Supported accommodation for male care leavers aged 16–17 in Slough. 24/7 staffed homes, life-skills programme, trauma-informed care.
Rooms for young people aged 16–17 in Langley, Slough — call 07717 034353 for live availability.
Every placement at C4U Homes includes a basket of services tailored to the individual. We don't offer one-size-fits-all housing — we offer a journey toward independence.
Safe, furnished housing in Slough with 24/7 staffing and a home-like environment.
Learn moreBespoke support plans built around each young person's history, strengths, and goals.
Learn moreA structured programme covering cooking, budgeting, health, employment readiness and more.
Learn moreOutreach support for young people transitioning to greater independence in the community.
Learn moreC4U Homes was founded by people who understand that young people leaving care need more than a room. They need stability, consistency, and someone who genuinely believes in them.
We operate from Slough and accept referrals from local authorities across Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, and surrounding areas. Our homes are small, calm, and designed for young people — not institutions.
Make a referral today →Contact us by phone or email. We will respond within 24 hours.
We meet the young person and review their pathway plan and any risks.
We match the young person to the right home and support level.
Keyworker introduced, support plan activated, and regular reviews begin.
Akash combines professional experience in business with a deep personal commitment to making a difference. He oversees governance, compliance, and strategic direction — ensuring C4U Homes meets Ofsted standards and delivers meaningful outcomes for every young person placed with us.
BSc (Hons) Psychology | Level 5 Diploma in Leadership for Residential Care (in progress). As Responsible Individual, Akshita is accountable for the overall quality and compliance of the business. She brings a person-centred, trauma-informed approach to all operations — overseeing safeguarding, support delivery, and staff development across C4U Homes.
We update this section in real time. If you need an emergency placement, call us directly — we aim to respond within 2 hours.
C4U Homes provided exceptional support for our young person. The structured approach and genuine care from staff made a real difference in his transition to independence.
The life skills programme is outstanding. Within 6 months our young person was cooking, budgeting, and had enrolled in college. Exactly what supported accommodation should deliver.
Responsive, professional, and genuinely invested in outcomes. C4U Homes is one of the providers we trust to take our most complex referrals.
Our residents enjoy a safe, welcoming environment where they can grow in confidence and prepare for independent life.
"Every young person leaving care deserves more than a roof. They deserve consistency, belief, and the tools to build a future. That is what C4U Homes is built to provide."
Our supported accommodation is fully regulated under the Supported Accommodation (England) Regulations 2023, inspected and registered with Ofsted. We provide small, high-quality shared properties in Slough and Langley — environments that feel like home rather than institutional care settings.
Each property is staffed around the clock by trained support workers. Young people have their own bedroom, access to shared communal spaces, and their own front-door key — reflecting the balance between independence and safety that supported accommodation is designed to offer.
Our properties accommodate a small number of young people — creating a calm, settled household rather than a large group setting. This supports better relationships between residents and staff, and reduces the triggers that can come with busier environments.
Social workers and commissioners can contact us directly to discuss a referral or visit one of our homes.
Every young person at C4U Homes has a support plan built specifically around them — not a template, not a generic package.
We believe no two young people are the same. Each person arrives with their own history, strengths, vulnerabilities, and aspirations. Our individualised support model means we start by listening — to the young person, to their social worker, and to anyone else who knows them.
From day one, every resident is assigned a dedicated keyworker who is their primary point of contact, their advocate, and the person responsible for delivering their support plan.
Weekly 1:1 sessions with a named keyworker to review wellbeing, progress against the support plan, and any emerging concerns.
A bespoke written support plan developed with the young person within the first two weeks. Plans are reviewed monthly.
We work closely with the young person's local authority to ensure our support plan is consistent with their statutory Pathway Plan.
Individual risk assessments updated regularly. Clear protocols for managing crises, missing episodes, and escalation. 24/7 on-call support.
Our staff are trained in trauma-informed approaches. We create environments and relationships that prioritise safety, choice, and trust — recognising that behaviour is often communication, and that a young person's past does not define their potential.
Our Responsible Individual can discuss a young person's needs before any formal referral is made.
The leap from supported accommodation to independent living is one of the hardest transitions a care leaver faces. The C4U Homes Life Skills Programme is designed to make that leap achievable — building practical competence, confidence, and resilience over the course of a placement.
Every skill developed through our programme is recorded and shared with the young person's social worker, contributing directly to the statutory Pathway Plan review.
Social workers can request a full copy of our Life Skills Programme curriculum and skills tracking framework.
Floating support is a step-down model — designed for young people who no longer need 24/7 staffed accommodation but are not yet fully ready to manage completely alone. A support worker visits regularly, providing professional guidance and helping to maintain the routines and skills built during the supported accommodation placement.
Support workers visit the young person in their own accommodation 2–5 times per week depending on assessed need. Visits are planned but flexible.
Between visits, support workers maintain regular contact by phone and text. Young people know they can reach out whenever they need to.
Support with paying rent, understanding bills, maintaining the property, and managing the relationship with the landlord.
An emergency out-of-hours contact number is available. If a young person is in crisis, we can respond rapidly and liaise with relevant agencies.
Early floating support intervention is far more cost-effective than dealing with tenancy breakdown and subsequent homelessness. Sustaining a tenancy is always better — for the young person and for the local authority.
Social workers and personal advisers can refer directly. We also accept self-referrals where appropriate.
📷 Replace these placeholders with your own C4U Homes branded photos
Our team is our greatest asset. Every member of staff at C4U Homes is carefully selected for their commitment, empathy, and experience. We invest in ongoing training — including trauma-informed practice, safeguarding, and mental health awareness — so that every young person receives the very best support.
We're always looking for compassionate, skilled people who want to make a genuine difference to young people's lives.
At C4U Homes, working here means more than a job title. It means becoming a consistent, trustworthy adult in a young person's life — often the first one they've had. If that resonates with you, we'd love to hear from you.
Don't see a role that fits? Send us your CV anyway — we keep all applications on file.
Contact C4U Homes to discuss a placement or floating support for a young person. We respond to all enquiries within 24 hours.
Whether you're a social worker with an urgent referral, a commissioning manager exploring options, or a family member looking for information — please get in touch. We aim to respond within 24 hours.
181 High Street, Langley
Slough, Berkshire
SL3 8LP
C4U Homes Ltd
Registered in England & Wales
Ofsted regulated provider
For referrals and placement enquiries, ask to speak with our Responsible Individual.
BSc (Hons) Psychology | Level 5 in progress
For professionals: complete the form below for a structured referral. We will respond within 2 hours during office hours, or by the next working morning if submitted outside hours.
Every policy, procedure, and staff training programme at C4U Homes is built around one principle: that every young person in our care is safe, respected, and supported.
Our safeguarding framework is aligned with Working Together to Safeguard Children (2023) and the Supported Accommodation Regulations 2023. Every member of staff is trained to recognise and respond to signs of abuse, exploitation, and neglect.
Our staff are trained in the PACE model (Playfulness, Acceptance, Curiosity, Empathy), developed by Dan Hughes. This therapeutic approach supports young people who have experienced developmental trauma — helping them build trust, regulate emotions, and feel genuinely safe in our homes.
We believe the quality of our staff is the single most important factor in delivering safe, effective care. Every team member receives:
Staff are supported to pursue Level 3 and Level 5 qualifications in Health and Social Care. We view qualification support as a core part of our retention and quality strategy.
We take all complaints seriously. Young people, families, and professionals can raise concerns directly with our Responsible Individual. All complaints are logged, investigated, and responded to within 28 days.
Raise a concern →Our full suite of policies and procedures is available to commissioners, social workers, and Ofsted on request. Key policies include safeguarding, missing from accommodation, behaviour management, and equal opportunities.
View documents →C4U Homes is registered with the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO). We process personal data in line with UK GDPR and maintain a clear data retention schedule for all young person records.
Data enquiries →All documents are kept current. If you need a document that isn't listed, contact us directly and we'll send it within one working day.
For urgent referrals, placement queries, or to arrange a visit to one of our properties:
How we collect, use and protect personal information at C4U Homes
C4U Homes Ltd ("we", "our", "us") is a supported accommodation provider for male care leavers aged 16–17 in Slough, Berkshire. Our registered address is 181 High Street, Langley, Slough SL3 8LP.
We are the data controller for personal information collected through this website. For data protection enquiries, contact info@c4uhomes.co.uk.
When you submit a referral or contact form on this website, we collect:
We process personal data on the following lawful bases under UK GDPR:
We share personal information only where necessary and lawful:
We do not sell or rent personal data. We do not share data for marketing purposes.
You have the right to:
To exercise these rights, email info@c4uhomes.co.uk. We will respond within one calendar month.
This website uses minimal cookies. We do not use Google Analytics, advertising trackers, or social media tracking pixels. The only data automatically collected is technical information by our hosting provider (Netlify) for security and performance, retained for no more than 30 days.
We review this Privacy Policy at least annually and may update it to reflect changes in regulation or our practices. Material changes will be communicated to active partners directly.
For any data protection concern:
If you are not satisfied with our response, you have the right to complain to the Information Commissioner's Office at ico.org.uk or 0303 123 1113.
Our commitment to making this website usable by everyone
C4U Homes is committed to making its website accessible, in line with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 at Level AA. We believe everyone should be able to access information about our supported accommodation services — including young people, families, social workers, and professionals who may use assistive technology.
We have aimed to meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA standards, but acknowledge that some elements may not yet fully comply. Known limitations include:
If you have difficulty using any part of this site, please contact us and we will be happy to provide the information in another format (large print, plain text, audio etc.) or to help you complete a referral by phone.
We welcome feedback on the accessibility of this website. If you find any issue not listed above, please tell us by emailing info@c4uhomes.co.uk. We will aim to respond within 5 working days.
The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) is responsible for enforcing the Public Sector Bodies (Websites and Mobile Applications) (No. 2) Accessibility Regulations 2018. C4U Homes is a private supported accommodation provider, not a public sector body, but we voluntarily align with these standards where reasonable.
If you believe we have not adequately addressed your accessibility concern, you may also contact the Equality Advisory and Support Service (EASS).
This website is built as a single-page HTML application. It is hosted on Netlify with HTTPS encryption. We tested compliance against WCAG 2.1 Level AA using a combination of automated tooling and manual review. Our last review was conducted in May 2026.
We treat accessibility as an ongoing journey rather than a one-off task. Improvements planned over the next 12 months include:
Real outcomes, anonymous voices — the impact of C4U Homes in the words of the people we work with.
Step inside our supported accommodation in Slough. Genuine photos of the spaces where our young people live, learn and prepare for independence.
We believe supported accommodation should feel like a home — not an institution. Take a look around the spaces that make C4U Homes different.
Quick answers for social workers, commissioners, young people and families. Cannot find what you need? Just call us.
Yes. We respond to emergency referrals within 2 hours during office hours and can usually arrange same-day or next-day placement subject to risk assessment and bed availability.
We support young people with a range of needs including emotional dysregulation, low-level criminal exploitation risks, mild mental health needs, history of being looked after, and care leavers transitioning to independence. We assess each referral on its merits.
Our properties operate with 24/7 staffing including waking nights. Daytime ratios are based on resident needs — typically two staff during peak hours and one during quieter periods, with on-call management out-of-hours.
We follow a structured missing protocol aligned with the Joint National Protocol on Missing Children. Staff complete welfare checks, notify police promptly, inform social workers and parents, and conduct a return home interview within 72 hours.
Yes, where appropriate. We assess each young person’s capacity to self-medicate as part of placement. Where supervision is needed, staff support administration and recording in line with our Medication Policy.
Yes. We have experience supporting unaccompanied asylum-seeking children and young people. Our staff are trained in trauma-informed care and we support engagement with immigration solicitors, GP registration, English classes, and education access.
Absolutely. We support residents to continue any existing education or employment placement and help with travel where reasonable. Maintaining stability in education is a key part of our approach.
We specialise in male care leavers aged 16–17. Young people can stay with us up to their 18th birthday, with floating support available afterwards where commissioned.
You will have your own private bedroom with a bed, wardrobe, desk and storage. Some rooms have en-suite bathrooms; others share. All rooms have heating, Wi-Fi access and lockable storage.
Yes — free unlimited Wi-Fi throughout the property. We have some safeguarding filters to protect everyone, but it is fast and works on all devices.
Yes. Family and friends can visit at agreed times, after a quick safety chat with your support worker. We do this to keep everyone safe — not to restrict your relationships.
We provide essentials and support you to plan and cook your own meals as part of life-skills development. You will have your own food storage space and access to the kitchen. We also do group cooking sessions weekly.
Yes. There is always at least one staff member on site, day and night, including a waking night worker. You are never alone if you need help.
Talk to any staff member — they are here to help, not judge. We can connect you with mental health support, your social worker, or just sit with you while things feel hard. Key working sessions are also a safe space to talk.
The team is happy to talk anything through — referrals, visits, or specifics of a placement.
A family-led, values-driven supported accommodation provider dedicated to helping male care leavers in Slough and Berkshire build the foundations for an independent, fulfilling life.
| Provider type | Supported accommodation for looked-after children and care leavers |
|---|---|
| Who we support | Male young people aged 16–17 |
| Location | 181 High Street, Langley, Slough SL3 8LP, Berkshire |
| Registration | Registering with Ofsted under the Supported Accommodation (England) Regulations 2023 |
| Referral response | Within 2 hours during office hours; emergency placements considered |
| Contact | 07717 034353 · info@c4uhomes.co.uk |
C4U Homes was founded with a simple but powerful belief: every young person leaving care deserves more than just a roof over their head. They deserve safety, stability, structure, and a team that genuinely believes in their future.
Born out of a desire to do things differently in the supported accommodation sector, C4U Homes combines professional rigour with the warmth of a family-led service. We are not a large impersonal provider — we are a small, intentional team that knows every young person by name, understands their story, and is invested in their outcomes.
Our properties are based in Langley, Slough — a community with excellent transport links, education opportunities, and local amenities that support a successful transition to independence.
Every young person at C4U Homes will be treated with respect, supported with care, and championed in their journey to adulthood — regardless of where they came from or what they have been through.
To provide safe, structured supported accommodation that prepares male care leavers for independent, healthy and fulfilling adult lives — with dignity, opportunity and unwavering belief in their potential.
A future where no young person leaving care has to face adulthood alone — where supported accommodation is a launchpad for opportunity, not a holding pattern.
Safety. Dignity. Belief. Structure. Compassion. Every decision we make — from staff training to property design — is rooted in these five values.
Physical, emotional and psychological safety underpins everything we do.
Every young person is treated with respect, regardless of their background or story.
We see potential where others see problems. Every young person has a future worth fighting for.
Consistent routines, clear expectations and predictable support help young people thrive.
Trauma-informed, person-centred care that meets young people where they are.
We blend evidence-based practice with genuine warmth. Our approach is grounded in three frameworks that research has shown deliver the best outcomes for young people with care experience.
Developed by Dan Hughes. Stands for Playfulness, Acceptance, Curiosity, Empathy — a therapeutic approach that helps young people who have experienced developmental trauma to build trust, regulate emotions and feel genuinely safe.
All staff are trained to understand how trauma affects behaviour, emotional regulation and trust-building. We focus on safety, predictability and choice — never on punishment.
We start with what young people can do, not what they cannot. Every plan we make builds on existing strengths, interests and aspirations — not deficits.
Akash combines professional experience in business with a deep personal commitment to making a difference. He oversees governance, compliance and strategic direction — ensuring C4U Homes meets Ofsted standards and delivers meaningful outcomes for every young person placed with us.
BSc (Hons) Psychology · Level 5 Diploma in Leadership for Residential Care (in progress). As Responsible Individual, Akshita is accountable for the overall quality and compliance of the business. She brings a person-centred, trauma-informed approach to all operations.
Whether you are a social worker considering a referral, a young person wondering what life at C4U is like, or a professional wanting to partner with us — we would love to hear from you.
If you are moving into C4U Homes — or just thinking about it — here is what daily life looks like. No jargon, no corporate speak. Just real talk.
We know moving somewhere new can feel weird — especially if you have moved a lot already. So here is the honest version: at C4U, you get your own room, your own space, your own privacy. Staff are here to help, not to watch over you. We are here to support you to live independently, not to control your life.
Every young person gets their own private bedroom. No sharing.
Decorate it. Hang stuff up. Make it yours. We just ask that you keep it reasonably tidy and look after the furniture — basic stuff really.
When you move in, bring:
If you don't have something you need, talk to your support worker — we can usually help sort it.
You plan and cook your own meals — with help if you want it. We provide basic essentials. Weekly group cooking sessions are optional but actually quite fun.
Once or twice a week, you sit down with your support worker for a chat. About anything. Your goals, problems, what you want to do next. No judgement.
Optional sessions on budgeting, cooking, laundry, job interviews, opening a bank account. The stuff school never taught you — useful for real life.
We back you in college, apprenticeships or work. If you have stopped engaging, we help you reconnect — at your pace.
Your time is your time. Hang out in the lounge, go to the gym, see friends, play games. You do not have to be doing “something productive” all the time.
If you are struggling, we help you access support — CAMHS, counselling, your GP. Nothing is too small. Staff are trained in trauma-informed support.
We keep it short. Here is the deal — designed to keep everyone safe, not to control you.
No. We are there if you need us, but we are not going to follow you around. You get your privacy. Key working is once or twice a week — the rest of the time, your life is your own.
Honestly? Everyone messes up sometimes. We do not throw you out for one bad day. We talk about it, work out what happened, and figure out what to do differently. The only things that are non-negotiable are violence, weapons, or putting others at risk.
Yes — family and friends can visit at agreed times. We just need a quick safety chat first. It is about keeping everyone safe, not about limiting your friendships.
We work with you well in advance to plan your move-on. Whether that is your own tenancy, university accommodation, returning to family — we help you get ready. If commissioned, we can also provide floating support after you move out.
We assess every placement carefully to make sure the mix in the house works. You do not have to be best friends with the other residents — just respectful. Most young people end up forming good connections.
Completely fair. A lot of young people in care have good reasons not to trust adults. We do not expect you to. We just ask that you give us a chance to show up consistently — trust builds over time, not overnight.
You can talk to us directly, or ask your social worker / personal adviser to arrange a chat or a visit. No pressure, no commitment — just a conversation.
What we measure, why we measure it, and how we use data to keep getting better for the young people in our care.
Local authorities are accountable for the outcomes of their care leavers. So are we. Every placement at C4U Homes is monitored against a structured framework — not because regulation demands it, but because we believe young people deserve better than vague promises.
Every young person has an Outcomes Plan reviewed monthly. We track measurable progress across these seven areas:
We support engagement in college, apprenticeships, traineeships, and employment.
Stability is the foundation of every other outcome. Frequent moves harm young people.
Trauma-informed support, with formal links to CAMHS, GP and counselling.
Progress towards independent living — measured, not assumed.
Reducing risks; documenting and learning from every incident.
Young people drive their own care plans. Engagement is non-negotiable.
The ultimate measure: did the young person leave us ready for the next stage of life?
Transparency is core to our practice. Commissioners and placing authorities can expect:
Commissioners and senior practitioners can request a redacted sample monthly report to see exactly what to expect. Contact us via the form.
Providers without robust outcomes measurement cannot improve. Commissioners cannot make evidence-based decisions. Young people pay the price.
At C4U Homes, outcomes monitoring is not a marketing slogan — it is the operational backbone of how we deliver care.
We are currently in pre-launch testing pending Ofsted registration. Once our first cohort of young people has been placed, we will publish anonymised aggregate outcomes data quarterly on this page. Commissioners are welcome to request our outcomes framework in full at any time.