The Good Childhood Report 2024
Our Good Childhood Report 2024 shows the latest trends in children's wellbeing. Our research seeks to understand how young people feel about different aspects of their lives. This year’s Good Childhood Report reveals that too many young people are unhappy with their lives. 11% of the children and young people who completed our survey in 2024 had low wellbeing. And shockingly, data from the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA 2022) shows that the UK’s 15-year-olds had the lowest average life satisfaction in Europe.
81 pages
Children’s wellbeing over time
The Good Childhood Report 2024 looked at children’s responses to the latest Understanding Society survey wave to assess how wellbeing has changed over time, for all children, and by gender.
In 2021/22, the latest data available, children’s (aged 10 to 15) mean scores for happiness with their life as a whole, their friends, appearance, school, and schoolwork were all significantly lower than when the Understanding Society survey began in 2009/10. Family was the only aspect of life where there was no significant difference in children’s average happiness compared to 2009/10.
In 2021/22, on average, children were most happy with their family, and least happy with their appearance. In terms of proportions, almost one in six children (15.6%) were unhappy with their appearance (that is, they scored below the midpoint of the scale for this measure).
As highlighted in last year’s Good Childhood Report, the latest Understanding Society data continued to show concerning patterns for girls. Girls’ mean happiness scores for each of the six measures were significantly lower in 2021/22 than in 2009/10. In 2021/22, girls were also significantly less happy on average than boys with their life as a whole, their family, their appearance, and their school.
GCR staff pack stat 1
Key findings from The Children’s Society’s own annual survey 2024
- In 2024, 10- to 17-year-olds who took part in our annual survey were, on average, most happy with their family (out of the 10 aspects of life asked about in our Good Childhood Index). More children and young people (14.3%) were unhappy with school than with the nine other areas of life they were asked about (that is, they scored below the midpoint on the measure of happiness with school).
- More children and young people said they were worried about rising prices, compared with the other eight societal issues they were asked about. Two in five (41%) children and young people were ‘very’ or ‘quite’ worried about this issue.
- 23% of parents and carers said that they had found it ‘quite’ or ‘very’ difficult to manage financially between January and March 2024, which indicates that their households were in financial strain.
- One in six (17%) children and young people living in households in financial strain had low life satisfaction. For children and young people living in households not in financial strain, this was just under one in ten (9%).
Comparing UK children’s wellbeing with other European countries
Data from the OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2022 enabled us to see how the wellbeing of 15-year-olds in the UK compared to that of their peers across Europe.
- When comparing to 26 other countries in Europe, the UK had the lowest average overall life satisfaction among 15-year-olds.
- There were differences in life satisfaction between girls and boys both in the UK, and on average across Europe. In the UK, girls’ average life satisfaction declined between 2018 and 2022, while boys’ remained broadly stable.
- In terms of socio-economic differences, the UK was the European country with the largest gap in average life satisfaction between the 25% most advantaged and the 25% most disadvantaged 15-year-olds.
The Good Childhood Report
This year’s Good Childhood Report reveals that too many young people are unhappy with their lives. The Government must act now and set a path to a good childhood for all.
Ambition for the future
Children and young people deserve better. Year on year, findings that UK children’s wellbeing is in decline cannot go on. Decisive action and national leadership are needed to overturn the decline in children’s wellbeing. We know that these experiences are not lived in a vacuum. They are influenced, exacerbated and compounded by societal challenges. The pandemic, rising levels of poverty, concerns over young people’s safety, the climate emergency and other stresses have put a strain on young people’s lives and can prevent the experience of a happy and fulfilled childhood.
For far too long a piecemeal approach to addressing these challenges has failed to materialise into improvements to children’s wellbeing. There is an urgent need for a targeted, strategic and long-term vision for children and young people. The findings documented in this report and the clear message from children and young people is that a national mission is required to overturn the decline in children’s wellbeing.
Our policy recommendations
Children and young people deserve better. We cannot continue, every year, to have to report on children’s wellbeing declining. It doesn’t have to be this way. That’s why we’re calling for the government to take decisive action in line with our proposed national roadmap to a good childhood.
To overturn the decline in children’s wellbeing and set a path to a good childhood, the UK Government must:
- Prevent crisis by making sure that early intervention and preventative mental health and wellbeing support is in place for young people. This includes rolling out early support hubs in all communities and Mental Health Support Teams in every school.
- Prioritise children’s wellbeing, recognising that children’s happiness is a crucial marker of a successful society. This includes introducing a national annual measurement of children’s wellbeing as part of a national mission to set a path to a good childhood.
- End child poverty so that no family goes without the essentials. This includes legislating for a Child Poverty Act and ending the two-child limit and benefit cap.
- Improve girls’ wellbeing by working to understand and address their unhappiness, taking an intersectional approach to wellbeing.
- Reform the school experience by ending unwarranted pressures on children in school and prioritising their happiness and health. This includes improving school culture and reforming school assessment.
- Let children play by providing improved, safe spaces for leisure and play. This includes rebuilding communities for young people and increasing opportunities for them to be active, creative and to socialise.
Download the reports
Download the full report at the top, or download the summary reports here: