English Heritage reports a big rise in income and membership

The conservation charity has a record 1.18 million people signed up, but its chair warns of ‘challenges’ ahead.

image: for illustration

… combination of the two presents English Heritage with a financial challenge in the coming years…

Third Sector writes:

English Heritage has benefited from people’s post-pandemic desire to get out and about, recording a 16 per cent rise in income in the past year.

Membership of the conservation charity reached almost 1.2 million, including 422,000 new sign-ups, according to its annual report and accounts for 2021/22.

Some of its 400-plus sites posted record visitor numbers, which is thought to be partly down to the surge in staycations in summer 2020.

English Heritage’s income was £116m – up from £99.8m in 2020/21. Membership income rose from £37.4m to £42.4m, while overall expenditure was up from £96.2m to £125.7m.

English Heritage was launched as a charity on 1 April 2015 to conserve England’s national heritage collection of sites, monuments and artefacts.

At its founding, the charity received an £80m grant from Historic England. It has been used over eight years to address urgent conservation defects, invest in new visitor facilities and exhibitions, and update the presentation and interpretation of smaller sites.

The grant has almost been spent, while a lifeline series of Covid-19 recovery grants has ended. The combination of the two presents English Heritage with a financial challenge in the coming years….

In 2021/22, English Heritage spent more than in any other year on conservation and maintenance, including £14.4m on core building and landscape and £12.2m on major conservation projects.

Staff numbers dropped from 2,245 to 2,117, while the charity’s gender pay gap narrowed from 10.3 per cent to 7.8 per cent.

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See the Annual Report

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