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Best interests assessment reports help solicitors and the Court of Protection make lawful, defensible
decisions for a person who lacks capacity for a specific issue. The purpose is not to replace the person’s voice, but
to evidence how the decision-maker has applied the statutory framework: considering wishes and feelings, beliefs and
values, relevant views, and the “least restrictive” route to the required outcome. A well-prepared report highlights
the real-world options available, the likely consequences of each, and why one course best meets the protected party’s
welfare and rights.
When a best interests assessment is required
A best interests assessment is commonly required where there is a serious decision to be made and
disagreement, uncertainty, or risk makes a structured evaluation essential. Typical instructions include: living
arrangements and care regime disputes; disagreements over medical treatment; welfare applications before the Court of
Protection; financial decisions with major life impact (for example, selling a property, funding care, or relocation);
and cases where professionals and family members propose different pathways. Solicitors often instruct where the court
needs a clear comparison of realistic options, grounded in evidence rather than preference or assumption.
What a best interests assessment report should cover
The court expects a balanced appraisal that is specific to the decision at hand. A robust
best interests assessment report will typically address past and present wishes and feelings, including
any consistent expressions of preference; the person’s beliefs and values (cultural, religious, relational, and personal
priorities); and the views of those involved in care or welfare, such as family members, carers, treating clinicians,
and key professionals. It should also evaluate the “least restrictive” alternatives—what can achieve the aim while
limiting autonomy and rights as little as possible—and explain the clinical impact of the decision, including any
foreseeable risks, stability concerns, or safeguarding implications.
Decision-specific and evidence-based reasoning
A common pitfall is producing a generic narrative that does not answer the practical question before the court.
We approach each best interests assessment as decision-specific: what is the precise decision, what are
the genuine options available, and what are the likely outcomes of each option for the protected party? This includes
practicalities (location, supervision, care package, medical access), emotional and relational consequences (family contact,
distress, isolation), and longer-term sustainability (whether the plan can realistically continue). The report should read
like a structured comparison, with clear reasoning that a judge can follow in one sitting.
Explaining “least restrictive” options in practice
“Least restrictive” is often misunderstood as “do the minimum”. In a best interests assessment, the task is to
identify an option that actually meets the person’s needs while restricting liberty, contact, and autonomy as little as is
realistically safe. That may involve comparing supported living against residential care, testing whether a care package can
be safely delivered at home, or examining whether contact arrangements can be managed with supervision rather than prohibition.
The key is to set out what protections would be required for each option and whether those safeguards are workable.
Handling disputes between family, professionals, and providers
Many Court of Protection matters become difficult because the parties agree on the person’s vulnerability but disagree on the
solution. A best interests assessment report should fairly capture each viewpoint, separate evidence from opinion,
and explain why one pathway better aligns with welfare and rights. Where relationships are strained, the report can also identify
practical steps that reduce conflict—clear care plans, communication structures, review points, and measurable goals—so the final
order is more likely to be followed and less likely to trigger repeated applications.
Clinical impact, prognosis, and real-world sustainability
Courts often need more than a snapshot of current presentation. A good best interests assessment describes the likely
clinical impact of the proposed decision over time: stability, relapse risk, behavioural deterioration, treatment engagement, and the
effect on day-to-day functioning. It should also consider sustainability—whether the plan can survive staffing pressures, funding changes,
family availability, and service constraints. A decision that looks ideal on paper can fail quickly if it depends on resources that do not
exist or cannot be reliably maintained.
What solicitors should send to speed up the instruction
To keep turnaround tight, we recommend providing: the precise decision for determination; the options being proposed (including who proposes
each option); key deadlines; recent care plans and risk assessments; relevant medical notes; and a brief chronology of significant events.
If there has been a breakdown of placement or contact, include incident logs and any safeguarding correspondence. This allows the expert to
target the best interests assessment to the live issues and produce a report that is usable without multiple addenda.
Specialist input and settings for assessment
Best interests instructions are frequently supported by consultant psychiatrists, Best Interests Assessors (BIA), and
experienced social workers. Assessment can be completed in a range of settings—home, hospital, care home, or remotely—
depending on the person’s circumstances and the decision in issue. In complex cases, the instruction may require a
multidisciplinary perspective to cover mental health, social care needs, safeguarding, and functional capability. Our
case managers review the instruction and propose the most appropriate expert profile so the best interests assessment
addresses the court’s core concerns without unnecessary delay.
Compliance expectations for Court of Protection matters
These reports sit within a legal framework. The analysis should clearly reflect the statutory best interests checklist,
and the reasoning must be transparent and fair. Where required, the report can also be presented in a structured,
court-ready format consistent with expert evidence expectations (including CPR Part 35 where relevant to wider proceedings).
The goal is always the same: a report that supports lawful, defensible decision-making and helps the court reach an outcome
that is practical, proportionate, and focused on the protected party.
For related capacity report types and instructions, see our
Capacity services page.
If you need an urgent best interests assessment, send brief case details and identifying documents,
and we will propose suitable experts, settings, and realistic timescales to match the decision the court must determine.
A best interests assessment provides a formal evaluation of the most appropriate course of action for an individual who lacks the mental capacity to make a specific decision. These reports assist the Court of Protection and legal representatives in ensuring that any decision made on behalf of a protected party adheres to the statutory principles of the Mental Capacity Act.
Overview
When this report is required
To determine the most appropriate living arrangements or care regime for an incapacitated adult
To resolve disputes between family members or professionals regarding medical treatment
To provide expert evidence for the Court of Protection during welfare or financial proceedings
To justify significant life changes, such as the sale of a property or relocation to a care facility
What the expert assesses
Past and present wishes and feelings
Beliefs and values likely to influence the decision
Views of relevant family members and carers
Evaluation of the “least restrictive” options
Prognosis and clinical impact of the proposed decision
Report specification
Element
Detail
Assessment Setting
Home Visit, Hospital, Care Home, Remote
Court Acceptance
Court of Protection
Compliance
CPR Part 35, Mental Capacity Act 2005 (Section 4)
CPR Part 35 Compliant
Digital Delivery
Urgent Instructions
While these are the primary specialists engaged for this instruction type, please note that every case turns on
its own facts. Complex or multi-disciplinary cases may require a bespoke team of experts. Our case managers will
review your specific instruction to ensure the correct clinical match.