Ashton Meadows Nursing Homes in Kingston upon Thames Surrey
At a Glance
The information you need to decide whether this home warrants a closer look.
Staff warmth score
of reviewers answered yes
Good to know
- Registered beds
- SpecialismsThe home provides nursing care for people with dementia, mental health conditions and physical disabilities. They support both younger adults under 65 and older residents.
- Last inspected
- Activities programmeThe home maintains high standards of cleanliness throughout. Bedrooms and shared spaces are well-finished and comfortable. The kitchen team shows real flexibility, happy to adapt meals week by week to match changing preferences.
- Visit Website
The Evidence
What the review data, the inspection reports, and the dementia-care evidence base tell us about this home.
What families say
Families speak about the patience and respect shown during difficult times. Staff have helped residents navigate complex emotional changes, particularly during end-of-life care, maintaining dignity throughout. The team takes time to understand each person's needs and adjusts their approach accordingly.
The eight family priority themes
- Staff warmth82
- Compassion & dignity80
- Cleanliness78
- Activities & engagement52
- Food quality72
- Healthcare62
- Management & leadership78
- Resident happiness68
What inspectors found
Inspected · Report published
Is this home safe?
{"found":"Ashton Meadows holds a CQC rating of Good, which covers the Safe domain alongside others. The published rating indicates that inspectors did not find significant safety concerns at the time of inspection. One family reviewer describes a three-month end-of-life placement during which her father, who could be very challenging, was supported without any account of incidents or safety failures. Beyond this, the available public data does not contain specific detail on night staffing ratios, falls management, infection control practices, or agency staff usage.","quotes":[{"text":"My father could be very challenging at times, but Ashton Meadows understood this and always tried to adjust their care to meet his needs accordingly.","attribution":"Google reviewer"}],"family_meaning":"A Good CQC rating in the Safe domain means inspectors were satisfied that basic safety standards were met at the time of their visit. That is reassuring, but it does not tell you what the staffing picture looks like on a Tuesday night in February. Good Practice research consistently shows that night staffing is where safety most often slips in care homes, and that heavy reliance on agency staff undermines the consistency your parent needs, particularly if they have dementia and benefit from familiar faces. The one substantive family account here suggests staff coped well with a resident who was at times difficult to support, which is a positive signal. However, you should ask directly about night staffing numbers and agency reliance before drawing conclusions.","evidence_base":"The IFF Research and Leeds Beckett University rapid evidence review found that night staffing ratios and agency staff reliance are among the strongest predictors of safety incidents in care homes. A Good CQC rating does not guarantee these are optimal, only that they met the threshold at inspection.","watch_out":"Ask the manager to show you the actual staffing rota for the past two weeks, not a blank template. Count the number of permanent staff versus agency names, and check specifically how many carers and how many senior or nursing staff were on duty each night."}
Is the care effective?
{"found":"Ashton Meadows holds a CQC rating of Good, which includes the Effective domain. One family reviewer describes care being adjusted to meet her father's changing needs over three months, and kitchen staff tailoring food to his weekly preferences. These are markers of effective, individualised care in practice. The home specialises in nursing care for people with dementia, mental health conditions, and physical disabilities, including younger adults under 65. No specific detail is available from the public record on dementia training content, GP access arrangements, or how frequently care plans are reviewed.","quotes":[{"text":"The food is also very tasty and presented beautifully, the kitchen staff always tried to cater to whatever my father wanted that particular week.","attribution":"Google reviewer"}],"family_meaning":"Food quality might seem like a minor detail, but our family review data shows it features in 20.9% of positive reviews and is one of the clearest signs that a home genuinely pays attention to the individual. The description of kitchen staff adapting weekly to a resident's preferences is a specific, observable behaviour that goes beyond compliance. Good Practice evidence from the Leeds Beckett review highlights that care plans should function as living documents, updated regularly with family input, not filed away after admission. You should ask how often your parent's care plan would be reviewed and whether you would be invited to take part.","evidence_base":"The IFF Research rapid evidence review identifies regular, family-inclusive care plan reviews as one of the strongest markers of effective personalised care for people with dementia. Homes that treat care plans as static documents tend to miss changes in a resident's condition or preferences.","watch_out":"Ask how often care plans are formally reviewed at Ashton Meadows and whether families are routinely included. Then ask to see an example of how a care plan has been updated in response to a change in a resident's needs, without any personal details shown."}
Is this home caring?
{"found":"The most detailed family account in the available data describes staff as friendly, professional, patient, and compassionate over a sustained three-month period. The reviewer specifically notes that staff treated her father with dignity and were warm and down to earth. A separate external visitor describes residents and staff as wonderful. The home's CQC rating of Good covers the Caring domain. No inspector observations or formal testimony from the inspection are available in the public record.","quotes":[{"text":"I met most of the staff over the three months my father was there, and I always found them to be friendly, professional, patient, compassionate and most importantly, they treated my father with dignity.","attribution":"Google reviewer"}],"family_meaning":"Staff warmth is the single biggest driver of family satisfaction in our review data, mentioned in 57.3% of positive reviews, and compassion and dignity together account for a further 55.2%. The account from Lucy Chapman is particularly credible because it comes from someone with a care background herself, whose father was at times challenging to support, and who visited regularly over three months. That sustained observation carries more weight than a single-visit impression. Good Practice evidence confirms that for people with dementia, non-verbal communication, being unhurried, making eye contact, and using a person's preferred name, matters as much as what is said. When you visit, watch how staff interact with residents in corridors and communal areas when they think no one is evaluating them.","evidence_base":"The Leeds Beckett University evidence review found that person-led caring requires knowing the individual, including their history, preferences, and communication style, not just their clinical needs. Homes where staff demonstrate this knowledge consistently produce better wellbeing outcomes for people with dementia.","watch_out":"When you visit, spend time in a communal area and watch how staff greet residents passing by. Do they use the resident's name? Do they crouch down or make eye contact? Do they move at the resident's pace? These unscripted moments tell you more than any formal presentation."}
Is the home responsive?
{"found":"The home's CQC rating of Good covers the Responsive domain. The available review data contains no specific detail about the activities programme, one-to-one engagement, or how the home supports residents who cannot participate in group activities. One reviewer notes that care was adjusted to meet an individual's changing needs, which suggests some degree of responsiveness to the person. The home supports a mixed population including younger adults under 65, people with dementia, mental health conditions, and physical disabilities, which requires genuinely varied and individually tailored approaches.","quotes":[],"family_meaning":"Activities and engagement feature in 21.4% of positive family reviews in our data, but the absence of any mention in the available reviews here means you are working without evidence in this area. This matters particularly if your parent has dementia. Good Practice research is clear that group activities alone are not enough: people with more advanced dementia need regular one-to-one engagement, and approaches that incorporate everyday household tasks or familiar routines tend to produce better wellbeing outcomes than organised group sessions. A Good CQC rating suggests the inspection found adequate responsiveness, but adequate and genuinely enriching are not the same thing.","evidence_base":"The IFF Research rapid evidence review found that Montessori-based and activity-based approaches tailored to the individual, including involvement in everyday tasks like folding, gardening, or simple cooking, significantly reduce distress and improve wellbeing for people with dementia, compared with passive group entertainment.","watch_out":"Ask to see the actual activities schedule for the past two weeks, including weekends, and ask what provision exists for a resident who cannot join a group. Specifically ask: if my parent is having a difficult day and cannot come to the lounge, who would sit with them one to one, and for how long?"}
Is the home well-led?
{"found":"The home holds a CQC rating of Good, which includes the Well-led domain. One family reviewer describes managers as always professional, clearly very knowledgeable in all aspects of care, whilst still being very warm, down to earth and approachable. She also notes that she could speak with managers directly on her first visit, and that nothing was too much for them. An external health collaborator describes enjoying his visits and finding the home a great place. No specific detail is available on manager tenure, staff turnover, governance systems, or how the home responds to complaints.","quotes":[{"text":"They are always professional, clearly very knowledgeable in all aspects of care, whilst still being very warm, down to earth and approachable.","attribution":"Google reviewer"},{"text":"At Ashton Meadows, they want to get it just right, and if it's within their power to do so they will, nothing is too much for them.","attribution":"Google reviewer"}],"family_meaning":"Management stability is one of the strongest predictors of care quality over time. Our review data shows management and leadership feature in 23.4% of positive family reviews, and Good Practice research confirms that leadership continuity, combined with a culture where staff feel able to speak up, determines how a home performs between inspections, not just during them. The account here is positive and specific: a reviewer from a care background herself found the managers knowledgeable and genuinely responsive. However, a Good CQC rating is a point-in-time judgement. You should ask directly how long the current manager has been in post and whether there have been significant staffing changes in the past year.","evidence_base":"The Leeds Beckett University evidence review identifies leadership stability as a key predictor of quality trajectory in care homes. Homes with high management turnover tend to show deterioration in staff culture and care consistency, even when CQC ratings remain positive in the short term.","watch_out":"Ask the manager directly how long they have been in post at Ashton Meadows, and how many senior care staff have left in the past 12 months. Also ask how staff can raise concerns about care quality, and what the most recent example is of a change that was made as a result of staff or family feedback."}
Source: CQC inspection report →
What the evidence base says
Against the DCC Good Practice in Dementia Care standards, this home’s evidence aligns most strongly on The home provides nursing care for people with dementia, mental health conditions and physical disabilities. They support both younger adults under 65 and older residents.. Gaps or open questions remain on Staff show particular skill in supporting residents with dementia through emotional and behavioural changes. The team adapts their care approach to meet each person's changing needs with understanding and respect. — 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
These scores are based on a CQC rating of Good, a Google review average of 4.9 from 47 reviews, and the content of those reviews rather than a full inspection report. Several reviews are from external visitors or staff rather than family members of residents, and an earlier cluster of reviews appears to predate the home opening. The most substantive family account (Lucy Chapman) provides specific detail on staff warmth, compassion, cleanliness, food, and communication, which anchors the higher scores in those themes. Activities, healthcare, and resident happiness are scored conservatively at 52 to 68 because the review data contains no specific detail on these areas. Treat all scores as indicative rather than verified.
Homes in typically score 68–82.The three-lens summary
What families tell us
Families speak about the patience and respect shown during difficult times. Staff have helped residents navigate complex emotional changes, particularly during end-of-life care, maintaining dignity throughout. The team takes time to understand each person's needs and adjusts their approach accordingly.
What inspectors have recorded
Communication stands out as a real strength here. Families living far away receive regular updates about both clinical matters and daily life. Staff respond quickly to questions and take time to explain care decisions clearly. The team brings professional knowledge alongside genuine warmth in their interactions.
How it sits against good practice
Getting a true sense of any care home takes time — visiting and talking with current families will help you decide if this feels right for your loved one.
Worth a visit
Ashton Meadows Nursing Home holds a CQC rating of Good and scores 4.9 out of 5 across 47 Google reviews. This Family View is based on limited public data, specifically those reviews and the CQC rating, rather than a full published inspection report. The most detailed account comes from a family member whose father received end-of-life care at the home over three months. She describes staff as friendly, patient, and compassionate, premises as consistently spotless, food as tasty and individually tailored, and communication as excellent even across a 200-mile distance. These are exactly the markers that matter most in our family review data, where staff warmth and compassion together account for over half of what drives positive family satisfaction. The picture that emerges is a promising one, but there are important gaps. No review data covers activities, night staffing, agency use, dementia-specific training, or what daily life looks like for a resident who cannot join group activities. It is also worth noting that a number of the home's Google reviews appear to predate its opening or come from external visitors rather than families of residents. Before making a decision, visit in person on an unannounced or late-notice basis, ask to see last week's actual staffing rota, and request a walk-through of the dementia unit at a time when normal daily routines are running. The questions in the checklist above will help you fill in what the public record cannot yet tell you.
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In Their Own Words
How Ashton Meadows Nursing Homes in Kingston upon Thames Surrey describes itself — collected from its own website. DCC has not edited or independently verified the content in this tab.
Supporting families through life's most difficult transitions with genuine compassion
Nursing home in Kingston Upon Thames: True Peace of Mind
When someone you love needs specialist nursing care, finding the right place feels overwhelming. Ashton Meadows Nursing Home in Kingston Upon Thames offers nursing support for people with dementia, mental health conditions and physical disabilities. The home welcomes both younger adults and those over 65.
Who they care for
The home provides nursing care for people with dementia, mental health conditions and physical disabilities. They support both younger adults under 65 and older residents.
Staff show particular skill in supporting residents with dementia through emotional and behavioural changes. The team adapts their care approach to meet each person's changing needs with understanding and respect.
Management & ethos
Communication stands out as a real strength here. Families living far away receive regular updates about both clinical matters and daily life. Staff respond quickly to questions and take time to explain care decisions clearly. The team brings professional knowledge alongside genuine warmth in their interactions.
The home & environment
The home maintains high standards of cleanliness throughout. Bedrooms and shared spaces are well-finished and comfortable. The kitchen team shows real flexibility, happy to adapt meals week by week to match changing preferences.
“Getting a true sense of any care home takes time — visiting and talking with current families will help you decide if this feels right for your loved one.”
DCC does not edit or curate content in this tab. For independently curated information, see The Evidence and DCC Verdict.













