Got questions about fostering?
Foster Carer or Foster Parent: what’s the difference?
You may have heard both terms used and wondered if they mean the same thing. Technically, foster carer and foster parent describe people who open their homes to children in care. However, the language we choose reflects how we see the role.
The term foster carer is widely used in statutory services and focuses on the caring responsibilities involved – providing safety, stability, and day-to-day support.
At our therapeutic fostering service, we use the term foster parent intentionally. Parenting is more than caring for a child’s practical needs. It is about building secure attachments, offering emotional attunement, nurturing identity, and helping children heal from early trauma. It reflects a deeper, relationship-based commitment grounded in therapeutic principles.
Children who have experienced loss, neglect, or trauma need more than supervision – they need parenting that is patient, informed, and reparative. By using the term foster parent, we recognise the vital, lifelong impact this role can have on a child’s development and wellbeing.
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