Dark blue background with small pale blue and green triangles Dark background with pale blue and triangles Dark blue background with pale blue and green triangles

Good news overall from Year Five of the Foundation Practice Rating

Author: Friends Provident Foundation

Date: 18/03/2026

The Foundation Practice Rating (FPR) is an annual sector-wide assessment of the practices in diversity, accountability, and transparency of 100 UK grant-making foundations. 

 

We initiated the assessment five years ago and continue to work with our Funders Group partners to support UK charitable foundations to understand and enhance their diversity, accountability, and transparency practices. 

 

This year’s overall results are the strongest in the FPR’s five‑year history and show statistically significant improvements since it began assessing foundations’ practices five years ago. 

Friends Provident Foundation’s results

This year our overall grade remained the same as in Year Four – an A. In the three domains we received: 

  • Diversity – B grade 
  • Accountability – B grade 
  • Transparency – A grade 

 

Those grades are the same as last year, except for the B grade in the accountability domain, which is lower than our A grade last year. While that’s disappointing, it’s also useful feedback while we’re in the middle of examining our application process and the information we provide to applicants. 

Changes to our application process

Last year we reflected on how our application process supports applicants and, ultimately, our mission. We looked at how we fund, who we reach, and how we work in partnership with those driving change. 

 

We made changes to our grant application process to help build a more equitable, less extractive process for applicants. A review of the changes affirmed that our direction of travel is right: the process is more inclusive, more accessible, and less extractive.  

 

But we also know that we haven’t reached the end of this work. Firstly, we need to publish the work we’ve done so far to support applicants, and other foundations who are examining how they fund (not just what they fund). Secondly, we will continue to review and iterate our processes as needed, learning as we progress. The FPR encourages us to consider sharing our learning as we go with applicants, stakeholders and partners. 

A sector-wide picture

The overall Year Five results reveal significant progress in UK charitable foundations’ practices in diversity, accountability, and transparency. The headline results are:  

  • 12 foundations achieved an overall A grade (the highest grade) – the highest number ever to achieve this in one year.  
  • three foundations achieved an A in each domain (diversity, accountability, and transparency) and an A overall – only one foundation has ever achieved this in the four years previously.  
  • the number of foundations that achieved a D (the lowest grade) on all three domains is the lowest ever – seven (down from 12 in Year Four).  
  • every criterion was achieved by at least one foundation – demonstrating that the rating isn’t looking for the impossible. (Every criterion has been achieved every year.) 

“Five years ago, the Foundation Practice Rating found that as foundations we had work to do to improve our practices, especially in diversity. These results show that as a sector, we’re making headway. There’s still work to do, but improvements have been made. That’s good news for the charities who come to us for funding. And it’s positive news, ultimately, for the communities they work with and support.” 

Danielle Walker Palmour - Director, Friends Provident Foundation