Fostering a disabled child
The role of an independent fostering agency
Can I choose who I foster?
How to foster
What are the benefits of fostering with an independent fostering agency?
What happens when a child is taken into care?
Fostering process: what happens on an initial home visit?
Can you foster if you have mental health issues?
Fostering with local authority vs independent agency
Interview: Life as a foster parent during the pandemic
Becoming A Foster Carer
Benefits of becoming a foster parent
What is a Care Leaver?
What is a Foster Carer?
What is Foster Care?
Do I become a Foster Carer?
Fostering Regulations
How much do Foster Parents get paid?
How to Foster a Child
How long does it take to become a Foster Carer?
How to foster – everything you ever wanted to know
Facts about Foster Care
What are the Foster Care requirements?
Foster Care Handbook
Foster Carer Job Description
Changing IFA - Transferring to Capstone
Fostering Definition
Foster Care Statistics
Fostering Assessment
Fostering Outcomes
Fostering Stories
Fostering Children UK
Children needing Fostering
8 reasons why a child may be taken into care
Fostering as a Career
Looked after Children
Top transferable job skills to become a foster carer
Fostering as a same sex couple
Fostering while renting
Can I foster if...?
Mythbusting the top 10 Foster Care Myths
Can I foster if I am disabled?
LGBT Fostering Mythbusting
Can I foster if I have pets?
Can I Foster A Child?
Can you Foster and Work?
Can you Foster with a Criminal Record
Fostering as a Single Parent
LGBT Family and Foster Care
Fostering across Cultures
Muslim Fostering
Christian Foster Care
Sikh
Empty Nest Syndrome and Foster Care
10 things you can do when your Children fly the nest
Can I Foster?
Fostering Babies - Myths
Focusing on Parent & Child Fostering
Fostering Siblings
Fostering Teenagers
Fostering Teenagers - Breaking down the Myths
Fostering Unaccompanied and Asylum Seeking Children
Mother and Baby Foster Placements
Private Fostering
Therapeutic Fostering - Multi-disciplinary Assessment Treatment & Therapy Service (MATTS)
Young Children Fostering Placements
Difference between short and long-term fostering
How to prepare a child for becoming a care leaver
Children who foster: impact of fostering on birth children
How to prepare your home for a foster child
10 tips for foster children’s education
How to prepare your foster child for secondary school
Tips for coping when foster placements end
Tips for foster parents during Coronavirus
What happens if foster parents get divorced?
5 ways to manage Mother’s Day with foster children
Tips for managing foster children’s bedtime routines
How to handle foster child bullying
Fostering allowances and the gender pay gap
Tips for keeping foster children safe online
How to adopt from Foster Care
5 ways to manage Father’s Day with foster children
8 most common fostering challenges
Supporting foster children’s contact with birth families
How to deal with empty nest syndrome
How to recognise signs of depression in foster children
Can you take a foster child on holiday?
Tips and advice on fostering with a disability
10 tips on connecting with your Foster Child
Fostering versus Adoption - What's the difference?
How Fostering can change a future
How to adopt from Foster Care
How to encourage children to read in Foster Care
How to prepare a Foster Child's bedroom
Online grooming - unwanted contact and how to identify it
Reading and storytelling with Babies and young Children
Supporting Children's Learning
Technology and Internet Safety advice
The 20 most recommended books Foster Carers and young people should read
The impact of early childhood traumas on adolescence and adulthood
Tips for coping with attachment disorders in Foster Children
Tips for supporting reunification in Foster Care
Together for a better Internet - Web Safety for Foster Children
What is sexual abuse and sexual violence
Foster Child behaviour management strategies
Foster Parent Advice: What to expect in your first year of fostering
Capstone's twelve tips at Christmas
10 celebrities who grew up in Foster Care
Celebrating our Children and Young People
Could Millenials be the solution to the Foster Care crisis?
Do you work in Emergency Services?
Form F Assessor and Assessment Training
Foster Care Fortnight
Improving Children's Welfare - Celebrating Universal Children's Day
It's time to talk about Mental Health and Foster Care
New Year - New Career - Become a Foster Carer
Promoting the rights and wellbeing of persons with Disabilities
Refugee Week
Young people and Mental Health in a changing world
Young People Charities
If they have or want a full-time job outside the home, they ask, “Can I still foster?” The short answer may very well be, “No.” However, there are circumstances where a “Yes” could be the answer. Learn everything you need to know about fostering and working today with help from Capstone Foster Care.
If your fostering arrangement involves a set period of time, it is possible for fostering while working full-time at a job outside of your foster care responsibilities. For instance, if you provide respite care, you will know in advance when your fostering services are required. Otherwise, because there is no set appointment for when local authorities take children and young people into care, there is no prearranged time for when foster care is needed.
Some children have been in care since birth and in their experience – they may have been moved from place to place. Others may have endured living conditions that hindered their development and harmed their health. It is essential that they are placed in a caring, safe and stable home.
If you are a foster couple, you would have more flexibility regarding your job because one of you could always be available for the child’s needs while the other one is at work outside the home. Fostering as a couple makes working more realistic, but it’s also worth noting that fostering itself acts as a full-time job – so it may be worth evaluating both of your commitments to fostering and assessing how best to approach working.
Foster carers are categorised as self-employed – however, there is a generous tax scheme for foster parents. This is called Qualifying Care Relief – and this scheme calculates a unique threshold each year. Due to the help from this scheme, many foster carers do not pay tax from their fostering placements.
For a single parent, fostering while working full-time may become a problem. You will have to evaluate your working hours and your fostering commitment. As well as providing a home and affection to the foster child or young person, you must be available for meetings with the foster agency social worker, the child’s teacher, and other personnel involved in protecting the child’s welfare and wellbeing.
If you have had financial problems in your past, this shouldn’t affect your eligibility to foster – however, you will need to prove that you are now financially secure enough to provide for a fostering family.
Another common question we get asked is, “Is being a foster parent a job?”. The bottom line is that, when you become a foster carer, your first responsibility is to the child in care and this is a 24/7 job. The reality is that fostering may be a sporadic job sometimes and you might not always have a placement. And it’s also worth noting that when there is no placement, there is no payment.
Fostering is considered by many to be a career and as such, they do not want to jeopardise the stability and security of the home they offer children in care by being distracted by another job. While foster carers are paid an allowance when a child is placed with them and fostering is often considered as a career, fostering is not primarily about the pay that you can earn as a carer.
Our fostering allowance ensures that both you and your fostering child are able to live comfortably. The allowance provides:
The fostering allowance does not impact other benefits such as housing benefit or working tax credits either.
Part of your assessment as a foster carer involves your ability to provide support and training for a looked after child. Families with their own children may see a difference in between the needs of their own children and a child in care because the disadvantaged child may have suffered trauma. In addition, the looked after child is in a home that is new to them and they may take a while to feel accepted. They may be attending a new school and have to make new friends, as well as settle in with a new family in a new house.
Looking for more information on if you can foster and work? Contact Capstone Foster Care today or call us on 0800 012 4004 – we’re here to help answer all of your fostering and working queries.
If you’ve got any questions or would like to find out more about fostering with Capstone, fill out the form below.
An experienced fostering advisor from your local area will then be in touch.
Start the conversation today. Our team of friendly advisors are on hand to answer any foster care questions you may have. We can offer you honest and practical advice that can help you decide if becoming a foster carer is the right path for you.