Clarendon Nursing Home
At a Glance
The information you need to decide whether this home warrants a closer look.
Nursing homes
Staff warmth score
of reviewers answered yes
Good to know
- Registered beds54
- SpecialismsCaring for adults over 65 yrs, Dementia, Learning disabilities
- Last inspected2023-05-13
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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
Families talk about the way staff here really tune into what each resident needs. There's a sense that the team takes time to understand the person behind the diagnosis, maintaining that consistent, thoughtful approach even as needs change over the years.
The eight family priority themes
- Staff warmth72
- Compassion & dignity73
- Cleanliness72
- Activities & engagement65
- Food quality60
- Healthcare70
- Management & leadership75
- Resident happiness70
What inspectors found
Inspected 2023-05-13
Is this home safe?
Is the care effective?
The effective domain was rated Good. This covers how well the home understands and meets each person's individual needs, including care planning, dementia-specific training, GP access, nutrition, and hydration. The home specialises in dementia care, so inspectors will have considered whether staff have appropriate knowledge and whether care plans reflect the individual. No specific detail about training content, care plan quality, or mealtime practice is included in the published summary.Is this home caring?
The caring domain was rated Good. This covers how staff interact with the people they care for, including warmth, dignity, respect, and support for independence. A Good rating here means inspectors were satisfied with the quality of staff interactions when they visited. The published summary does not include specific observations such as whether staff knocked before entering rooms, used preferred names, or moved without rushing residents.Is the home responsive?
The responsive domain was rated Good. This covers whether the home meets individual needs, offers meaningful activities, and has a process for responding to complaints and changing care needs. Responsiveness for a dementia-specialist home should include tailored individual engagement, not only group activities. The published summary does not describe what activities are on offer, whether one-to-one engagement is available, or how the home adapts when a resident's condition changes.Is the home well-led?
The well-led domain was rated Good, up from Requires Improvement at the previous inspection. The home has a named registered manager, Mrs Geraldine Viray Reyes, and a nominated individual, Mr Alan Goldstein, both identified in the published report. The improvement across all five domains between inspections is the clearest available evidence that leadership is functioning. No detail about staff culture, governance meetings, or how the home handles complaints is included in the published summary.
Source: CQC inspection report →
What the evidence base says
The home specialises in dementia care and supporting people with learning disabilities, alongside general nursing care for over-65s. For those living with dementia, the team focuses on maintaining familiar routines and adapting their approach as the condition progresses. They work to keep each person connected to what matters to them. 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
Clarendon Nursing Home scores 74 out of 100, reflecting a home that has genuinely improved from Requires Improvement to Good across all five inspection domains. The score is held back by limited specific detail in the published report on food, activities, and night staffing.
Homes in London typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
Families talk about the way staff here really tune into what each resident needs. There's a sense that the team takes time to understand the person behind the diagnosis, maintaining that consistent, thoughtful approach even as needs change over the years.
What inspectors have recorded
The care team seems to deliver more than families initially expect when they first walk through the door. That said, there have been some concerns about how staff interact with visitors — something worth asking about when you visit.
How it sits against good practice
Sometimes the right place reveals itself in the details — how staff respond to questions, the feeling you get walking the corridors.
Worth a visit
Clarendon Nursing Home, at 7A Zion Place in Thornton Heath, was rated Good across all five inspection domains at its January 2023 inspection, with the report published in May 2023. This is a meaningful improvement from its previous Requires Improvement rating, which tells you the leadership team identified what was wrong and fixed it. The home is registered to care for 54 people, including older adults, people with dementia, and people with learning disabilities, and is operated by Bondcare (London) Limited with a named registered manager in post. The honest limitation of this report is that the published summary is brief and does not include specific observations, quotes, or detail on staffing ratios, food quality, activities, or how staff interact with residents day to day. A Good rating is a real and positive signal, but it does not tell you what the home feels like at 7pm on a Tuesday or how many permanent staff work the night shift. When you visit, ask to see last week's actual staffing rota, ask what a typical day looks like for someone with dementia who cannot join group activities, and spend time watching how staff speak to and move around the people who live there.
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In Their Own Words
How Clarendon Nursing Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Where thoughtful care meets families' hopes in Thornton Heath
Compassionate Care in Thornton Heath at Clarendon Nursing Home
Some decisions feel impossibly heavy, but finding the right support shouldn't have to. Clarendon Nursing Home in Thornton Heath brings years of experience to caring for people with dementia and learning disabilities. This established home focuses on getting to know each person as an individual, working with families to create the kind of care that makes a genuine difference.
Who they care for
The home specialises in dementia care and supporting people with learning disabilities, alongside general nursing care for over-65s.
For those living with dementia, the team focuses on maintaining familiar routines and adapting their approach as the condition progresses. They work to keep each person connected to what matters to them.
“Sometimes the right place reveals itself in the details — how staff respond to questions, the feeling you get walking the corridors.”
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
Clarendon Nursing Home scores 74 out of 100, reflecting a home that has genuinely improved from Requires Improvement to Good across all five inspection domains. The score is held back by limited specific detail in the published report on food, activities, and night staffing.
Homes in London typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
Families talk about the way staff here really tune into what each resident needs. There's a sense that the team takes time to understand the person behind the diagnosis, maintaining that consistent, thoughtful approach even as needs change over the years.
What inspectors have recorded
The care team seems to deliver more than families initially expect when they first walk through the door. That said, there have been some concerns about how staff interact with visitors — something worth asking about when you visit.
How it sits against good practice
Sometimes the right place reveals itself in the details — how staff respond to questions, the feeling you get walking the corridors.
Worth a visit
Clarendon Nursing Home, at 7A Zion Place in Thornton Heath, was rated Good across all five inspection domains at its January 2023 inspection, with the report published in May 2023. This is a meaningful improvement from its previous Requires Improvement rating, which tells you the leadership team identified what was wrong and fixed it. The home is registered to care for 54 people, including older adults, people with dementia, and people with learning disabilities, and is operated by Bondcare (London) Limited with a named registered manager in post. The honest limitation of this report is that the published summary is brief and does not include specific observations, quotes, or detail on staffing ratios, food quality, activities, or how staff interact with residents day to day. A Good rating is a real and positive signal, but it does not tell you what the home feels like at 7pm on a Tuesday or how many permanent staff work the night shift. When you visit, ask to see last week's actual staffing rota, ask what a typical day looks like for someone with dementia who cannot join group activities, and spend time watching how staff speak to and move around the people who live there.
The three questions to ask when you visitSave this home. Compare it against your shortlist.
Let our analysis show you how Clarendon Nursing Home measures up against the other homes you’re considering. Free account.
In Their Own Words
How Clarendon Nursing Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Where thoughtful care meets families' hopes in Thornton Heath
Compassionate Care in Thornton Heath at Clarendon Nursing Home
Some decisions feel impossibly heavy, but finding the right support shouldn't have to. Clarendon Nursing Home in Thornton Heath brings years of experience to caring for people with dementia and learning disabilities. This established home focuses on getting to know each person as an individual, working with families to create the kind of care that makes a genuine difference.
Who they care for
The home specialises in dementia care and supporting people with learning disabilities, alongside general nursing care for over-65s.
For those living with dementia, the team focuses on maintaining familiar routines and adapting their approach as the condition progresses. They work to keep each person connected to what matters to them.
Management & ethos
The care team seems to deliver more than families initially expect when they first walk through the door. That said, there have been some concerns about how staff interact with visitors — something worth asking about when you visit.
“Sometimes the right place reveals itself in the details — how staff respond to questions, the feeling you get walking the corridors.”
DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.























