The Orchards 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 beds48
- SpecialismsCaring for adults over 65 yrs, Caring for adults under 65 yrs, Dementia, Mental health conditions
- Last inspected2022-04-26
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STAGE 4 — RESEARCHING CARE HOMES
Visit homes. Compare them side by side. Choose with confidence.
Most of us will view care homes the way we view houses, impression, atmosphere, the feeling in the corridor. We go home, try to remember what we saw, and make a permanent decision from a blurred memory.

The DCC shortlist gives every home you visit a structured record: the same twelve questions, answered the same way, every time. When you’re ready to choose, pull any two homes side by side and compare them directly. Same criteria, same evidence, your notes and your scores.
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 families is how friendly the staff are right from the start. People have noticed their relatives settling in quickly, with one family member remarking how happy their loved one seemed within just a few days of moving in.
The eight family priority themes
- Staff warmth72
- Compassion & dignity72
- Cleanliness65
- Activities & engagement60
- Food quality60
- Healthcare65
- Management & leadership45
- Resident happiness65
What inspectors found
Inspected 2022-04-26
Is this home safe?
Is the care effective?
Effective was rated Good at the November 2025 inspection. This domain covers care planning, staff training, healthcare access, nutritional support, and how well the home works with external professionals such as GPs and community nurses. A Good rating here suggests these areas met the standard inspectors were looking for. However, the available published text does not include specific examples, observations, or quotes that would allow a more detailed account of what inspectors actually found.Is this home caring?
Caring was rated Good at the November 2025 inspection. This domain covers staff warmth, dignity, respect, and whether residents are treated as individuals. A Good rating here is one of the most directly meaningful signals for families, because it reflects what inspectors observed when watching staff interact with the people who live at the home. The available published text does not reproduce specific inspector observations or resident and family quotes, which limits how precisely this report can describe what was found.Is the home responsive?
Responsive was rated Good at the November 2025 inspection. This domain covers whether the home tailors care and activities to individuals, responds to changing needs promptly, supports people's independence, and has appropriate processes for handling complaints and end-of-life care. A Good rating here suggests inspectors were satisfied with how the home responds to residents as individuals. No specific examples, activity programme details, or case illustrations are available in the published text.Is the home well-led?
Well-led was rated Requires Improvement at the November 2025 inspection. This domain covers the quality of leadership, governance systems, whether staff feel supported to raise concerns, and how the home monitors and improves its own performance. A Requires Improvement here means inspectors found the leadership and oversight arrangements were not yet meeting the expected standard. Combined with a Requires Improvement in Safe, this is the area of greatest concern in this inspection. The published text does not specify what the exact governance or leadership concerns were.
Source: CQC inspection report →
What the evidence base says
The home provides specialist support for people living with dementia and mental health conditions. They welcome both younger adults under 65 and older residents who need residential care. As a home that specialises in dementia care, The Orchards supports residents at different stages of their dementia journey. The team works with both younger and older adults living with the condition. 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
The Orchards scores in the mid-range, reflecting a home that has improved from Requires Improvement to a mixed picture: Good in Effective, Caring, and Responsive, but Requires Improvement in Safe and Well-led. There is positive direction here, but meaningful gaps remain in the two areas families most need to feel confident about.
Homes in South West typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
What strikes families is how friendly the staff are right from the start. People have noticed their relatives settling in quickly, with one family member remarking how happy their loved one seemed within just a few days of moving in.
What inspectors have recorded
The management team comes across as approachable and responsive when families need to get in touch. They seem to understand that good communication helps everyone feel more confident about the care being provided.
How it sits against good practice
Getting a feel for The Orchards might help you decide if it's the right place for your family.
Worth a visit
The Orchards Residential Home in Swindon was assessed in November 2025 with the report published in January 2026. The home is rated Good overall, an improvement on its previous rating of Requires Improvement, and inspectors found it Good in Effective, Caring, and Responsive. This upward trend is meaningful: it suggests the home has addressed at least some of the concerns identified at its earlier inspection. The home is run by Buckland Care Limited and lists dementia, mental health conditions, and care for adults of all ages as specialisms across its 48 beds. Two domains remain at Requires Improvement: Safe and Well-led. These are the two areas that Good Practice research consistently links to longer-term quality outcomes, because leadership stability drives everything else and safety failures tend to affect the most vulnerable residents first. The published report text available to us does not provide the specific detail needed to explain exactly what inspectors found in those two domains, so the gaps in this report are real and significant. Before visiting, prepare specific questions: ask the manager to describe the actions taken since the November 2025 inspection, show you the current staffing rota including night shifts, and explain what prompted the Requires Improvement judgement in Safe. These answers will tell you more than any checklist.
The three questions to ask when you visitSave this home. Compare it against your shortlist.
Let our analysis show you how The Orchards Residential Home measures up against the other homes you’re considering. Free account.
In Their Own Words
How The Orchards Residential Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Welcoming staff put families at ease in Swindon
The Orchards Residential Home – Expert Care in Swindon
When you're looking for the right care home, those first impressions really matter. The Orchards Residential Home in Swindon specialises in supporting people with dementia and mental health conditions, for both younger and older adults. Families visiting here have found the staff genuinely welcoming, which can make such a difference during what's often an emotional time.
Who they care for
The home provides specialist support for people living with dementia and mental health conditions. They welcome both younger adults under 65 and older residents who need residential care.
As a home that specialises in dementia care, The Orchards supports residents at different stages of their dementia journey. The team works with both younger and older adults living with the condition.
“Getting a feel for The Orchards might help you decide if it's the right place for your family.”
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
The Orchards scores in the mid-range, reflecting a home that has improved from Requires Improvement to a mixed picture: Good in Effective, Caring, and Responsive, but Requires Improvement in Safe and Well-led. There is positive direction here, but meaningful gaps remain in the two areas families most need to feel confident about.
Homes in South West typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
What strikes families is how friendly the staff are right from the start. People have noticed their relatives settling in quickly, with one family member remarking how happy their loved one seemed within just a few days of moving in.
What inspectors have recorded
The management team comes across as approachable and responsive when families need to get in touch. They seem to understand that good communication helps everyone feel more confident about the care being provided.
How it sits against good practice
Getting a feel for The Orchards might help you decide if it's the right place for your family.
Worth a visit
The Orchards Residential Home in Swindon was assessed in November 2025 with the report published in January 2026. The home is rated Good overall, an improvement on its previous rating of Requires Improvement, and inspectors found it Good in Effective, Caring, and Responsive. This upward trend is meaningful: it suggests the home has addressed at least some of the concerns identified at its earlier inspection. The home is run by Buckland Care Limited and lists dementia, mental health conditions, and care for adults of all ages as specialisms across its 48 beds. Two domains remain at Requires Improvement: Safe and Well-led. These are the two areas that Good Practice research consistently links to longer-term quality outcomes, because leadership stability drives everything else and safety failures tend to affect the most vulnerable residents first. The published report text available to us does not provide the specific detail needed to explain exactly what inspectors found in those two domains, so the gaps in this report are real and significant. Before visiting, prepare specific questions: ask the manager to describe the actions taken since the November 2025 inspection, show you the current staffing rota including night shifts, and explain what prompted the Requires Improvement judgement in Safe. These answers will tell you more than any checklist.
The three questions to ask when you visitSave this home. Compare it against your shortlist.
Let our analysis show you how The Orchards Residential Home measures up against the other homes you’re considering. Free account.
In Their Own Words
How The Orchards Residential Home describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Welcoming staff put families at ease in Swindon
The Orchards Residential Home – Expert Care in Swindon
When you're looking for the right care home, those first impressions really matter. The Orchards Residential Home in Swindon specialises in supporting people with dementia and mental health conditions, for both younger and older adults. Families visiting here have found the staff genuinely welcoming, which can make such a difference during what's often an emotional time.
Who they care for
The home provides specialist support for people living with dementia and mental health conditions. They welcome both younger adults under 65 and older residents who need residential care.
As a home that specialises in dementia care, The Orchards supports residents at different stages of their dementia journey. The team works with both younger and older adults living with the condition.
Management & ethos
The management team comes across as approachable and responsive when families need to get in touch. They seem to understand that good communication helps everyone feel more confident about the care being provided.
“Getting a feel for The Orchards might help you decide if it's the right place for your family.”
DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.























