Only a fraction of the hundreds of households that enquired about fostering in Reading last year actually applied, new figures suggest.

It comes as the number of foster care places across the England continued to decrease.

A charity said services are under "immense pressure" and called on the Government to take "urgent action" to recruit and retain more foster carers.

This comes after the Government announced a £44 million package to support kinship and foster carers in the Autumn Budget, which includes improving local authorities' access to regional fostering recruitment hubs.

Ofsted data shows local authorities and independent fostering agencies across the country received 8,500 applications from prospective fostering households in the year to March, up from around 8,000 the previous year.

Of these, 3,020 were to local authority services, despite 28,165 enquiries being made across the same period.

In Reading, 220 households enquired about fostering, but only five applications were received in that time.

It suggests only a fraction of the households enquiring about providing foster care in the area end up actually applying.

Meanwhile, the total number of approved foster care places nationally has fallen to the lowest level in five years, with 18,860 households providing 37,430 places as of March.

In Reading there were 60 local authority-managed foster households as of March, including five newly-approved ones in 2023-24.

Sarah Thomas, chief executive of The Fostering Network, said the figures highlight "the immense pressure foster care is under", warning this will have "a detrimental impact on children and families".

"The fewer foster carers we have, the more children who may end up in residential care or in homes away from their families and friends," she added.

"Action needs to be taken to make fostering more sustainable – we urgently need a UK-wide fostering strategy that addresses the retention of foster carers as much as recruitment."

Colette Ferns, head of Fostering and Adoption England and Scotland at Action for Children, said England's broken care system is failing to deliver stable and loving homes.

She added the cost-of-living crisis often prevents prospective households from fostering as the costs associated with caring for a child can be a major barrier.

Ms Ferns urged the Government to take swift action and increase the availability of foster care families and children’s homes and ensure the national fostering allowance covers the care costs.

Yvette Stanley, Ofsted’s national director for social care, said: "It’s a big concern that the number of fostering families continues to fall."