Sport England’s system partner investment has committed over £500 million, since 2022, to more than 130 partners in support of the organisation's Uniting the Movement strategy.
This long-term funding provides up to five years of financial security and stability for organisations to focus on addressing the systemic changes needed to tackle the inequalities stopping individuals and communities from being physically active.
Moving forward together
The latest findings from the evaluation of the System Partner portfolio, based on insights gathered throughout 2025, matures the understanding of how partners’ collective efforts are creating change.
It also shines a light on four distinct, yet interconnected, roles that System Partners play to influence change.
It’s important to say that while many organisations naturally combine these roles, understanding them helps us to be more strategic and effective.
Whether you are funded through the System Partner investment or from elsewhere, we encourage you to reflect on the roles your organisation play.
We hope this insight can prompt you to consider how you can strengthen your collaborations and benefit from the expertise and reach of others as part of your work towards addressing inequalities and increasing physical activity.
The four roles identified are:
- The Improver. This role is the foundation of a safe and professional sector. Improvers focus on raising standards in governance, safeguarding, and equality, diversity and inclusion. They not only enhance their own practices but also support other organisations to do the same. An example is The Angling Trust, which – in response to a surge in demand for angling for wellbeing – introduced a 21-point checklist and new training to ensure its delivery partners met high standards for safety and quality.
- The Influencer. Influencers work to shape the conversations and conditions that make it easier for people to get active. They advocate for policy change and champion the needs of specific communities. The Richmond Group of Charities, a coalition of health charities, exemplifies this role. By acting as a collective, they have achieved greater reach and successfully embedded physical activity resources into the healthcare system.
- The Deliverer. This is where strategies are translated into opportunities for people to be more active. Deliverers create and adapt on-the-ground programmes for people to participate in sport and physical activity, with a focus on reaching under-represented communities. Chance to Shine’s ‘Street’ cricket programme illustrates this. By targeting deprived areas, recruiting local coaches and empowering young leaders, they have grown a programme that is youth-led and community-driven.
- The Connector. Connectors bring people and organisations together at a local level. They use their understanding of a place to guide funding and activities where they are most needed. Active Partnerships such as the Yorkshire Sport Foundation demonstrate this role. They bring people and policies together to link regional policy and community action, using formal agreements and data-driven insights to translate high-level strategy into targeted, grassroots support.
We’re investing £25 million in our Place Universal Offer until 2028, working with 30 Active Partnerships and other local organisations to drive community-led change.
The organisation will be restructured alongside the changes to the executive team.
We’re five years into our ongoing mission to ensure everyone can play sport and take part in physical activity – and later this year we’ll be unveiling our plan for the next phase.
More children than ever are taking part, but too many are missing out on the benefits of an active lifestyle.
We've announced more partnerships with places across the country where we'll work directly with communities to tackle high rates of inactivity.
Technical note to accompany the Active Lives Children and Young People Survey 2024/25, conducted by Ipsos.
The latest figures come from the second year of our social value model, which also shows a potential extra £20 billion of social value available by tackling inequalities.
Let's Move uses real families as inspiration for how to stay active during the autumn and winter months, when parents expect their children's activity levels to dip.
We developed a series of podcasts and resources to share what we've learned while testing our place-based approach in areas with some of the most disadvantaged and least active communities.

We’ve invested a further £700,000 in the sector-wide initiative that aims to make it easier for people to find opportunities to get active through better use of data.
We’ve signed a joint pledge to embed sport and physical activity into the everyday lives of people across West Yorkshire, building on our investment in the region.
Simon Hayes joins Sport England from his previous role as chief executive of HM Land Registry.
The appointees bring a wealth of experience and will help set our direction over the next three years.


The driving force behind our Uniting the Movement strategy concludes his time with us after more than six years.

We've announced a major collaboration with the region's mayoral combined authority and integrated care board to increase activity levels and improve lives.
Representatives of clubs from England and Wales will meet at Coronation Street tomorrow to celebrate National Lottery funding of the game, enabling pathways from local pitches to international tournaments.
We've worked with Good Things Foundation to understand the connection between digital inclusion and participation in sport and physical activity.
The Secretary of State has designated the active travel and sustainability advocate to lead our Board until 2029.
Leading the Movement will support and connect decision-makers working to make sport and physical activity accessible and inclusive to everyone.
Our new chief executive will join us in September after six years at HM Land Registry.

Significant growth in activity levels for older adults and disabled people but more work to do to support those living in the most deprived places.
As part of our Uniting the Movement strategy, we're committed to ‘investing most in those who need it most’.
Our Inequalities Metric measures how different personal, social and economic characteristics combine to influence activity levels.

Full technical report to accompany the Active Lives Children and Young People Survey 2023/24, conducted by Ipsos.
Tim Hollingsworth will leave the organisation at the end of July 2025.
How we’ve progressed over the last 12 months of our long-term strategy to transform lives through the power of sport and physical activity.
The Diversity in Sport Governance 2024 report was commissioned by us, along with UK Sport, and conducted by Perrett Laver and provides a detailed breakdown of the makeup of more boards and senior leadership teams of sports organisations.
Creating a diverse, thriving, community of leaders who are supported, empowered, skilled and united in the movement to tackle inequalities in physical activity and sport.
We’re partnering with three more national organisations as our quest to level up access to sport and physical activity in England continues.
Our Place Universal Offer will support Active Partnerships in England to supercharge efforts to tackle inequality and inactivity.
Sign up to take part in future user research about the Movement Hub.
Give us feedback on the effectiveness of our Movement Hub resource.
We've signed a memorandum of understanding with GM Moving to renew our shared commitment to tackling the region's health inequalities through physical activity.
The Grass Pitch Improvement Fund is backed by us and National Lottery funding to invest £5 million in areas of most need across England and Wales.
Our charter commits us to supporting and inspiring active communities by simplifying funding, promoting inclusivity, fostering collaboration, and driving innovation in community sports and physical activities.
Case studies on environmental sustainability, showcasing each of our Every Move strategy's priority themes.

All about crowdfunding, for successful applicants to the Movement Fund.
Terms and conditions of awards made by our Movement Fund .

Our £160 million fund offers crowdfunding pledges, grants and resources, and is launched alongside the Movement Hub pilot.
Our Movement Hub showcases the best of our tools and resources to help everyone in the sport and physical activity sector be a part of the movement.
We’re making new funding available to tackle major differences between demographic groups and places.
The reporting requirements for recipients of grants or crowdfunding pledges from Sport England's Movement Fund.
Details about our historic funds that have been closed down in recent years.
The impact of our funding over the years, including from our previous Small Grants and Active Together programmes.
Tips, advice and guidance on how to keep or get active.

Innovation is critical to making sport and physical activity accessible and relevant to many more people.

Our chief executive, Tim Hollingsworth, made the call during the 'Time for action: Tackling racism in sport' event held in Leicester today.


How we’re progressing with our long-term strategy to tackle inequalities and keep sport and physical activity central to everyone’s lives.
The new report considers what the impact has been on activity levels and the wider sector as a whole.



Children and young people’s overall activity levels are stable as the initial recovery from the pandemic was maintained across the 2022-23 academic year.


We’re investing a further £250m into this groundbreaking and innovative work.
Sport England chair Chris Boardman has warned climate change poses ‘serious threat’ to sport and physical activity in England
Go! London has awarded more than £2 million to sport and physical activity projects that will transform the lives of thousands of young Londoners.

The statement will help us understand how our relationship with sport and physical activity changes over our lifetime and is shaped by our experiences and our opportunities to be active.
A collection of best practice stories about creating positive experiences of movement for children and young people in England.
The campaign burst highlights the benefits of physical activity hidden in everyday movement and shines a light on why you don’t need to spend money to stay active and healthy.

Natalie Daniels will help to set our direction over her three-year term.


The Tackling Racism and Racial Inequality in Sport (TRARIIS) review was published in 2021, us and the other UK sports councils have published six-monthly update since then, this is the joint update at two years since publication.
The line will be available in a full range of sizes, in 264 Tesco locations across the country and with items for both women and girls.



The update looks at what we've achieved in the last year, breaks down key results and highlights the importance of working with our key partners and the sector to achieve our long-term strategy's goals.



The national governing bodies could receive a total of £21 million between them over the next five years, to help us deliver on the commitments made in our Uniting the Movement strategy.
Play Their Way has been developed with insight gathered from current grassroots coaches, as well as via focus groups and workshops with children and young people.
This third iteration has been developed with planners, urban designers and developers in mind, and is centred around a foundational principle of 'activity for all'.
Share your views on what’s needed to help the sport and physical activity sector accelerate action on environmental sustainability.

Sport England's Active Lives Adult Survey Report. has shown adults’ activity levels in England are back where they were before the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic.


Ben Wilson will join us in May as Ali Donnelly departs Sport England.
The news comes as part of a Government pledge to ensure parity of access to sport and physical activity opportunities for boys and girls at school.
Four new members have been appointed to Sport England's Board by DCMS
It has been two years since Sport England launched their Uniting the Movement strategy that is helping tackle inequalities in the sport and physical activity sector.

We, along with UK Sport, have made 19 commitments that will strengthening safeguarding and welfare across sport and are based on the Whyte Review.
Lizzie Hanna will join our executive leadership team in March, moving from the National Citizen Service Trust.
We're working with a number of universities to develop a Physical Literacy Consensus statement for England.
Our latest Active Lives Children and Young People Survey reveals strong growth, particularly for teenage girls, within the past year - showing that efforts to help children get active again are working.

Our future of public leisure report details the current state of the sector and how it can evolve to be sustainable and meet the challenges it faces, in doing so continuing to give people places to get active.
We've worked with key stakeholders in the sector to publish a report on the current state of public leisure and how it should evolve to continue providing vital services that help people get or stay active.
Our Active Lives Survey is an official government statistic. This page details the official statistics release schedule for each data release and subsequent report.
The investments are part of our new model that gives longer-term financial security to partners and come as part of the delivery of our Uniting the Movement strategy.
We’re working with more than 130 partners to deliver system-wide change against our ambitious 10-year strategy to level up access to sport and physical activity across the country.
The support hub launched in 2020 and provides the sport and physical activity sector with resources to establish a framework for effective and fair decision making.
Eloise Moller of the Single Homeless Project has been crowned This Girl Can Grassroots Sportswoman of the Year

We’re working to ensure the Commonwealth Games is leaving a lasting impact by supporting physical activity in West Midlands communities.
The award is part of the Sunday Times Sportswomen of the Year awards and voting closes on Thursday, November 10.