Abbotsleigh Care Home
At a Glance
The information you need to decide whether this home warrants a closer look.
Nursing homes, Residential homes
Staff warmth score
of reviewers answered yes
Good to know
- Registered beds61
- SpecialismsCaring for adults over 65 yrs, Dementia
- Last inspected2018-12-14
The Evidence
What the review data, the inspection reports, and the dementia-care evidence base tell us about this home.
What families say
The eight family priority themes
- Staff warmth55
- Compassion & dignity55
- Cleanliness55
- Activities & engagement50
- Food quality50
- Healthcare55
- Management & leadership65
- Resident happiness55
What inspectors found
Inspected 2018-12-14
Is this home safe?
Is the care effective?
The Effective domain was rated Good. This domain covers training, care planning, healthcare access, nutrition, and how well the home acts on health assessments. The home specialises in dementia, so dementia-specific training and care planning should be a particular strength. The published text does not describe specific training programmes, care plan examples, or how GP and specialist access works in practice.Is this home caring?
The Caring domain was rated Good. This is the domain most directly relevant to how staff treat your parent day to day: warmth, dignity, respect, use of preferred names, unhurried pace, and how staff respond when someone is distressed. The published findings contain no inspector observations, no resident quotes, and no family testimony to illustrate what this rating means in practice at Abbotsleigh.Is the home responsive?
The Responsive domain was rated Good. This covers whether the home tailors its activities and daily life to individual preferences, how it handles complaints, and whether end-of-life care is planned ahead. The home's dementia specialism means responsive care should include one-to-one engagement for people who cannot participate in group activities. No specific activities, complaints examples, or end-of-life planning detail is included in the published findings.Is the home well-led?
The Well-led domain was rated Good. A named registered manager, Mrs Alina Antoaneta Abagiu, and a nominated individual, Mr Martin Barrett, are recorded. The home is run by Nellsar Limited. The previous overall rating was Requires Improvement, so the current Good rating across all domains represents a genuine improvement under the current leadership structure. No specific information about manager tenure, staff culture, or governance arrangements is included in the published text.
Source: CQC inspection report →
What the evidence base says
The home provides specialist dementia care alongside general residential support for people over 65. Staff here understand that confusion and distress need gentle, consistent responses. The same familiar faces day after day help residents feel safer and calmer as they adjust to their new surroundings. 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
Abbotsleigh Dementia Nursing and Residential Care Home was rated Good across all five domains at its March 2021 inspection, an improvement from a previous Requires Improvement rating, but the published report text contains very little specific detail, so most scores reflect a general positive picture rather than strong confirmed evidence.
Homes in South East typically score 68–82.Worth a visit
Abbotsleigh Dementia Nursing and Residential Care Home, on George Street in Staplehurst, Kent, was rated Good across all five inspection domains at its most recent full inspection in March 2021. This is a meaningful improvement from a previous Requires Improvement rating, and it covers a 61-bed home specialising in dementia care for older adults. A desk-based review carried out in July 2023 found no reason to change this rating. The honest limitation here is that the published inspection text is very short and contains almost no specific detail: no inspector observations, no resident or relative quotes, and no examples of what the home does well day to day. A Good rating is genuinely encouraging, and the upward trend is positive, but it tells you the minimum rather than the full picture. Before deciding, visit in person, ask to see the staffing rota for last week (including nights), ask how many staff on the dementia unit are permanent rather than agency, and ask the manager how families are kept informed when something changes.
The three questions to ask when you visitSave this home. Compare it against your shortlist.
Let our analysis show you how Abbotsleigh Care Home measures up against the other homes you’re considering. Free account.
In Their Own Words
How Abbotsleigh Care Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Where dementia confusion finds patience and calm
Nursing home,residential home in Staplehurst: True Peace of Mind
When dementia brings distress and confusion, the right response makes all the difference. Abbotsleigh in Staplehurst has built its approach around patience and consistency — giving residents time to settle, space to trust, and familiar faces who understand their needs.
Who they care for
The home provides specialist dementia care alongside general residential support for people over 65.
Staff here understand that confusion and distress need gentle, consistent responses. The same familiar faces day after day help residents feel safer and calmer as they adjust to their new surroundings.
“Sometimes the smallest things — patience when someone's confused, a familiar face each morning — turn out to be exactly what matters most.”
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
Abbotsleigh Dementia Nursing and Residential Care Home was rated Good across all five domains at its March 2021 inspection, an improvement from a previous Requires Improvement rating, but the published report text contains very little specific detail, so most scores reflect a general positive picture rather than strong confirmed evidence.
Homes in South East typically score 68–82.Worth a visit
Abbotsleigh Dementia Nursing and Residential Care Home, on George Street in Staplehurst, Kent, was rated Good across all five inspection domains at its most recent full inspection in March 2021. This is a meaningful improvement from a previous Requires Improvement rating, and it covers a 61-bed home specialising in dementia care for older adults. A desk-based review carried out in July 2023 found no reason to change this rating. The honest limitation here is that the published inspection text is very short and contains almost no specific detail: no inspector observations, no resident or relative quotes, and no examples of what the home does well day to day. A Good rating is genuinely encouraging, and the upward trend is positive, but it tells you the minimum rather than the full picture. Before deciding, visit in person, ask to see the staffing rota for last week (including nights), ask how many staff on the dementia unit are permanent rather than agency, and ask the manager how families are kept informed when something changes.
The three questions to ask when you visitSave this home. Compare it against your shortlist.
Let our analysis show you how Abbotsleigh Care Home measures up against the other homes you’re considering. Free account.
In Their Own Words
How Abbotsleigh Care Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Where dementia confusion finds patience and calm
Nursing home,residential home in Staplehurst: True Peace of Mind
When dementia brings distress and confusion, the right response makes all the difference. Abbotsleigh in Staplehurst has built its approach around patience and consistency — giving residents time to settle, space to trust, and familiar faces who understand their needs.
Who they care for
The home provides specialist dementia care alongside general residential support for people over 65.
Staff here understand that confusion and distress need gentle, consistent responses. The same familiar faces day after day help residents feel safer and calmer as they adjust to their new surroundings.
“Sometimes the smallest things — patience when someone's confused, a familiar face each morning — turn out to be exactly what matters most.”
DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.












