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What Documents Do Childminders Need for Inspection in the UK?

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I’m Douglas Laing, a registered childminder of eight years and founder of Clariti Compliance. I built Clariti because I experienced the paperwork burden firsthand. Long hours, constant updates, and uncertainty around what is actually required. It takes time away from what matters most, caring for children. This blog is here to change that. You’ll find clear, accurate compliance guidance for childminders across Scotland, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, written in plain English. No jargon, no confusion. Just what you need to know to stay compliant and inspection ready. Clariti Compliance is an AI-powered platform that generates inspection-ready documents tailored to your setting and your nation’s requirements. It supports you with the structure, language, and legislation, while keeping your professional judgement at the centre. Join the waitlist at clariticompliance.co.uk.

If you are preparing for a childminder inspection in the UK, knowing what documents you need in place is key.

The inspection call comes.

Suddenly you are not thinking about the children in your care. You are thinking about your paperwork.

Have you got everything? Is it up to date? Have you interpreted what is required correctly?

That uncertainty is one of the most common experiences childminders describe before an inspection. And it is almost always rooted in the same problem. Documents were created, then forgotten about.

Here is what inspectors actually ask to see during a childminder inspection across all four UK nations.

In short, inspectors expect to see:

• Children’s records

• Individual planning or care documentation

• Observations and learning records

• Policies and procedures

• Risk assessments

• Safeguarding evidence

• Training records and attendance registers

These are the core documents inspectors consistently request across the UK, regardless of inspection body.

Children’s files

Registration details, emergency contacts, medical information, permissions, and authorised collection arrangements. These need to be current. If a child’s circumstances have changed and their file has not, that is a problem.

Individual planning and care documentation

In Scotland, a personal plan is a legal requirement under SSI 2011/210. It must be in place for every child and reviewed regularly, and at least every six months or sooner if needs change.

In England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, a formal care plan is not required for every child. However, inspectors still expect clear evidence that you understand and plan for each child’s individual needs, including any additional support requirements.

Observations and learning records

Inspectors are not looking for a specific format. They want clear evidence of how you support children’s learning and development. Your records should also reflect the correct framework for your nation. Scotland uses SHANARRI and Realising the Ambition. England follows the EYFS. Wales uses the National Minimum Standards for Regulated Childcare alongside the Curriculum for Wales. Northern Ireland follows the Curricular Guidance for Pre-School Education alongside the Minimum Standards for Childminding and Day Care.

Policies and procedures

Inspectors will check that your policies exist, that they are reviewed regularly, and that they reference current legislation. A policy written three years ago with no review date and no legislative reference is a red flag. Legislation changes. Frameworks are updated. Policies need to keep pace.

Risk assessments

Inspectors will expect to see risk assessments for your home, your outdoor spaces, outings, and specific activities. Fire safety must also be covered. These are not optional extras. They are a core inspection requirement across all four nations.

Safeguarding evidence

Your safeguarding and child protection policy must be current, and you must be able to demonstrate that you know your procedures. Inspectors do not just want to see a document. They want confidence that you understand what to do.

Training records and attendance registers

Up to date paediatric first aid and safeguarding training certificates should be accessible and current. Your attendance register must show who is present at any given time. Both are standard inspection requests.

Inspector conversations

Inspectors will ask questions as well as review documents. You should be able to explain your safeguarding procedures, how you assess risk, and how you support individual children. Your knowledge must match your paperwork.

The mistake most childminders make

Creating documents and never returning to them.

Legislation changes. Frameworks are updated. What was compliant two years ago may not meet current requirements. Without review dates built into your documents, and without a way of knowing when something has changed, it is almost impossible to stay on top of it.

This is not a reflection of how good a childminder you are. It is a reflection of how much the system asks of people who are already doing a full time job caring for children.

What inspectors are really assessing

They are not trying to catch you out. They want to see that you understand your responsibilities, that your documents reflect your practice, and that the children in your care are safe and well supported.

The nerves are normal. Every childminder feels them. But the best defence against inspection anxiety is knowing that your paperwork accurately reflects the quality of care you are already providing.

Ready for your next inspection?

Clariti is an AI-powered compliance platform built specifically for childminders across all four UK nations. It generates inspection-ready documents tailored to your setting, keeps track of review dates, and flags when something needs your attention.

Read the compliance guide for your nation: Scotland · England · Wales · Northern Ireland

Join the waitlist at clariticompliance.co.uk and be among the first 500 childminders to access Clariti at launch.

No paperwork guesswork. Just clear, inspection-ready compliance.

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I’m Douglas Laing, a registered childminder and founder of Clariti Compliance. I built Clariti after experiencing the paperwork burden firsthand. Long hours, constant updates, and uncertainty around what is required take time away from caring for children. This blog offers clear, practical compliance guidance across the UK. Clariti generates inspection-ready documents tailored to your setting, while keeping your professional judgement at the centre. Join the waitlist at clariticompliance.co.uk.