More buildings to receive dangerous cladding removal funding

News imageGetty Images A tall apartment building with grey exterior cladding by a fence and road Getty Images
Taller buildings like Nova House have undergone replacement of unsafe cladding

More buildings will soon be able to access government funding to remove dangerous cladding, the government has announced.

Funding was previously only available on blocks of 59ft (18m) or higher, leaving leaseholders in lower-rise buildings to foot the bill to fix safety issues.

Under the extended plans, buildings under 36ft (11m) will be able to apply for the financial support, with the government aiming to prioritise properties "based on the risk they pose to residents".

The change forms part of the Remediation Acceleration Plan, which was released in December 2024, building on work to address failings set out in the Grenfell inquiry.

The Grenfell Tower fire killed 72 people in 2017, with the cladding found to be the "principal" reason for the blaze's rapid spread.

Building Safety Minister, Samantha Dixon said: "Residents shouldn't be left worrying about living in homes with dangerous, flammable cladding, just because their building isn't tall enough to qualify for funding".

Applications will open from August but no figure has been given for the amount of funding that will be made available.

The plan also pledges that by 2029, all buildings 36ft or above with unsafe cladding will either have been remediated, have a date for completion, or the landlords will be liable for severe penalties.

The latest figures on remediation work, published in June, show that by the end of May 2026, 2,331 buildings have either started or completed remediation works.

In total, there are 4,411 residential buildings 36ft and over identified with unsafe cladding.

Kate Henderson, chief executive of the National Housing Federation, welcomed the government's decision, and called it an "important step towards accelerating remediation".

"This is an approach the sector has long called for, as height alone is not a reliable measure of risk, and will ensure capacity is directed to where it's needed most," Henderson added.

The changes are part of wider efforts to ensure building safety issues are fixed "quickly and fairly, without leaving leaseholders facing unreasonable costs", the government said.