The new DfE School Estate Management Standards signal a shift toward more structured, evidence-led and accountable estates management. For facility managers, this means being able to clearly show how compliance, maintenance planning, asset data and governance are being managed, not just doing the work, but proving control in a practical, defensible way.
Many schools are moving toward one system for managing estates information, rather than relying on disconnected documents and individual knowledge.
While the January 2026 DfE update wasn’t new legislation, it reinforced a clear direction of travel for education estates.
The standards bring together existing guidance and expectations into a clearer framework that focuses on:
In short, estate management is becoming more visible, more structured, and more accountable, especially at the leadership and governance level.
For most schools, this isn’t about starting again. It’s about clarity.
That usually means:
The emphasis isn’t on perfection, it’s on being able to show control.
No.
The DfE has been clear that schools are not expected to jump straight to “advanced” estates management. The realistic target over time is Level 3: Fully Effective.
What matters most is:
Progression matters more than labels.
This is one of the biggest shifts.
The expectation is no longer just doing the work, but being able to show it clearly, quickly and confidently.
That includes records for:
If you can produce this information without scrambling, you’re broadly aligned with the standards.
The standards reinforce a move away from constant firefighting toward more control.
In practice, that looks like:
Most school FM teams already do elements of this. The difference now is joining it up and making it visible.
Digital readiness means estates information is accessible, data supports decision-making, and systems reduce reliance on memory and spreadsheets, which is why many schools are moving toward a CAFM system designed for education estates.
Digital readiness looks like:
The DfE has been clear that these standards are designed to simplify what many schools found overwhelming, not add more admin.
Sustainability is no longer a side project.
Energy efficiency, carbon planning and climate readiness are becoming embedded expectations, even where budgets feel tight.
For most schools, this starts with:
It’s about awareness and planning, not instant transformation.
One of the quieter changes happening across education is that estates management is becoming more visible at the leadership level.
You may be asked:
The standards give leadership teams a clearer framework, which means clearer questions for FMs.
The strongest approaches we see are digital-first and centralised.
That usually means:
The goal isn’t more work, it’s less last-minute scrambling and more confidence.