Priestnall Court Residential Home
At a Glance
The information you need to decide whether this home warrants a closer look.
Residential homes
Staff warmth score
of reviewers answered yes
Good to know
- Registered beds24
- SpecialismsCaring for adults over 65 yrs, Dementia, Physical disabilities
- Last inspected2018-01-05
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The Evidence
What the review data, the inspection reports, and the dementia-care evidence base tell us about this home.
What families say
What strikes visitors is how approachable the care team feels. There's a warmth that comes through in everyday interactions, whether it's a quick chat in the corridor or a longer conversation about a resident's needs.
The eight family priority themes
- Staff warmth55
- Compassion & dignity55
- Cleanliness55
- Activities & engagement52
- Food quality50
- Healthcare55
- Management & leadership35
- Resident happiness52
What inspectors found
Inspected 2018-01-05
Is this home safe?
Is the care effective?
Effective was rated Good, indicating that care planning, staff training, healthcare access, and nutrition met inspection standards at the time of the November 2017 visit. The home is registered as a dementia specialist, so dementia-specific training and person-centred care planning would have been assessed as part of this domain. No specific detail about training content, GP visit frequency, or care plan review processes appears in the published summary. Food quality, which falls within Effective, is also unspecified. The seven-year gap since inspection means current practices around care planning and training should be confirmed directly with the home.Is this home caring?
Caring was rated Good, suggesting that inspectors observed broadly respectful, dignified, and compassionate interactions between staff and residents. This domain typically involves direct observation of staff behaviour, resident interviews, and privacy checks. No specific quotes, named observations, or examples of staff interaction are available from the published inspection summary. The home supports people living with dementia, for whom the manner of care — tone of voice, patience, use of preferred names — is as clinically important as any medical intervention. Given the age of the inspection, the warmth and consistency of current staff should be assessed on a personal visit.Is the home responsive?
Responsive was rated Good, indicating that at the time of inspection, the home was meeting residents' individual needs, providing activity provision, and handling complaints appropriately. The home's registration as a dementia and physical disability specialist means responsiveness to changing needs and tailored activities would have been part of the assessment. No specific description of the activities programme, individual engagement approaches, or complaint outcomes is available from the published summary. For people with dementia who may not be able to join group activities, one-to-one engagement is a critical quality indicator that cannot be assessed from this report alone.Is the home well-led?
Well-Led was rated Requires Improvement — the only domain not to achieve a Good rating, and the one area that prevented a fully Good overall rating. This means inspectors identified specific concerns about governance, management oversight, or accountability at the time of the November 2017 inspection. The home is run by Halliwell Homes M/C Limited, with a registered manager and a nominated individual named in the registration. A monitoring review in July 2023 found no evidence requiring a reassessment, but this used data rather than an on-site visit. The specific nature of the Well-Led concerns is not described in the available published summary.
Source: CQC inspection report →
What the evidence base says
Priestnall Court specialises in dementia care alongside support for physical disabilities, welcoming residents over 65. The home's approach to dementia care focuses on maintaining dignity at every stage. Families describe seeing this commitment in action, particularly in how the team manages personal care needs with genuine respect. All areas worth probing directly during a visit.
The DCC Verdict
Our editorial view, built from the three lenses: what families tell us, what inspectors record, and how the home sits against good dementia-care practice.
DCC Family Score
Priestnall Court scores in the moderate range, reflecting a home that improved from Requires Improvement to Good across most areas but leaves significant gaps in detail — and a Well-Led rating that remains at Requires Improvement raises questions about leadership stability and accountability that families should probe directly.
Homes in North West typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
What strikes visitors is how approachable the care team feels. There's a warmth that comes through in everyday interactions, whether it's a quick chat in the corridor or a longer conversation about a resident's needs.
What inspectors have recorded
The team shows particular skill in caring for residents with advanced dementia. One family shared how their 98-year-old relative received attentive, dignified care right through their final months — the kind of sustained compassion that makes such a difference.
How it sits against good practice
Sometimes the smallest gestures reveal the most about a place's character.
Worth a visit
Priestnall Court, a 24-bed residential home on Priestnall Road in Stockport, was inspected in November 2017 and rated Good overall — an improvement on a previous Requires Improvement rating. Four of the five inspection domains — Safe, Effective, Caring, and Responsive — all achieved Good ratings, suggesting the home addressed earlier concerns and was providing broadly acceptable care at the time of assessment. However, two important caveats apply. First, Well-Led was rated Requires Improvement, meaning inspectors had specific concerns about leadership, governance, or accountability that were not fully resolved. Second, this inspection is now more than seven years old. A monitoring review in July 2023 found no reason to change the rating, but that review used data rather than a physical visit. You should treat the information in this report as a starting point, not a guarantee of current standards. When you visit, ask specifically: how long has the current registered manager been in post, what changed to address the Well-Led concerns, and how is the home managed day-to-day now?
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In Their Own Words
How Priestnall Court Residential Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Where dignity guides every moment of dementia care
Dedicated residential home Support in Stockport
When someone you love needs dementia care, you want to know they'll be treated with genuine respect. Priestnall Court in Stockport understands this deeply. Families here talk about the sustained attention their loved ones receive, especially during those most vulnerable times.
Who they care for
Priestnall Court specialises in dementia care alongside support for physical disabilities, welcoming residents over 65.
The home's approach to dementia care focuses on maintaining dignity at every stage. Families describe seeing this commitment in action, particularly in how the team manages personal care needs with genuine respect.
“Sometimes the smallest gestures reveal the most about a place's character.”
DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.
The DCC Verdict
Our editorial view, built from the three lenses: what families tell us, what inspectors record, and how the home sits against good dementia-care practice.
DCC Family Score
Priestnall Court scores in the moderate range, reflecting a home that improved from Requires Improvement to Good across most areas but leaves significant gaps in detail — and a Well-Led rating that remains at Requires Improvement raises questions about leadership stability and accountability that families should probe directly.
Homes in North West typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
What strikes visitors is how approachable the care team feels. There's a warmth that comes through in everyday interactions, whether it's a quick chat in the corridor or a longer conversation about a resident's needs.
What inspectors have recorded
The team shows particular skill in caring for residents with advanced dementia. One family shared how their 98-year-old relative received attentive, dignified care right through their final months — the kind of sustained compassion that makes such a difference.
How it sits against good practice
Sometimes the smallest gestures reveal the most about a place's character.
Worth a visit
Priestnall Court, a 24-bed residential home on Priestnall Road in Stockport, was inspected in November 2017 and rated Good overall — an improvement on a previous Requires Improvement rating. Four of the five inspection domains — Safe, Effective, Caring, and Responsive — all achieved Good ratings, suggesting the home addressed earlier concerns and was providing broadly acceptable care at the time of assessment. However, two important caveats apply. First, Well-Led was rated Requires Improvement, meaning inspectors had specific concerns about leadership, governance, or accountability that were not fully resolved. Second, this inspection is now more than seven years old. A monitoring review in July 2023 found no reason to change the rating, but that review used data rather than a physical visit. You should treat the information in this report as a starting point, not a guarantee of current standards. When you visit, ask specifically: how long has the current registered manager been in post, what changed to address the Well-Led concerns, and how is the home managed day-to-day now?
The three questions to ask when you visitSave this home. Compare it against your shortlist.
Let our analysis show you how Priestnall Court Residential Home measures up against the other homes you’re considering. Free account.
In Their Own Words
How Priestnall Court Residential Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Where dignity guides every moment of dementia care
Dedicated residential home Support in Stockport
When someone you love needs dementia care, you want to know they'll be treated with genuine respect. Priestnall Court in Stockport understands this deeply. Families here talk about the sustained attention their loved ones receive, especially during those most vulnerable times.
Who they care for
Priestnall Court specialises in dementia care alongside support for physical disabilities, welcoming residents over 65.
The home's approach to dementia care focuses on maintaining dignity at every stage. Families describe seeing this commitment in action, particularly in how the team manages personal care needs with genuine respect.
Management & ethos
The team shows particular skill in caring for residents with advanced dementia. One family shared how their 98-year-old relative received attentive, dignified care right through their final months — the kind of sustained compassion that makes such a difference.
The home & environment
The home maintains consistently clean spaces throughout, something families notice both inside and in the outdoor areas. It's the kind of attention to environment that helps everyone feel more settled.
“Sometimes the smallest gestures reveal the most about a place's character.”
DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.























