Dementia Care Home

Whitegates Care Home

25 Hereford Road, Bromyard, Herefordshire, HR7 4ES

Residential homes, Rehabilitation (illness/injury)

At a Glance

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

DCC Family Score
74/ 100
Weighted from family reviews
Dementia SpecialismConfirmed

Residential homes, Rehabilitation (illness/injury)

Families Rate The Staff72 / 100

Staff warmth score

“Well Looked After”74%

of reviewers answered yes

Good to know

  • Registered beds37
  • SpecialismsCaring for adults over 65 yrs, Caring for adults under 65 yrs, Dementia, Learning disabilities, Mental health conditions, Physical disabilities
  • Last inspected2018-07-28

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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

The eight family priority themes

  • Staff warmth72
  • Compassion & dignity72
  • Cleanliness68
  • Activities & engagement82
  • Food quality65
  • Healthcare82
  • Management & leadership68
  • Resident happiness74
Section 02

What inspectors found

Inspected 2018-07-28

  • Is this home safe?

    Good
    The inspection rated this domain Good, indicating that inspectors were broadly satisfied with safety arrangements at the time of their visit in July 2018. This would typically cover medicines management, safeguarding processes, infection control and staffing levels. A Good Safe rating suggests no significant or systemic concerns were identified. However, because the full inspection text is not available, the specific evidence behind this rating — including any observations about night staffing, falls management or agency use — cannot be confirmed. The rating is now over six years old.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is the care effective?

    Outstanding
    This is one of two domains rated Outstanding, and it is the one that tells you most about whether staff genuinely understand your parent's needs and act on them. Outstanding in Effective typically reflects detailed, individualised care plans that are treated as living documents rather than paperwork, strong dementia-specific training, reliable access to GPs and other health professionals, and food that is genuinely adapted to individual needs and preferences. Without the full report text, the precise evidence behind this rating cannot be shared, but it is the hardest domain to achieve Outstanding in and carries significant weight. The rating dates from July 2018.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is this home caring?

    Good
    The inspection rated Caring as Good, which means inspectors found staff to be broadly kind, respectful and attentive to dignity. Good in Caring is a positive finding — it covers how staff speak to and about the people they care for, whether privacy is respected during personal care, and whether people are supported to make their own choices. The absence of Outstanding here, alongside Outstanding in Effective and Responsive, suggests that while care was warm and appropriate, the specific evidence of exceptional, individualised kindness that characterises Outstanding Caring was perhaps less consistently documented. The full report text is unavailable so specific observations and quotes cannot be cited.
    Verified by inspectorResident testimony recorded
  • Is the home responsive?

    Outstanding
    Responsive is the second domain rated Outstanding, and it is the one that answers the question 'will my parent have a life here, not just a place to sleep?' Outstanding in Responsive typically reflects an activity offer that is genuinely tailored to individuals rather than delivered uniformly to groups, strong end-of-life care planning, meaningful engagement for people at all stages of dementia including those who cannot join group activities, and evidence that the home adapts quickly when someone's preferences or needs change. The full inspection text is unavailable so the specific evidence and examples behind this rating cannot be confirmed. The rating dates from July 2018.
    Verified by inspector
  • Is the home well-led?

    Good
    The inspection rated Well-Led as Good, indicating that governance, leadership and workplace culture were functioning adequately at the time of inspection. This domain covers whether the registered manager is visible and supportive, whether staff feel able to raise concerns, whether quality assurance processes are genuinely used to drive improvement, and whether the home learns from complaints and incidents. Good Well-Led alongside Outstanding in two other domains suggests a leadership team that creates the conditions for good care, even if the governance infrastructure itself was not found to be exceptional. The full inspection text is unavailable and the rating dates from July 2018.
    Verified by inspector
  • Source: CQC inspection report →

    Section 03

    What the evidence base says

    The team here works with adults both under and over 65, supporting people with dementia, learning disabilities, mental health conditions and physical disabilities. This breadth of experience means they're set up to handle complex or changing needs. For those living with dementia, being somewhere that also supports younger adults and people with different conditions can create a more varied, stimulating environment than traditional dementia-only settings. 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.

74/ 100

DCC Family Score

This home achieved an Outstanding overall rating — a distinction held by fewer than 5% of UK care homes — with particular recognition for what inspectors found in effective care delivery and responsiveness to individuals, though the full inspection text is unavailable so specific evidence cannot be independently verified.

Homes in West Midlands typically score 68–82.
DCC Recommendation

Worth a visit

This home in Bromyard was rated Outstanding overall at its last inspection in July 2018 — a rating achieved by fewer than one in twenty UK care homes. Inspectors rated it Outstanding for both Effective (what the staff know and how they apply it) and Responsive (whether your parent will have a meaningful life there), with Good ratings across Safe, Caring and Well-Led. That combination points to a home where the quality of care planning and daily life were genuinely above the ordinary. The main uncertainty is straightforward: this inspection is now over six years old, which means you cannot rely on it alone. Staff, management and ownership can all change significantly in that time, and a home's trajectory can shift in either direction. The inspection text itself is also unavailable, so none of the specific evidence behind these ratings — the quotes, the observations, the records reviewed — can be shared with you here. Visit in person, ideally unannounced or at a mealtime, and ask the home directly what has changed since 2018, who the registered manager is and how long they have been in post, and what the current staffing picture looks like on nights.

The three questions to ask when you visit

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In Their Own Words

How Whitegates Care Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.

What Whitegates Care Home says about itself

Specialist support across ages with welcoming staff in Bromyard

Whitegates – Expert Care in Bromyard

When you're looking for somewhere that can support complex needs across different age groups, finding the right environment matters just as much as the care itself. Whitegates in Bromyard brings together specialist support for both younger and older adults, with staff who visitors find genuinely welcoming. The West Midlands location offers a setting where different generations facing various challenges can find appropriate care.

Care & specialisms

Who they care for

    The team here works with adults both under and over 65, supporting people with dementia, learning disabilities, mental health conditions and physical disabilities. This breadth of experience means they're set up to handle complex or changing needs.

    How they describe their dementia care

    For those living with dementia, being somewhere that also supports younger adults and people with different conditions can create a more varied, stimulating environment than traditional dementia-only settings.

    “Sometimes the basics — friendly faces and pleasant surroundings — tell you what you need to know about a place's values.”

    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

    Not sure if it's dementia or just ageing? Here's the checklist your GP will use.

    Twelve signs to observe. A simple scoring framework. A printable, one-page record you can take to your next GP appointment, so you go in with specifics, not anxiety.

    Download Your Checklist

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    Related:

    What Real Families Say About Dementia Care Homes: The Eight Things That Matter Most

    A Which? Report for Care Homes: Real Family Reviews, Not Just Official Inspections

    Step-by-Step Guide to Finding a Care Home for Your Mum in the UK

    What Does 'Dementia Specialist' Actually Mean? How to Tell If a Care Home Really Is One

    Best UK Website for Comparing Dementia Care Homes (Beyond CQC Ratings)

    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

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

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

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