/B proportionality consultation 1 — if accepted, scope rebalancing will be the principal mechanism for clearing the Gateway 2 backlog without primary legislation; if it founders, the Government will face renewed pressure to introduce a structural Gateway 2 reform Bill. Second, the Approved Document B consultation announced in HCWS1460 2 is the single largest operational deliverable against the Grenfell Tower Inquiry's Phase 2 recommendations on fire guidance; its outcome will determine whether the Government can credibly claim line-by-line delivery against all 58 recommendations 34. Third, the Remediation Bill committed by Alex Norris in HCWS849 (17 July 2025) 5 has no parliamentary slot or Bill text in the build — its emergence (or non-emergence) will indicate whether the Government can hit the hard 2029/2031 cladding remediation deadlines 6 without amended primary legislation. Watch also for monthly BSR Gateway 2 data 78910; the next Grenfell Annual Report (expected February 2027) 11; outcomes of BSR's Conditions of Authorisation review 12; the BSR's ongoing review of the higher-risk building definition (initial review published December 2025) 13; and any HCLG Committee follow-through on its call for an independent national oversight mechanism 14, which directly contests MHCLG's self-reporting model.
The most material risk is delivery: PAC reported insufficient BSR capacity in March 2025 1, the Lords Industry and Regulators Committee echoed it in December 2025 2, and Government accepted the diagnosis in February 2026 3 — but the practical metric is monthly Gateway 2 determination time data 4. Inferred from corpus gap: there is no National Audit Office value-for-money study on the BSR or the Remediation Acceleration Plan in this build, despite the programme's scale — the absence of independent fiscal scrutiny is itself the issue. Inferred from corpus gap: this build does not enumerate the line-by-line status of each of the 58 Phase 2 recommendations; the Progress Report and Annual Report are cited as containers but their granular tables are not in this synthesis. The Remediation Bill commitment 5 is firm in WMS but has no parliamentary id, leaving the 2029/2031 deadlines exposed to legislative slippage. Finally, HCLG Committee's call for independent oversight 67 is in unresolved tension with MHCLG's self-reporting model 8 — the governance-architecture question of who polices delivery remains live.
This workspace covers the post-Grenfell building safety and fire safety regulatory regime in England (and Wales, where Welsh Ministers exercise parallel commencement powers). It deliberately excludes: general fire safety in non-residential buildings outside the Fire Safety Act 2021's clarification scope; fire service operational response and emergency procedures; criminal prosecutions arising from the Grenfell fire itself; and compensation and civil litigation for Grenfell victims. The Saville Roberts Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 (Amendment) Bill [62428] is included in key_documents but flagged as adjacent — it amends the same statute that hosts HSE/BSR architecture but addresses workplace violence rather than building safety. The Housing (Cladding Remediation) (Scotland) Act 20
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.
The framework Act for the entire post-Grenfell building safety regime — establishes BSR, higher-risk building regime, leaseholder protections and Building Safety Levy.
Clarifies the application of the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 to multi-occupied residential buildings; the immediate legislative response to the Grenfell Phase 1 recommendations.
Government-committed primary legislation (Norris WMS HCWS849, 17 July 2025) to accelerate remediation of historical building-safety defects; no Bill text or parliament_id yet.
Amended the Building Safety Act 2022 leaseholder-protections regime (per gov.uk guidance on amendments introduced through that Act).
The post-Grenfell building safety regime is layered: an immediate fire-safety clarification (Fire Safety Act 2021), a framework Act establishing a new regulator and a higher-risk regime (Building Safety Act 2022), a body of secondary legislation operationalising that framework, and an evolving implementation programme responding to the Grenfell Tower Inquiry's Phase 1 and Phase 2 recommendations.
The primary architecture sits in the Building Safety Act 2022 (BSA 2022). Part 2 establishes the Building Safety Regulator and its functions, committees (the Industry Competence Committee, Resident Panel and Building Advisory Committee) and resident-engagement duties. Part 3 amends the Building Act 1984 to introduce Gateway approvals for higher-risk building work, replaces approved inspectors with registered building control approvers (RBCAs), creates the Building Safety Levy, and confers default powers on the appropriate national authority. Part 4 imposes ongoing duties on accountable persons in occupation: registration of buildings, safety case reports, mandatory occurrence reporting, building assessment certificates, and resident engagement. Sections 116-125 and Schedule 8 create the leaseholder cost protections.
Secondary legislation runs that architecture. SI 2023/275 defines 'higher-risk building' (>=18m / 7 storeys, two residential units). SI 2023/907 implements occupation-phase Part 4 duties. SI 2023/315 governs the BSR register and review of decisions. SI 2023/396 sets out 'key building information'. SI 2022/711 and SI 2022/859 operationalise leaseholder protections. SI 2024/104 (commencement no. 7) brought the building-control profession reforms into force from 6 April 2024 and transferred approved inspectors to RBCAs, with SI 2024/850 fixing a defect in the original commencement order to preserve amendment notices in transitional cases.
SI 2026/20 is the most significant structural change since BSA 2022 itself: it establishes the BSR as a standalone body corporate and removes building functions from the HSE entirely. Schedule 1 sets out the BSR's constitution (chair, 3-8 members, chief executive subject to Secretary of State approval, Secretary of State power to direct except in particular enforcement cases). Schedule 2 amends HSWA 1974 to strip out HSE's building functions and amends both the Building Act 1984 and BSA 2022 to substitute 'Building Safety Regulator' for 'HSE' as the regulator. Regulation 5 preserves continuity: acts of HSE 'as the building safety regulator' before transfer are treated as acts of the BSR.
The Government response to the Grenfell Tower Inquiry Phase 2 report (CP 1248, 26 February 2025) accepted all 58 recommendations. Operationally that has driven: BSR's initial review of the HRB definition (December 2025); the Approved Document B consultation (announced March 2026); the Category A/B proportionality consultation (March 2026, addressing the Gateway 2 backlog identified by PAC and the Lords I&R Committee); construction product reforms; building control competence work through the ICC; and the planned Remediation Bill (committed by Norris in HCWS849, July 2025).
Remediation funding sits parallel to the regulatory regime: the Building Safety Fund (for buildings 18m+), the Cladding Safety Scheme (operated by Homes England for buildings 11m-18m, expanded post-2024), the Social Sector ACM Cladding Remediation Fund, and the Building Safety Levy (developer-funded). The 17 July 2025 Remediation Acceleration Plan Phase 2 update set hard 2029/2031 deadlines for remediation completion. Enforcement is via remediation orders (BSA 2022 enforcement power, with March 2026 guidance), prohibition orders, and the BSR's Remediation Enforcement Unit.
A building of at least 18m in height or 7 storeys with at least two residential units (SI 2023/275).
Persons under Part 4 BSA 2022 with statutory duties for the management of building-safety risks during occupation of a HRB; PAPs are responsible for the building as a whole.
Statutory pre-construction approval required from the BSR before HRB building work can start under the amended Building Act 1984.
Lease type defined in s.119 BSA 2022 and SI 2022/711 attracting the statutory leaseholder protections in Schedule 8.
Enforcement orders available under BSA 2022 directing relevant landlords / associated bodies to undertake or pay for remediation works.
Successor to approved inspectors under SI 2024/104, registered by the BSR.
Government response to the Approved Document B consultation announced in HCWS1460 (25 March 2026) and the substantive content of any revised AD-B.
Outcome of the 'Proportionality in building control: categorisation of higher-risk building work' consultation — will determine whether scope rebalancing can clear the Gateway 2 backlog.
BSR delivery against its 2026-27 strategic plan, including Gateway 2 determination times and external remediation team caseload reductions.
Introduction of the Remediation Bill committed by Norris in HCWS849 (17 July 2025) — focused on accelerating historical-defect remediation.
Outcome of BSR's Conditions of Authorisation review and fire-doorsets self-certification call for evidence.
Next Grenfell Tower Inquiry Government Annual Report (expected February 2027 on the annual cycle following the February 2026 report).
Monthly BSR building control approval application data — the most reliable contemporaneous indicator of regulator operational performance.
Hard deadline for remediation of buildings 18m+ in government-funded schemes (HCWS849, July 2025).
Hard deadline for remediation of all 11m+ buildings with unsafe cladding (HCWS849, July 2025).
On BSR separation and Phase 2 implementation: pursuing a comprehensive Phase 2 delivery package — published SI 2026/20 establishing the standalone BSR, signed off on the 17 December 2025 Progress Report committing to all 58 recommendations, and announced (HCWS1460, March 2026) an Approved Document B consultation covering all outstanding fire-guidance recommendations.Jan 2026Dec 2025Mar 2026Jan 2026
On remediation acceleration: committed to a future Remediation Bill (HCWS849, 17 July 2025) and reforms to the BSR (HCWS749, 30 June 2025) to accelerate housebuilding, and to the Building Safety Levy (HCWS546, 24 March 2025) — positioning remediation acceleration as the immediate operational priority alongside structural BSR reform.Jul 2025Jun 2025Mar 2025Jul 2025
Mirrors the MHCLG operational policy line in the Lords — issued the Lords parallel WMSs on BSR separation (HLWS1279), Grenfell Phase 2 progress (HLWS1193) and the November 2025 BSR update (HLWS1038), reinforcing the cross-chamber consistency of the Government's Phase 2 delivery commitment.Jan 2026Dec 2025Nov 2025
On BSR capability: published 'Building a better regulator' (2nd Report, 11 December 2025) concluding the BSR's capacity and operational design require substantive reform; the diagnosis was accepted in Government's 11 February 2026 response, and the Government's reform package (BSR separation, Category A/B consultation, batching trial) is the operational response.Dec 2025Feb 2026
On BSR capacity: reported (March 2025) on 'insufficient capacity and capability' at the BSR overseeing buildings over 18m — the first major parliamentary indictment of the regulator's operational performance, which framed the subsequent Lords I&R inquiry and the Government's reform package.Mar 2025
On Grenfell Inquiry implementation: called (14 May 2025) for an 'independent national oversight mechanism' so the Government is not 'left marking its own homework' on implementation of the 58 Phase 2 recommendations — directly contesting MHCLG's preferred self-reporting model via the Progress Report cycle.May 2025Feb 2025
Tension with Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG)
Self-reporting through the Progress Report cycle (Sept 2025, Dec 2025) and Annual Report (Feb 2026) is the Government's chosen implementation accountability mechanism for the 58 Phase 2 recommendations — implicitly rejecting the HCLG Committee's call for an independent national oversight mechanism.Dec 2025Sep 2025Mar 2026Dec 2025
Tension with House of Commons Housing, Communities and Local Government Committee (HCLG Committee)
On Gateway 2 backlog: BSR's strategic plan 2026-27 and its 'BSR plans to reduce external remediation delays' announcement (8 April 2026) describe a comprehensive external remediation improvement plan, a new batching model and an external remediation team — operational acceptance of the PAC/I&R Committee diagnosis of capacity gaps.Mar 2026Apr 2026Apr 2026Apr 2026
On Government's Phase 2 implementation: tabled four PQs in March 2025 probing the Government's response to specific Phase 2 paragraphs (paras 129 and 144 on TMOs and public-inquiry process), the most sustained backbench scrutiny of the substantive content of CP 1248.Mar 2025Mar 2025Mar 2025Mar 2025Mar 2025Mar 2025Mar 2025Mar 2025
On Government's response timetable: tabled PQ on 27 November 2024 pressing the Government for its timetable for responding to the GTI Phase 2 report — a scheduling pressure point ahead of the February 2025 response.Nov 2024
On Government's response timetable: tabled PQ on 5 February 2025 asking when the Government would publish its response to the GTI Phase 2 report — immediate pre-publication pressure, the response being issued 26 February 2025.Feb 2025
On national standards: tabled PQ (10 November 2025) probing whether the Government would introduce a national standard for building safety — substantive scrutiny of regime architecture rather than process.Nov 2025
On the regime's substantive direction: the Inquiry's 58 Phase 2 recommendations (September 2024) and Phase 1 recommendations (October 2019) are the principal external policy driver; the entire current implementation programme is calibrated against acceptance of all 58 recommendations.Jun 2025Jan 2020Dec 2025
Devolved Scottish statute providing a separate cladding remediation framework, commenced 6 January 2025 by the Housing (Cladding Remediation) (Scotland) Act 2024 (Commencement) Regulations 2024 (SSI 2024/370) 1 — a structurally distinct cladding-remediation track from the England regime.
For M&A practitioners on residential / mixed-use real estate transactions and developer / contractor M&A: (1) the BSA 2022 ss.116-125 / Sch 8 leaseholder protections create cost-allocation diligence questions on every transaction touching an English residential building over 11m 1; (2) the Responsible Actors Scheme (referenced in candidate 531860) creates differential treatment for developers that have / have not signed the developer remediation contract; (3) Welsh and Scottish parallel regimes mean a UK-wide residential developer faces three distinct cladding-remediation tracks with different deadlines and funding mechanisms 2; (4) the Building Safety Levy on new residential developments 3 is a developer-side tax to be priced into transaction modelling; and (5) the BSR Gateway 2 backlog 45 creates execution risk on any deal predicated on planning consent and BSR approval timelines.