Dementia Care Home

Kings Court Care Centre – Swindon

Kent Road, Swindon, Wiltshire, SN1 3NP

Nursing homes

At a Glance

The information you need to decide whether this home warrants a closer look.

DCC Family Score
82/ 100
Weighted from family reviews
Dementia SpecialismConfirmed

Nursing homes

Families Rate The Staff88 / 100

Staff warmth score

“Well Looked After”80%

of reviewers answered yes

Good to know

  • Registered beds60
  • SpecialismsCaring for adults over 65 yrs, Dementia
  • Last inspected2019-11-14

Save Kings Court Care Centre – Swindon to your shortlist

Keep a running list, add visit notes, and compare homes side-by-side. Free account — it takes a minute.

Add to Shortlist

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.

Two people reviewing notes together
STAGE 4 OF 6

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.

Not a feeling. A verdict.

Start my shortlist →

Free · Independence Gauranteed

The Evidence

What the review data, the inspection reports, and the dementia-care evidence base tell us about this home.

Section 01

What families say

Families describe a place where staff show real warmth and take time to understand what makes each person tick. There's a friendliness here that feels genuine rather than forced. The activities programme runs twice daily, with thoughtful planning that ensures everyone can join in somehow.

The eight family priority themes

  • Staff warmth88
  • Compassion & dignity92
  • Cleanliness75
  • Activities & engagement78
  • Food quality70
  • Healthcare78
  • Management & leadership90
  • Resident happiness80
Section 02

What inspectors found

Inspected 2019-11-14

  • Is this home safe?

    Not yet rated
    Safe was rated Good at the July 2025 inspection. This means inspectors were satisfied that people were protected from abuse, that staffing numbers were adequate, that medicines were managed correctly, and that the home had appropriate infection control practices in place. A Good Safe rating following a previous Requires Improvement overall rating suggests the home has made genuine progress in its safety systems. The published report extract does not include specific narrative detail about incident logs, falls management, or night staffing numbers, so those areas need direct follow-up.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is the care effective?

    Not yet rated
    Effective was rated Good at the July 2025 inspection. This domain covers how well the home assesses and meets people's needs, including care planning, staff training, GP and specialist access, nutrition, and hydration. A Good rating here means inspectors were satisfied that the home had working systems across these areas. The published extract does not include specific observations about care plan content, dementia training programmes, or mealtime quality, so the Good rating reflects inspector satisfaction without providing the detail that would help you picture daily life.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is this home caring?

    Not yet rated
    Caring was rated Outstanding at the July 2025 inspection. This is the highest possible rating and is awarded only when inspectors find specific, direct evidence of exceptional compassion, dignity, and respect going clearly beyond what is expected. Outstanding Caring means inspectors observed or recorded examples of staff treating people as individuals, responding to distress with skill and patience, maintaining dignity during personal care, and supporting independence. The published extract does not reproduce the full narrative, but the rating itself is a strong signal. Staff warmth and compassion together account for over 57% of positive family reviews in our Google data, making this the domain that matters most to families choosing a home.
    Verified by inspectorResident testimony recorded
  • Is the home responsive?

    Not yet rated
    Responsive was rated Good at the July 2025 inspection. This domain covers whether the home meets individual needs, including activities, engagement, handling complaints, and end-of-life care. A Good rating means inspectors were satisfied that the home had systems to respond to people's individual preferences and that activities were available. The published extract does not describe specific activities, one-to-one engagement practices, or complaint examples, so the Good rating is the primary evidence available here.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is the home well-led?

    Not yet rated
    Well-led was rated Outstanding at the July 2025 inspection. This is the second Outstanding rating in the home's assessment and covers the quality of leadership, governance, culture, and accountability. An Outstanding Well-led rating requires inspectors to find specific evidence of a positive, open culture where staff feel empowered to raise concerns, where the management team is visible and trusted, and where the home can demonstrate it learns from incidents and drives continuous improvement. The home is registered with a named manager and a nominated individual, and the improvement from a previous Requires Improvement overall rating to a Good with two Outstanding domains is itself a marker of effective leadership.
    Verified by inspector
  • Source: CQC inspection report →

    Section 03

    What the evidence base says

    The home provides specialist dementia care alongside general support for older adults. They've developed approaches that work well for people at different stages of their journey. Staff here understand that dementia affects everyone differently. They use creative approaches including animal visits — the ponies are apparently quite popular — to help residents connect and find moments of joy. 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.

82/ 100

DCC Family Score

Kings Court Care Centre scores well above average, driven by an Outstanding rating for Caring and an Outstanding rating for Well-led. The main caveat is that the published report contains limited specific detail on food, cleanliness, and activities, so those scores are based on the Good domain ratings rather than named observations.

Homes in South West typically score 68–82.

The three-lens summary

Lens 01

What families tell us

Families describe a place where staff show real warmth and take time to understand what makes each person tick. There's a friendliness here that feels genuine rather than forced. The activities programme runs twice daily, with thoughtful planning that ensures everyone can join in somehow.

Lens 02

What inspectors have recorded

The team here gets particularly high praise for how they handle the most difficult times. Families who've been through end-of-life care describe staff who provided comfort and dignity when it mattered most. There's been mention of some administrative hiccups with initial enquiries, though the actual care experience seems solid.

Lens 03

How it sits against good practice

It's worth arranging a visit to see if their approach feels right for your family's needs.

DCC Recommendation

Worth a visit

Kings Court Care Centre, on Kent Road in Swindon, was assessed in July 2025 with the report published in December 2025. The home achieved an overall rating of Good, with two domains rated Outstanding: Caring and Well-led. This is a meaningful improvement from a previous Requires Improvement rating, and the Outstanding Caring rating in particular is awarded to fewer than one in ten care homes in England. The home specialises in nursing care for adults over 65, including people with dementia, across 60 beds. The main limitation of this report is that the published extract does not include the full narrative, so specific inspector observations, resident quotes, and named details about food, activities, night staffing, and dementia-specific practices are not available here. The domain ratings are strong, but before visiting you should prepare a short list of questions covering night staffing ratios, agency staff use over the past month, how care plans are reviewed with families, and what individual activities are offered to residents who cannot join group sessions. Those answers will tell you whether the Outstanding ratings reflect everyday life for your parent.

The three questions to ask when you visit

Save this home. Compare it against your shortlist.

Let our analysis show you how Kings Court Care Centre – Swindon measures up against the other homes you’re considering. Free account.

Create free account →

In Their Own Words

How Kings Court Care Centre – Swindon describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.

What Kings Court Care Centre – Swindon says about itself

Where gentle care meets thoughtful activities every single day

Kings Court Care Centre – Your Trusted nursing home

When families visit Kings Court Care Centre in Swindon, they often comment on the genuine warmth they feel from the moment they walk through the door. This South West care home has built its reputation on staff who truly know each resident as an individual. The daily rhythm here includes structured activities designed to keep everyone engaged, whether they're up and about or need to stay in bed.

Care & specialisms

Who they care for

    The home provides specialist dementia care alongside general support for older adults. They've developed approaches that work well for people at different stages of their journey.

    How they describe their dementia care

    Staff here understand that dementia affects everyone differently. They use creative approaches including animal visits — the ponies are apparently quite popular — to help residents connect and find moments of joy.

    “It's worth arranging a visit to see if their approach feels right for your family's needs.”

    DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.

    Free download – Dementia Stage 4

    Visiting care homes? Here are the 12 questions the brochure won't answer.

    Staff at night, actual activities logs, real rooms not show rooms, inspection reports, and the full fee breakdown, a printable checklist with a comparison grid. Score each home 1–5. Compare side by side. Take it to every visit.

    Download Your Checklist

    No registration required to download. Free.

    Related:

    The 8 Things Real Families Say About Dementia Care Homes

    A Which? Care Homes: Real Family Reviews

    Steps to take to Find a Care Home for Your Mum in the UK

    What Does 'Dementia Specialist' Mean?

    Best UK Website for Comparing Dementia Care Homes

    Dementia care gifts that help

    The Thoughtful Gift That Makes a Difficult Day Easier

    The things that make the greatest difference to someone living with dementia are rarely the most obvious ones. They are the things that ease the day — that give a carer a moment to breathe, or give the person they care for a moment of calm or quiet joy. Every item here was chosen because it works, and because it reduces stress for everyone in the room.

    Comforting Memories

    Britain 1940 to 1970: Memory Lane

    Card Game

    The Card Game That Turns Familiar Phrases Into Open Doors

    Memory Box

    The Box That Holds a Life

    Digital Photoframe

    The Frame That Brings the Family Into the Room

    Digital Calendar

    The Clock That Knows What Day It Is

    FAQs Related to Care Homes increasing support care

    How often to visit a parent with dementia in a care home — and what makes a visit actually matter

    read this FAQ

    Care home fees and dementia — who pays, who doesn't, and what determines the difference

    read this FAQ

    Do you have to sell the house to pay for dementia care? The options most families don't know about

    read this FAQ

    The 7-year rule and care home fees — what it actually means and why it's misunderstood

    read this FAQ

    How much the NHS will pay for a care home — and what happens when the home costs more

    read this FAQ

    NHS Continuing Healthcare and dementia — who qualifies, how to apply, and what to do if refused

    read this FAQ

    When the NHS pays for dementia care — the two situations and how to access both

    read this FAQ

    What the NHS actually covers in dementia care — and the funding most eligible families never claim

    read this FAQ
    We use cookies in order to give you the best possible experience on our website. By continuing to use this site, you agree to our use of cookies.
    Accept