Woodpeckers Care Home
At a Glance
The information you need to decide whether this home warrants a closer look.
Nursing homes
Staff warmth score
of reviewers answered yes
Good to know
- Registered beds41
- SpecialismsCaring for adults over 65 yrs, Caring for adults under 65 yrs, Dementia, Physical disabilities
- Last inspected2018-01-30
The Evidence
What the review data, the inspection reports, and the dementia-care evidence base tell us about this home.
What families say
The warmth here comes through in unexpected ways. One family watched their relative discover a creative side they'd never shown before, finding real joy in activities that brought out talents nobody knew existed. There's a genuine community spirit that extends beyond the walls, with the home opening its gardens for local charity events.
The eight family priority themes
- Staff warmth70
- Compassion & dignity70
- Cleanliness68
- Activities & engagement82
- Food quality68
- Healthcare82
- Management & leadership85
- Resident happiness72
What inspectors found
Inspected 2018-01-30
Is this home safe?
Is the care effective?
Effective was rated Outstanding — the strongest possible grade — which covers how well the home supports your parent's health, manages medicines, coordinates with GPs and other healthcare professionals, ensures staff are trained, and uses care plans as living documents that reflect who your parent really is. Outstanding here suggests the inspectors found specific, compelling evidence rather than just adequate compliance. For a home specialising in dementia care, this is particularly significant, as effective dementia-specific practice requires more than basic training. The absence of the full report means we cannot confirm the specific evidence behind this rating.Is this home caring?
The Caring domain was rated Good, covering how staff treat your parent day to day — warmth, dignity, respect, and whether your parent's independence and preferences are genuinely honoured. Good means inspectors found satisfactory evidence of kind and respectful care, but it did not reach the Outstanding threshold seen in Effective and Responsive. Without the full text, we cannot determine what distinguished Good from Outstanding here — whether it was a specific observation, a gap in privacy practice, or simply less evidence gathered on this domain. Staff warmth accounts for 57.3% of our family score weighting, making this the single most important theme for families in their assessment of a home.Is the home responsive?
Responsive was rated Outstanding, covering how well the home tailors its support to your parent as an individual — meaningful activities, one-to-one engagement, response to changing needs, and end-of-life planning. Outstanding here is particularly relevant for a home specialising in dementia, where the ability to reach individuals who can no longer easily communicate their preferences is a genuine skill. This rating suggests inspectors found specific, compelling evidence of individualised rather than one-size-fits-all care. Without the full report, the specific activities, engagement approaches, or end-of-life practices that earned this rating cannot be confirmed.Is the home well-led?
Well-Led was rated Outstanding — the highest grade — covering the quality of management, governance, staff culture, accountability, and the home's ability to continuously improve. This is often the domain that predicts a home's future trajectory most reliably: strong leadership creates the conditions for everything else to stay good. Outstanding here suggests inspectors found a stable, empowering culture where staff feel supported to raise concerns and where the manager has genuine oversight of quality. Without the full inspection text, specific evidence about manager tenure, governance processes, or staff survey results cannot be confirmed.
Source: CQC inspection report →
What the evidence base says
Woodpeckers provides residential care for adults over 65 as well as younger adults with physical disabilities. The home also specialises in dementia care. For those living with dementia, the creative activities and gentle encouragement here may help unlock new forms of expression and engagement. All areas worth probing directly during a visit.
The DCC Verdict
Our editorial view, built from the three lenses: what families tell us, what inspectors record, and how the home sits against good dementia-care practice.
DCC Family Score
This home achieved an Outstanding overall rating — a distinction held by fewer than 5% of UK care homes — with particular strength in how it cares for individuals and how it is led, though the absence of full inspection text means we cannot verify specific details behind those ratings.
Homes in South East typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
The warmth here comes through in unexpected ways. One family watched their relative discover a creative side they'd never shown before, finding real joy in activities that brought out talents nobody knew existed. There's a genuine community spirit that extends beyond the walls, with the home opening its gardens for local charity events.
What inspectors have recorded
How it sits against good practice
Sometimes the right care home helps people discover parts of themselves they never knew existed.
Worth a visit
This nursing home in Brockenhurst holds an Outstanding overall rating from the official inspection — the highest possible grade, achieved by fewer than one in twenty care homes in England at the time of assessment. The inspection, carried out in January 2018, found Outstanding performance across three of the five domains: how effectively the home supports people's health and wellbeing, how well it responds to individuals' needs, and how it is led. Safe and Caring were both rated Good, meaning no concerns were identified in those areas. The home cares for up to 41 people, including those living with dementia and physical disabilities, across all age groups. The most important caveat here is that the full inspection report text was not available to us, which means we cannot verify the specific evidence behind these ratings — no resident quotes, no inspector observations, no detail on staffing ratios or activity programmes. Outstanding ratings are meaningful, but they reflect a single point in time, and this inspection is now over six years old. The care sector changes: managers move on, staffing pressures shift, occupancy rises. Before making a decision, visit in person at an unannounced time, ask specifically about night staffing levels and agency use, and ask how the home has developed its dementia care practice since 2018. The rating is a strong starting point — but your own eyes and the conversations you have on a visit should carry the most weight.
The three questions to ask when you visitSave this home. Compare it against your shortlist.
Let our analysis show you how Woodpeckers Care Home measures up against the other homes you’re considering. Free account.
In Their Own Words
How Woodpeckers Care Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Where unexpected creativity blooms in later life
Woodpeckers – Expert Care in Brockenhurst
Sometimes the transition to care brings surprising discoveries. At Woodpeckers in Brockenhurst, families have found their loved ones not just settling in, but actually flourishing in ways they hadn't imagined possible. This care home seems to understand that moving into care can be the start of something new, not just the continuation of what came before.
Who they care for
Woodpeckers provides residential care for adults over 65 as well as younger adults with physical disabilities. The home also specialises in dementia care.
For those living with dementia, the creative activities and gentle encouragement here may help unlock new forms of expression and engagement.
“Sometimes the right care home helps people discover parts of themselves they never knew existed.”
DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.
The DCC Verdict
Our editorial view, built from the three lenses: what families tell us, what inspectors record, and how the home sits against good dementia-care practice.
DCC Family Score
This home achieved an Outstanding overall rating — a distinction held by fewer than 5% of UK care homes — with particular strength in how it cares for individuals and how it is led, though the absence of full inspection text means we cannot verify specific details behind those ratings.
Homes in South East typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
The warmth here comes through in unexpected ways. One family watched their relative discover a creative side they'd never shown before, finding real joy in activities that brought out talents nobody knew existed. There's a genuine community spirit that extends beyond the walls, with the home opening its gardens for local charity events.
What inspectors have recorded
How it sits against good practice
Sometimes the right care home helps people discover parts of themselves they never knew existed.
Worth a visit
This nursing home in Brockenhurst holds an Outstanding overall rating from the official inspection — the highest possible grade, achieved by fewer than one in twenty care homes in England at the time of assessment. The inspection, carried out in January 2018, found Outstanding performance across three of the five domains: how effectively the home supports people's health and wellbeing, how well it responds to individuals' needs, and how it is led. Safe and Caring were both rated Good, meaning no concerns were identified in those areas. The home cares for up to 41 people, including those living with dementia and physical disabilities, across all age groups. The most important caveat here is that the full inspection report text was not available to us, which means we cannot verify the specific evidence behind these ratings — no resident quotes, no inspector observations, no detail on staffing ratios or activity programmes. Outstanding ratings are meaningful, but they reflect a single point in time, and this inspection is now over six years old. The care sector changes: managers move on, staffing pressures shift, occupancy rises. Before making a decision, visit in person at an unannounced time, ask specifically about night staffing levels and agency use, and ask how the home has developed its dementia care practice since 2018. The rating is a strong starting point — but your own eyes and the conversations you have on a visit should carry the most weight.
The three questions to ask when you visitSave this home. Compare it against your shortlist.
Let our analysis show you how Woodpeckers Care Home measures up against the other homes you’re considering. Free account.
In Their Own Words
How Woodpeckers Care Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Where unexpected creativity blooms in later life
Woodpeckers – Expert Care in Brockenhurst
Sometimes the transition to care brings surprising discoveries. At Woodpeckers in Brockenhurst, families have found their loved ones not just settling in, but actually flourishing in ways they hadn't imagined possible. This care home seems to understand that moving into care can be the start of something new, not just the continuation of what came before.
Who they care for
Woodpeckers provides residential care for adults over 65 as well as younger adults with physical disabilities. The home also specialises in dementia care.
For those living with dementia, the creative activities and gentle encouragement here may help unlock new forms of expression and engagement.
The home & environment
The gardens at Woodpeckers deserve special mention — they're clearly maintained with real pride and provide a lovely setting for both residents and community gatherings. Creative activities seem to be a particular strength, with opportunities that have genuinely transformed at least one resident's experience of care.
“Sometimes the right care home helps people discover parts of themselves they never knew existed.”
DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.












