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CIF Is Ending: A Closer Look at the Future of School Estates

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Robert Gould FRICS

Partner at Barker Associates | Award-Winning Integrated Property Consultants

For years, the Condition Improvement Fund (CIF) has been a lifeline for academies, small trusts, and sixth‑form colleges needing to tackle essential building improvements.

But with the Department for Education’s long‑term estates strategy now in motion, many school leaders are asking the same question: When will CIF end – and what comes next?

The short answer is reassuring. CIF funding isn’t disappearing overnight. Instead, the government is reshaping how schools access capital funding, aiming for a system that is fairer, more predictable, and less burdensome.

Let’s break down what’s changing, when it’s happening, and why schools can feel confident about the future.

When Will CIF End?

CIF will continue to run annual funding rounds until Autumn 2028. That means schools can still apply for CIF in the coming years while the new system is being built and tested.

This gradual transition is intentional. The DfE wants to ensure that schools continue to receive support for urgent and essential works while the replacement model is developed.

What Will Replace CIF?

The new programme, which is part of the government’s 10‑year Education Estates Strategy, will fundamentally change how capital funding is allocated. While the official name is still to come, the direction is clear: it will be a move away from competitive bidding and towards a data‑driven allocation model.

The DfE is introducing a new requirement for annual estate data returns from 2026, ensuring that every responsible body maintains up‑to‑date, consistent information about the condition, compliance, and risk profile of their buildings.

This data will feed into a national picture of estate need, allowing the government to distribute capital more fairly and transparently. Alongside this, the DfE is rolling out the Manage Your Education Estate digital platform, which will eventually become the central hub for estate information, guidance, and tools.

The intention is to create a system where funding flows automatically to the areas of greatest need, without schools having to produce lengthy narratives or commission multiple reports simply to compete for limited funds.

We also know that the new model will place a much stronger emphasis on strategic, long‑term estate planning.

Rather than focusing on isolated projects, responsible bodies will be expected to demonstrate how they are managing their estate holistically by prioritising safety, resilience, and lifecycle maintenance.

The DfE has emphasised that the new approach will align closely with Good Estate Management for Schools (GEMS), meaning trusts will need to show they have robust asset management plans, risk registers, and maintenance strategies in place.

Importantly, the government has stressed that the new system is designed to be simpler and less burdensome, particularly for smaller trusts and standalone academies that often struggle with the resource demands of CIF.

While the finer details, such as the exact allocation formula, are still being developed, the general direction is unmistakable. The new system will focus on:

  1. Estate condition data, not bid-writing skills
  2. Predictable annual allocations, not competitive scoring
  3. Long‑term planning, not one‑off project submissions
  4. Digital tools and shared standards to support responsible bodies

 

British school with solar PV pannels on roof

Why There’s No Need to Panic

Change often brings uncertainty, but in this case, the shift is designed to reduce pressure on schools and ensure funding reaches the buildings that need it most.

The sector can feel confident in CIF ending because:

  1. Funding isn’t being cut

The government has committed £38 billion in capital investment between 2025–30, the highest level in over a decade. The money is still there; it’s simply being delivered through a more strategic system.

  1. The new model is fairer

CIF success rates have hovered around 35%, meaning many high‑need schools miss out each year. A data‑driven model removes the “lottery” effect and ensures funding follows genuine condition need.

  1. There will be less of an administrative burden

Schools will no longer need to produce lengthy narratives, gather multiple reports, or compete against each other. This frees up time and resources for a more strategic approach to estate management.

  1. The new system supports better long‑term planning

With predictable allocations and clearer expectations, schools can plan multi‑year programmes rather than waiting anxiously for annual bid outcomes.

  1. Support for urgent issues remains

Urgent Capital Support (UCS) will continue to operate for buildings at immediate risk of closure, during and after the transition.

What Schools Should Do Now

Although CIF will continue for few more rounds, schools can start preparing for the new system today by:

  1. Continuing to apply for CIF while it remains available
  2. Improving estate data quality, as this will directly influence future funding
  3. Adopting Good Estate Management for Schools (GEMS) principles
  4. Engaging with the new Manage Your Education Estate digital tools
  5. Preparing for annual estate data returns from Autumn 2026


These steps will help schools transition smoothly and position themselves strongly under the new model.

CIF may be coming to an end, but capital funding for school buildings is not.

The government is replacing CIF with a system designed to be simpler, fairer, and more strategic, ensuring that funding reaches the schools that need it most, without the headache of competitive bidding.

Speak to Barker to get funding support with CIF and beyond.

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