Boughton Lodge Care Home
At a Glance
The information you need to decide whether this home warrants a closer look.
Residential homes
Staff warmth score
of reviewers answered yes
Good to know
- Registered beds19
- SpecialismsCaring for adults over 65 yrs, Dementia
- Last inspected2023-11-22
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STAGE 4 — RESEARCHING CARE HOMES
Visit homes. Compare them side by side. Choose with confidence.
Most of us will view care homes the way we view houses, impression, atmosphere, the feeling in the corridor. We go home, try to remember what we saw, and make a permanent decision from a blurred memory.

The DCC shortlist gives every home you visit a structured record: the same twelve questions, answered the same way, every time. When you’re ready to choose, pull any two homes side by side and compare them directly. Same criteria, same evidence, your notes and your scores.
The Evidence
What the review data, the inspection reports, and the dementia-care evidence base tell us about this home.
What families say
What strikes families visiting Boughton Lodge is how staff across every department take time to know residents as individuals. Whether it's the kitchen team remembering a favourite meal or care assistants spotting a small change in mood, there's a consistency in how attentive everyone is.
The eight family priority themes
- Staff warmth55
- Compassion & dignity55
- Cleanliness55
- Activities & engagement50
- Food quality50
- Healthcare50
- Management & leadership50
- Resident happiness55
What inspectors found
Inspected 2023-11-22
Is this home safe?
Is the care effective?
The November 2023 inspection did not publish individual domain findings, so there is no inspection-level evidence about how well the home assesses and meets residents' needs. The August 2024 assessment rated Effective as Good. Whether care plans are detailed and up to date, whether GP access is routine, whether dementia training is substantive, and whether food quality reflects individual preferences are all questions that cannot be answered from the published inspection text.Is this home caring?
No specific findings about the quality of staff interactions, dignity, or compassion are available from the November 2023 inspection. The August 2024 assessment rated Caring as Good. There are no published quotes from residents or relatives recorded during the inspection, and no inspector observations of how staff spoke with or supported the people living there. This domain cannot be assessed from the available evidence.Is the home responsive?
No specific findings about activities, individual engagement, or responsiveness to preferences are available from the November 2023 inspection. The August 2024 assessment rated Responsive as Good. There is no published evidence about whether the activities programme is varied, whether one-to-one engagement is offered to residents who cannot join groups, or whether end-of-life care is planned and discussed with families.Is the home well-led?
The November 2023 inspection resulted in an overall Requires Improvement rating, which typically reflects concerns about governance, oversight, or culture as much as front-line care. No specific findings about management or leadership are available in the published text. The August 2024 assessment rated Well-led as Good, suggesting the registered provider addressed the concerns identified. The home is run by Kingsthorpe Care Limited, with Mr Mohinderpal Singh Chehal listed as the Nominated Individual. The length of time the current manager has been in post, the staff turnover rate, and the culture of the home are all unknown from the published evidence.
Source: CQC inspection report →
What the evidence base says
The home provides specialist dementia care alongside general support for adults over 65. For residents living with dementia, the team's attentive approach means picking up on non-verbal cues and understanding when someone needs extra reassurance. Staff work to maintain familiar routines while gently supporting independence where possible. 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
Boughton Lodge Care Home was rated Requires Improvement at its November 2023 inspection, a decline from its previous Good rating. The individual domain ratings from that inspection were not published, which means the scores above reflect this uncertainty rather than specific confirmed strengths.
Homes in East Midlands typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
What strikes families visiting Boughton Lodge is how staff across every department take time to know residents as individuals. Whether it's the kitchen team remembering a favourite meal or care assistants spotting a small change in mood, there's a consistency in how attentive everyone is.
What inspectors have recorded
Families who've experienced other care homes often mention the difference they notice here. The way the home runs day-to-day shows in the details — staff have time to stop and chat, routines flex around residents' needs, and nothing feels rushed.
How it sits against good practice
Sometimes the best measure of a care home is when families say it's better than they expected — and that's what people discover at Boughton Lodge.
Worth a visit
Boughton Lodge Care Home, at 105 Boughton Green Road, Northampton, was rated Requires Improvement at its most recent inspection in November 2023. This is a decline from its previous rating of Good. The home is a small, 19-bed residential care home registered to support adults over 65, including people living with dementia, and is run by Kingsthorpe Care Limited. Importantly, the published report from this inspection does not include individual domain ratings or specific findings, which makes it very difficult to identify what went wrong or what is working well. Because the inspection findings contain almost no detail, this Family View cannot tell you whether care is kind, whether food is good, or whether staffing is safe. A Requires Improvement rating is a formal signal that something needed to change, and the lack of published specifics means you cannot assess progress from the outside. Before considering this home, visit in person at different times of day, ask to see the most recent improvement action plan, and ask the manager what specific changes have been made since November 2023. The most recent assessment, dated August 2024 and published January 2025, rated the home Good across all five domains, which is an encouraging trajectory, but you should verify on a visit what that improvement looks like in practice.
The three questions to ask when you visitSave this home. Compare it against your shortlist.
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In Their Own Words
How Boughton Lodge Care Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Where every staff member notices what matters most
Boughton Lodge Care Home – Your Trusted residential home
Finding the right care takes more than checking facilities — it's about discovering where your loved one will truly be seen and valued. Boughton Lodge Care Home in Northampton has built its reputation on something families notice immediately: staff who pay attention, from the care assistants to the housekeeping team. This East Midlands care home specialises in supporting residents over 65, including those living with dementia.
Who they care for
The home provides specialist dementia care alongside general support for adults over 65.
For residents living with dementia, the team's attentive approach means picking up on non-verbal cues and understanding when someone needs extra reassurance. Staff work to maintain familiar routines while gently supporting independence where possible.
“Sometimes the best measure of a care home is when families say it's better than they expected — and that's what people discover at Boughton Lodge.”
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
Boughton Lodge Care Home was rated Requires Improvement at its November 2023 inspection, a decline from its previous Good rating. The individual domain ratings from that inspection were not published, which means the scores above reflect this uncertainty rather than specific confirmed strengths.
Homes in East Midlands typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
What strikes families visiting Boughton Lodge is how staff across every department take time to know residents as individuals. Whether it's the kitchen team remembering a favourite meal or care assistants spotting a small change in mood, there's a consistency in how attentive everyone is.
What inspectors have recorded
Families who've experienced other care homes often mention the difference they notice here. The way the home runs day-to-day shows in the details — staff have time to stop and chat, routines flex around residents' needs, and nothing feels rushed.
How it sits against good practice
Sometimes the best measure of a care home is when families say it's better than they expected — and that's what people discover at Boughton Lodge.
Worth a visit
Boughton Lodge Care Home, at 105 Boughton Green Road, Northampton, was rated Requires Improvement at its most recent inspection in November 2023. This is a decline from its previous rating of Good. The home is a small, 19-bed residential care home registered to support adults over 65, including people living with dementia, and is run by Kingsthorpe Care Limited. Importantly, the published report from this inspection does not include individual domain ratings or specific findings, which makes it very difficult to identify what went wrong or what is working well. Because the inspection findings contain almost no detail, this Family View cannot tell you whether care is kind, whether food is good, or whether staffing is safe. A Requires Improvement rating is a formal signal that something needed to change, and the lack of published specifics means you cannot assess progress from the outside. Before considering this home, visit in person at different times of day, ask to see the most recent improvement action plan, and ask the manager what specific changes have been made since November 2023. The most recent assessment, dated August 2024 and published January 2025, rated the home Good across all five domains, which is an encouraging trajectory, but you should verify on a visit what that improvement looks like in practice.
The three questions to ask when you visitSave this home. Compare it against your shortlist.
Let our analysis show you how Boughton Lodge Care Home measures up against the other homes you’re considering. Free account.
In Their Own Words
How Boughton Lodge Care Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Where every staff member notices what matters most
Boughton Lodge Care Home – Your Trusted residential home
Finding the right care takes more than checking facilities — it's about discovering where your loved one will truly be seen and valued. Boughton Lodge Care Home in Northampton has built its reputation on something families notice immediately: staff who pay attention, from the care assistants to the housekeeping team. This East Midlands care home specialises in supporting residents over 65, including those living with dementia.
Who they care for
The home provides specialist dementia care alongside general support for adults over 65.
For residents living with dementia, the team's attentive approach means picking up on non-verbal cues and understanding when someone needs extra reassurance. Staff work to maintain familiar routines while gently supporting independence where possible.
Management & ethos
Families who've experienced other care homes often mention the difference they notice here. The way the home runs day-to-day shows in the details — staff have time to stop and chat, routines flex around residents' needs, and nothing feels rushed.
“Sometimes the best measure of a care home is when families say it's better than they expected — and that's what people discover at Boughton Lodge.”
DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.






















