Strong financial governance and aligned financial planning establish a shared understanding and a solid platform for ongoing improvement.
Finance is a key enabler of effective LGR. Through clear planning, shared assumptions and aligned financial governance, councils create a strong foundation for the new authority. Financial activity supports smooth transition, protects service continuity and provides the platform for long-term, sustainable improvement.
Experience from LGR-experienced councils shows that effective financial delivery is supported by:
- Developing a joint transition cost and savings schedule, explicitly guided by CIPFA's Local Government Reorganisation financial planning principles, with consistent templates and clarity on transitional versus transformational costs.
- Agreeing a council tax harmonisation strategy with a clear trajectory and narrative.
- Establishing a common financial control framework - delegations, approvals and reporting - aligned to CIPFA's Delivering Good Governance and assurance guidance for reorganising authorities.
- Adopting a single chart of accounts with phased finance-system integration, reflecting the emphasis in the LGA's Insights: LGR Financial Planning and Transformation webinar on early systems and data decisions.
- Applying scenario-based modelling and benefits tracking, reinforced in the LGA Transformation Masterclass materials (Somerset, Alyn Jones), where robust modelling supported confident decisions and visible progress.
Aligned financial planning helps teams work together seamlessly, ensures reporting is consistent from Day One and gives senior leaders and councillors a shared understanding of priorities. It also enables programme teams and services to plan with confidence, knowing that assumptions are clear and enabling capacity is in place to support transition and future transformation.
Overall, strong financial governance enables councils to enter vesting day with confidence, ensuring stable services, shared financial understanding and a solid platform for ongoing improvement.
Top resources
This short explanatory note was published by the Government on 25 July 2025. It provides advice to councils going through LGR on financial decisions before LGR, to help balance the decisions needed now to maintain service delivery, and ensure value for money for council taxpayers with those key decisions that will affect the future success of any new councils in the area.
The LGA has published an LGR finance essentials hub with guides provide practical advice and guidance on financial issues that local authorities should consider throughout the LGR implementation phase. The guides are aimed at non-finance professionals, such as elected members and Chief Executives, but may also be useful to Chief Financial Officers and their teams. The notes have been developed in discussion with CIPFA but are not intended to provide detailed technical finance advice.
This first guidance note focuses on how to maintain strong financial governance throughout the LGR journey and why a focus on financial sustainability is so important in the period up to vesting day.
- financial governance and sustainability: what do we mean by this?
- financial governance and decision making in LGR programmes
- financial sustainability in the context of LGR
- successful collaboration
- understanding the financial baseline
- implementation costs and funding for the LGR programme.
This second guidance note focuses on the importance of maintaining comprehensive and accurate financial records throughout LGR.
- local authority accounts and audit requirements during LGR
- local authority statement of accounts: Statutory timelines and responsibilities
- local Government Pension fund: statement of accounts
- annual governance statements
- value for Money reporting
- the role of the Audit Committee
- resource implications.
The third guidance note sets out high‑level principles for estimating expenditure, funding and balance sheet positions when creating new unitary councils under LGR, drawing on learning from recent reorganisations. It explains how to aggregate district finances and disaggregate county finances, supported by financial modelling for revenue, funding and balance sheet assumptions. The document stresses that producing these estimates is complex, resource‑intensive and dependent on agreed principles and assumptions. It also notes that figures must be refined continually and can only be finalised after government confirms the creation of the new unitary councils.
- background
- context
- modelling funding and expenditure
- financial modelling to inform budget setting: High level principles
- financial modelling: Revenue expenditure
- financial modelling: Balance sheet position
- summary
- appendix 1: Example disaggregation principles.
Data collection
Since the summer of 2025 Surrey District & Borough Councils, with support from Local Partnerships, have completed an extensive data gathering and analysis exercise in support of their LGR process. This work has included, among others, the establishment of a Project Management Organisation to facilitate the data gathering exercise, a standardised process for the collection, review and analysis of data and the development of Requests for Information (RFIs) in support of that process.
Based on this work, in support of the wider sector, the Data & Analytics team of Local Partnerships has developed an initial sub-section of the RFI’s into a set of generic templates, including a template on elections, that councils can use for collecting consistent and comparable data required for Local Government Reorganisation (LGR), alongside an RFI tracker document to help manage the project management of the data workflow.
The aim of the RFI templates is to help:
- Build a robust, evidence-based baseline to support planning for service transition and, subsequently, service transformation
- identify opportunities, risks, and integration challenges early
- reduce duplication, improve data quality and ensure data is collected once.
Further reading
Blog
A summary of an LGA webinar on managing finance and transformation during local government reorganisation - covering financial planning, budget disaggregation, council tax harmonisation, and lessons from recent unitary transitions.
- financial planning in LGR
- budget disaggregation and funding alignment
- council tax harmonisation
- post-vesting transformation and efficiency
- data and evidence for business cases
- lessons learned and key takeaways.
Slides: Westmoreland and Furness Council
This set of slides explores how councils manage finances during reorganisation, covering budget disaggregation, funding alignment, governance, efficiency planning, and risk management to ensure sustainable transformation and delivery.
Page 1 – LGR – Financial Planning and Transformation
Page 2 – Funding and disaggregation
Page 3 – Key issues – governance & programme setup
Page 4 – Efficiencies and transformation
Page 5 – 'Watch outs'!
Page 6 – Overall summary
Page 7 – LGA Support Offer.
Slides: Cornwall Council
The presentation traces Cornwall’s journey to becoming a unitary authority, outlining the structure and services before reorganisation, the governance and implementation process, and the key milestones achieved before vesting day. It reflects on the initial challenges, financial and operational pressures, and how the council stabilised and matured over time. The slides conclude with lessons learned, emphasising leadership, planning, and collaboration in successfully delivering 'One Council for Cornwall.'
Slide 1 – Introduction – Context and purpose of LGR insights
Slide 2 – Speaker – Background and role
Slide 3 – Pre-LGR Cornwall – Structure before reorganisation
Slide 4 – Pre-LGR Services – How services were delivered pre-2009
Slide 5 – Timeline – Steps to becoming a unitary authority
Slide 6 – Governance – Programme promises and oversight
Slide 7 – Implementation – Phased delivery approach
Slide 8 – Deliverables – Key actions before vesting day
Slide 9 – Planning – Critical milestones for transition
Slide 10 – Vision – 'One Council Serving Cornwall' concept
Slide 11 – Challenges – Initial transition difficulties
Slide 12 – Early Issues – Financial and operational strain
Slide 13 – Stabilisation – Early consolidation and adjustments
Slide 14 – Maturity – Growth and improvement pre-pandemic
Slide 15 – Reflections – Lessons and personal insights
Slide 16 – Conclusion – Closing thanks and summary.
This webinar session outlines North Yorkshire’s journey to becoming a single unitary council while simultaneously securing a devolution deal. Speakers explain how the business case was developed, how governance, HR, finance, IT and programme structures were set up to ensure the new authority was ‘safe and legal’ on day one, and how extensive staff, political and stakeholder engagement underpinned the process. The webinar closes with lessons learned on culture, communication, and preparing for transformation after vesting day.
0:00 – 0:44: Housekeeping & introductions.
0:44 – 4:07: Chief Executive introduction and background to the reorganisation journey.
4:07 – 5:02: Business case submission and government decision timeline.
5:02 – 6:33: Key themes from the business case (‘case for change’).
6:33 – 10:06/15:55: Structural Change Order and early governance arrangements. Timeline from decision to elections to vesting day.
15:55 – 19:00: Running LGR and devolution processes in parallel.
19:00 – 22:17: Developing the business case internally (approach, resources, political involvement).
22:17 – 26:08: Public consultation and winning a business case.
26:08 – 27:17: Introduction of Rachel Joyce, Assistant Chief Executive – Local engagement
27:17 – 29:35: Setting up the Programme Management Office (PMO) and principles for the PMO.
29:35 – 36:36: Safe and legal must haves for Day One; Safe and legal plus; early system and customer access planning.
33:06 – 35:15: Programme governance structures and workstream setup.
35:15 – 36:37: Communications and engagement
36:54 – 48:42: Governance and legal framework (continuing authority model, structural change regulations, constitutions, S24 Directions, policy mapping, elections).
48:42 – 54:39: HR and workforce transition (terms, payroll, job evaluation, role matching, TUPE).
54:39 – 1:06:10: Finance considerations (spending controls, S24 Direction, transition reserve, financial systems, early savings challenges, harmonisation of council tax, post-vesting day savings).
1:06:20 – 1:10:00: Cultural integration and change leadership themes.
1:09:58 – 1:30:52: Q&A session.
This presentation by Alyn Jones, Executive Director for Strategy, Workforce and Localities at Somerset Council, shared insights into Somerset's approach LGR during a Local Government Association (LGA) Transformation Masterclass. He highlighted Somerset's rural context, economic challenges, and the opportunities presented by becoming a unitary authority. The presentation covered the council's preparedness, critical path delivery, and customer-focused initiatives, emphasising the importance of sound programme management, leadership engagement, and effective communication to ensure a smooth transition and continued service delivery.
This guide by Browne Jacobson provides a practical, high-level overview intended to help councils in England to understand the main legal, procedural and organisational considerations related to reorganisation. This includes highlighting relevant statutory instruments.
Page 3-6: Process including legal mechanics, proposals, consultation and Structural Changes Orders
Page 7: Governance and constitution
Page 9: Transitional arrangements
Page 10-11: Transfer of assets
Page 12-13: Commercial considerations including contracts, branding and intellectual property
Page 14: Property considerations
Page 15-16: Staff and employment including TUPE and practical issues
Page 17-18: Finance and council tax including through transition periods and shadow authorities
Page 19-20: Risk and insurance including liabilities and knowledge capture.
The report by Grant Thornton UK LLP reviews lessons drawn from eight of the new unitary councils created since 2019. The report draws on auditors’ annual reports, making this report particularly helpful in identifying lessons around finance, audit and LGR.
The report is structured around early successes before, during, and post-transition. It looks at learning in financial sustainability, governance and effectiveness, economy and efficiency. Grant Thornton highlights three cross-cutting themes emerging from its report: transformation, capacity, and corporate knowledge.
Page 5-7: Key messages for local authorities
Page 9-11: Early success before and during transition
Page 12-14: Financial sustainability
Page 15-17: Governance
Page 18-20: Improving economy, efficiency and effectiveness.
This paper highlights some key learning from the implementation on 1 April 2009 of unitary structures in seven county areas. That process established nine new unitary councils:
- Bedford Borough Council
- Central Bedfordshire Council
- Cheshire East Council
- Cheshire West & Chester Council
- Cornwall Council
- Durham County Council
- Northumberland County Council
- Shropshire Council and
- Wiltshire Council.
Following their establishment, this paper sought to draw together the key learning from implementing those unitary structures.
Page 1-2: The key areas of learning
Page 3: Overall approach
Page 3-5: Timing of elections
Page 5: Implementation model: continuing council with implementation executive or shadow council
Page 6-8: Staffing issues
Page 8-9: Appointment of chief executive and senior management
Page 9-10: Financial framework
Page 10: Framework for the transfer of property, rights and liabilities
Page 10-11: Shared services
Page 11-12: Localism agenda
Page 12-13: Relations with others
Page 13: Communications
Page 13-4: Local performance framework
Page 14: Ceremonial issues
Page 14-15: Engagement and support from central government
Page 15: Conclusion.
The article discusses North Yorkshire Council's experience with LGR, highlighting challenges such as an unexpected £22 million funding shortfall and the complexities of merging multiple councils. Insights from leaders like Richard Flinton (Chief Executive, North Yorkshire Council) and Ed Hammond (Deputy Chief Executive, Centre for Governance and Scrutiny) emphasise the importance of governance, planning and relationship-building during reorganisation.
The piece also draws on lessons from other councils, including Buckinghamshire and Westmorland and Furness, underscoring the need for strong programme management and early certainty to navigate LGR effectively.
This webpage outlines North Northamptonshire Council’s discussion of, and decision on, the disaggregation of the former Northamptonshire County Council balance sheet. The page includes links to a report setting out the disaggregation of the balance sheet and the approach taken to disaggregate technical balances by North and West Northamptonshire Councils.
CIPFA finance template for LGR proposals
CIPFA has developed a template to support councils to present financial information in business cases. This was initially developed to support the development of local proposals, and may now be used as the basis of more detailed business cases and implementation plans, along with council tax equalisation calculations, disaggregation and aggregation tools and four year forecasts.
The main theme of this webinar is introducing and explaining a standardised financial template to support local government reorganisation business cases, emphasising consistency, transparency, and practical guidance for capturing incremental costs, savings, risks, and assumptions across multiple councils.
1:52 - Why a common finance template
3:36 - Principles and who developed it
7:11 - Template walkthrough (base, detail, risks)
19:05 - Practical LGR lessons (F3)
22:00 - Q&A: Is it mandatory? Assumptions & data
26:05 - Q&A: Incremental vs totals; income/ICT
31:08 - Q&A: Balancing area finances; data readiness
38:15 - Accessing template & FAQs; consistency.
Data collection
Since the summer of 2025 Surrey District & Borough Councils, with support from Local Partnerships, have completed an extensive data gathering and analysis exercise in support of their LGR process. This work has included, among others, the establishment of a Project Management Organisation to facilitate the data gathering exercise, a standardised process for the collection, review and analysis of data and the development of Requests for Information (RFIs) in support of that process.
Based on this work, in support of the wider sector, the Data & Analytics team of Local Partnerships has developed an initial sub-section of the RFI’s into a set of generic templates, including one on audit, that councils can use for collecting consistent and comparable data required for Local Government Reorganisation (LGR), alongside an RFI tracker document to help manage the project management of the data workflow.
The aim of the RFI templates is to help:
- Build a robust, evidence-based baseline to support planning for service transition and, subsequently, service transformation.
- Identify opportunities, risks, and integration challenges early.
- Reduce duplication, improve data quality and ensure data is collected once.
Since the summer of 2025 Surrey District & Borough Councils, with support from Local Partnerships, have completed an extensive data gathering and analysis exercise in support of their LGR process. This work has included, among others, the establishment of a Project Management Organisation to facilitate the data gathering exercise, a standardised process for the collection, review and analysis of data and the development of Requests for Information (RFIs) in support of that process.
Based on this work, in support of the wider sector, the Data & Analytics team of Local Partnerships has developed an initial sub-section of the RFI’s into a set of generic templates, including one on financial information, that councils can use for collecting consistent and comparable data required for Local Government Reorganisation (LGR), alongside an RFI tracker document to help manage the project management of the data workflow.
The aim of the RFI templates is to help:
- Build a robust, evidence-based baseline to support planning for service transition and, subsequently, service transformation.
- Identify opportunities, risks, and integration challenges early.
- Reduce duplication, improve data quality and ensure data is collected once.
Highlighted pages
LGR Toolkit
This toolkit hub brings together resources from across the sector to help those going through local government reorganisation (LGR).
LGR: Checklist
The following checklist outlines a range of key actions that must be undertaken at each stage of the LGR process, along with links to resources that will help councils to deliver those actions.