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Non-metropolitan county
  • Also known as:
  • Shire county
Non-metropolitan counties
CategoryCounties
LocationEngland
Found inRegions
Combined authority areas
Created byLocal Government Act 1972
Created
  • 1 April 1974
Number78 (as of 1 April 2023)
Possible types
  •   Two-tier (21)
  •   Single-tier unitary authority (56)[a]
  •   Royal county of 6 single-tier unitary authorities (1)
Possible status
Populations300,000–1.4 million
Subdivisions

A non-metropolitan county, or colloquially, shire county, is a subdivision of England used for local government.[1]

The non-metropolitan counties were originally created in 1974 as part of a reform of local government in England and Wales, and were the top tier of a two-tier system of counties and districts. 21 non-metropolitan counties still use a two-tier system; 56 are unitary authorities, in which the functions of a county and district council have been combined in a single body. Berkshire has a unique structure.

Non-metropolitan counties cover the majority of England with the exception of Greater London, the Isles of Scilly, and the six metropolitan counties: Greater Manchester, Merseyside, South Yorkshire, Tyne and Wear, West Midlands and West Yorkshire.

The non-metropolitan counties are all part of ceremonial counties. Some ceremonial counties, such as Norfolk, contain a single non-metropolitan county, but many contain more than one and it is also common for ceremonial counties and non-metropolitan counties to share a name. Lancashire, for example, contains the non-metropolitan counties of Lancashire, Blackpool, and Blackburn with Darwen.

Origins

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Prior to 1974 local government had been divided between single-tier county boroughs (the largest towns and cities) and two-tier administrative counties which were subdivided into municipal boroughs and urban and rural districts. The Local Government Act 1972, which came into effect on 1 April 1974, divided England outside Greater London and the six largest conurbations into thirty-nine non-metropolitan counties. Each county was divided into anywhere between two and fourteen non-metropolitan districts. There was a uniform two-tier system of local government with county councils dealing with "wide-area" services such as education, fire services and the police, and district councils exercising more local powers over areas such as planning, housing and refuse collection.

Service Non-metropolitan county Non-metropolitan district Unitary authority
Education  Yes  No  Yes
Transport  Yes  No  Yes
Housing  No  Yes  Yes
Planning  Yes  No  Yes
Planning applications  No  Yes  Yes
Fire and public safety  Yes  No  Yes
Social care  Yes  No  Yes
Libraries  Yes  No  Yes
Waste management  Yes  No  Yes
Rubbish collection  No  Yes  Yes
Recycling  No  Yes  Yes
Trading standards  Yes  No  Yes
Council Tax collections  No  Yes  Yes

As originally constituted, the non-metropolitan counties were largely based on existing counties, although they did include a number of innovations. Some counties were based on areas surrounding large county boroughs or were formed by the mergers of smaller counties. Examples of the first category are Avon (based on Bath and Bristol) and Cleveland (based on Teesside). An example of the second category is Cumbria, formed by the merger between Cumberland and Westmorland. The counties were adopted for all statutory purposes: a lord-lieutenant and high sheriff was appointed to each county, and they were also used for judicial administration, and definition of police force areas. The Royal Mail adopted the counties for postal purposes in most areas.

Changes

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1995–1998

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A Local Government Commission was appointed in 1992 to review the administrative structure of the non-metropolitan counties. It was anticipated that a system of unitary authorities would entirely replace the two-tier system. The Commission faced competing claims from former county boroughs wishing to regain unitary status and advocates for the restoration of such small counties as Herefordshire and Rutland.[2] The review led to the introduction of unitary local government in some areas but not in others. In the majority of unitary authorities an existing district council took over powers from the county council. The 1972 Act required that all areas outside Greater London form part of a non-metropolitan county, and that all such counties should contain at least one district.[3] Accordingly, the statutory instruments that effected the reorganisation separated the unitary districts from the county in which they were situated and constituted them as counties. The orders also provided that the provisions of the 1972 Act that every county should have a county council should not apply in the new counties, with the district council exercising the powers of the county council.

An exception was made in the case of Berkshire, which was retained with its existing boundaries in spite of the abolition of its county council and the creation of six unitary authorities. This was done in order to preserve its status as a royal county.[4]

With the creation of numerous new non-metropolitan counties, the areas used for lieutenancy and shrievalty began to diverge from local government areas. This led to the development of ceremonial counties for these purposes, a fact recognised by the Lieutenancies Act 1997.

2009

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A further wave of unitary authorities were created in 2009 under the terms of the Local Government and Public Involvement in Health Act 2007. While a number of new counties were created, several of the new authorities (such as Cornwall or Northumberland) continued to have the boundaries set in 1974.

2019–2023

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The 2019–2023 structural changes to local government in England have involved changes to the non-metropolitan county of Dorset (2019), and the abolition of the non-metropolitan counties Northamptonshire (2021) and Cumbria (2023). In addition, the non-metropolitan counties of Buckinghamshire (2020), North Yorkshire (2023), and Somerset (2023) are unchanged, but their councils became unitary authorities as the existing non-metropolitan districts in these areas were consolidated and the district councils abolished.

List of non-metropolitan counties

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The following list shows the original thirty-nine counties formed in 1974, subsequent changes in the 1990s, and further changes since then.

  Current
  Planned abolition
  Abolished non-metropolitan county
  Abolished non-metropolitan county and associated ceremonial county
Non-metropolitan county 1974[5] Changes 1995–1998 Changes 2009 Changes 2019 and 2020s
Avon (6 districts)[b] 1996: North West Somerset[7] (unitary)
2005: Renamed North Somerset[c]
None None
1996: Bath and North East Somerset[7] (unitary) None None
1996: South Gloucestershire[7] (unitary) None None
1996: City of Bristol[7] (unitary) None None
Bedfordshire (4 districts) 1997: Bedfordshire[9] (3 districts) Bedford[10] (unitary) None
Central Bedfordshire[10] (unitary) None
1997: Luton[9] (unitary) None None
Berkshire (Royal County)[11]
(6 districts)
1998: The county council was abolished, with each of the six district councils in the county becoming unitary authorities. The Royal County of Berkshire was not abolished.[12] None None
Buckinghamshire (5 districts) 1997: Buckinghamshire[13] (4 districts) None 2020: Buckinghamshire (unitary)
1997: Milton Keynes[13] (unitary) None None
Cambridgeshire (6 districts) 1998: Cambridgeshire[14] (5 districts) None None
1998: Peterborough[14] (unitary) None
Cheshire (8 districts) 1998: Cheshire[15] (6 districts) Cheshire East[16] (unitary) None
Cheshire West and Chester[16] (unitary) None
1998: Halton[15] (unitary) None None
1998: Warrington[15] (unitary) None None
Cleveland (4 districts) 1996: Hartlepool[17] (unitary) None None
1996: Middlesbrough[17] (unitary) None None
1996: Redcar and Cleveland[17] (unitary) None None
1996: Stockton-on-Tees[17] (unitary) None None
Cornwall (6 districts) None Became unitary[18] None
Cumbria (6 districts) None None 2023: Cumberland (unitary)
2023: Westmorland and Furness (unitary)
Derbyshire (9 districts) 1997: Derby[19] (unitary) None None
1997: Derbyshire[19] (8 districts) None None
Devon (10 districts) 1998: Devon[20] (8 districts) None None
1998: Torbay[20] (unitary) None None
1998: Plymouth[20] (unitary) None None
Dorset (8 districts) 1997: Dorset[21] (6 districts) None 2019: Dorset (a unitary from 5 districts)[22]
1997: Bournemouth[21] (unitary) None 2019: Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole (unitary from 2 unitaries and Christchurch district)[22]
1997: Poole[21] (unitary) None
Durham (8 districts) 1997: Durham[23] (7 districts) Became unitary[24] None
1997: Darlington[23] (unitary) None None
East Sussex (7 districts) 1997: East Sussex[25] (5 districts) None None
1997: Brighton and Hove[25] (unitary) None None
Essex (14 districts) 1998: Essex[26] (12 districts) None None
1998: Southend-on-Sea[26] (unitary) None None
1998: Thurrock[26] (unitary) None None
Gloucestershire (6 districts) None None None
Hampshire (13 districts) 1997: Hampshire[27] (11 districts) None None
1997: Portsmouth[27] (unitary) None None
1997: Southampton[27] (unitary) None None
Hereford and Worcester (9 districts) 1998: Herefordshire[28] (unitary) None None
1998: Worcestershire[28] (6 districts) None None
Hertfordshire (10 districts) None None None
Humberside (9 districts) 1996: East Riding of Yorkshire[29] (unitary) None None
1996: City of Kingston upon Hull[29] (unitary) None None
1996: North Lincolnshire[29] (unitary) None None
1996: North East Lincolnshire[29] (unitary) None None
Isle of Wight (2 districts) 1995: Became unitary[30] None None
Kent (14 districts) 1998: Kent[31] (12 districts) None None
1998: The Medway Towns[31] (unitary)
1998: renamed Medway
None None
Lancashire (14 districts) 1998: Lancashire[32] (12 districts) None None
1998: Blackburn with Darwen[32] (unitary) None None
1998: Blackpool[32] (unitary) None None
Leicestershire (9 districts) 1997: Leicestershire[33] (7 districts) None None
1997: Leicester[33] (unitary) None None
1997: Rutland[33] (unitary) None None
Lincolnshire (7 districts) None None None
Norfolk (7 districts) None None None
North Yorkshire (8 districts) 1996: North Yorkshire[34] (7 districts) None 2023: North Yorkshire (unitary)
1996: York[34] (unitary) None None
Northamptonshire (7 districts) None None 2021: North Northamptonshire (unitary)
2021: West Northamptonshire (unitary)
Northumberland (6 districts) None Became unitary[35] None
Nottinghamshire (8 districts) 1998: Nottinghamshire[36] (7 districts) None None
1998: Nottingham[36] (unitary) None None
Oxfordshire (5 districts) None None None
Salop (6 districts)

1980: renamed Shropshire

1998: Shropshire (5 districts)[37] Became unitary[38] None
1998: The Wrekin[37] (unitary)

1998: Renamed Telford and Wrekin

None None
Somerset (5 districts) None None 2019: Somerset (4 districts through merger)[39]
2023: Somerset (unitary)
Staffordshire (9 districts) 1997: Staffordshire[40] (8 districts) None None
1997: Stoke-on-Trent[40] (unitary) None None
Suffolk (7 districts) None None 2019: Suffolk (5 districts through mergers)[41][42]
Surrey (11 districts) None None None
Warwickshire (5 districts) None None None
West Sussex (7 districts) None None None
Wiltshire (5 districts) 1997: Wiltshire[43] (4 districts) Became unitary[44] None
1997: Thamesdown[43] (unitary)
1997: Renamed Swindon
None None

Wales

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In Wales there was no distinction between metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties: all upper tier areas were designated "counties".[45] The Local Government (Wales) Act 1994 amended the 1972 Act, abolishing the Welsh counties and creating instead new Welsh principal areas, some of which are also designated "counties". For the purposes of lieutenancy the counties constituted in 1974 were preserved.

See also

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Notes

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A non-metropolitan county is an administrative subdivision of , outside the six metropolitan counties and , typically encompassing rural, semi-rural, and smaller urban areas with delivered through a two-tier structure of a responsible for strategic services and multiple district councils handling local matters. These counties, often termed shire counties due to their alignment with historic territorial divisions originating in Anglo-Saxon times, were formalized under the Local Government Act 1972 and came into effect in 1974 to replace earlier administrative arrangements. As of April 2023, 21 non-metropolitan counties retain this two-tier model, subdivided into 164 non-metropolitan districts, while others have transitioned to unitary authorities combining county and district functions for efficiency in more sparsely populated regions. This structure contrasts with metropolitan counties, which feature single-tier metropolitan boroughs suited to denser urban environments, reflecting causal differences in , service demands, and historical governance patterns.

Definition and Characteristics

Non-metropolitan counties in were established by the Local Government Act 1972, which reorganized structures effective 1 April 1974, creating a two-tier system outside metropolitan areas and . The Act specified non-metropolitan counties in Schedule 1, distinguishing them from the six metropolitan counties by encompassing predominantly rural and smaller urban areas, with boundaries defined to align with administrative efficiency rather than strictly historic precedents. Subsequent orders, such as the English Non-metropolitan Districts (Definition) Order 1972, further delineated the internal district subdivisions within these counties. Administratively, non-metropolitan counties operate under a two-tier framework, with an upper-tier overseeing strategic functions and lower-tier councils managing localized services. are elected bodies responsible for county-wide services, including , highways maintenance, social care for children and adults, , , and fire and rescue services. councils handle operational duties such as allocation, and disposal, local permissions, , and facilities. Under section 101 of the Local Government Act 1972, county and district councils may delegate functions to one another or to councils, enabling flexible service delivery while maintaining the core two-tier division of powers. This framework supports coordinated governance but has faced critiques for potential overlaps and inefficiencies in decision-making, as noted in parliamentary reviews of local authority structures. Funding primarily derives from precepts set by each tier, supplemented by grants and business rates retention.

Key Features and Distinctions

Non-metropolitan counties in feature a two-tier structure, with an upper-tier providing strategic services across the , such as , highways maintenance, , and coordination, while lower-tier non-metropolitan district councils deliver localized services including housing, , , and planning enforcement. This division of responsibilities promotes efficiency in service delivery by aligning authority with geographic scale, as manage functions requiring broader coordination and districts focus on community-level needs. A primary distinction from metropolitan counties lies in governance continuity and service allocation: metropolitan county councils were abolished by the Local Government Act 1985, transferring most responsibilities to metropolitan boroughs and necessitating joint committees for cross-borough matters like transport, whereas non-metropolitan counties retain elected county councils for integrated upper-tier oversight. Non-metropolitan counties also differ from unitary authorities, which consolidate all functions into a single elected body, eliminating the district tier to streamline decision-making in areas deemed suitable for unified administration, such as former non-metropolitan counties like Dorset that transitioned to unitary status in 2019. Geographically, non-metropolitan counties encompass predominantly rural, suburban, and smaller urban areas outside major conurbations, covering the bulk of 's landmass and supporting diverse economies from agriculture to , in contrast to the densely urbanized metropolitan counties centered on cities like and West Midlands. As of 2023, 24 non-metropolitan counties maintain this two-tier model, serving populations ranging from approximately 300,000 in to over 1.1 million in , with boundaries generally stable since the 1974 reforms but subject to periodic reviews for efficiency.

Historical Origins and Evolution

Establishment under 1974 Local Government Act

The Local Government Act 1972 received on 26 October 1972 and introduced sweeping reforms to and Wales, with most changes operative from 1 April 1974. The Act abolished the prior system of administrative counties and county boroughs established under the Local Government Act 1888, replacing it with a standardized framework that distinguished metropolitan from non-metropolitan areas based on urban density and population scale. Non-metropolitan counties—intended for predominantly rural and smaller urban regions outside and the six designated metropolitan counties—were created as the upper tier in a two-tier administrative structure, each encompassing multiple lower-tier non-metropolitan districts. Schedule 1 of the Act enumerated 39 non-metropolitan counties, including continuations of historic entities such as and alongside newly formed ones like Avon (merging parts of and ), (from northern and Durham), (combining , , and parts of and ), and (incorporating and elements). These boundaries were delineated by the Secretary of State via orders under sections 6 and 17 of the Act, prioritizing geographic coherence, population thresholds (typically over 250,000 for counties), and service delivery efficiency over strict adherence to historic precedents. The reforms drew from the 1969 on Local Government in England (), which advocated functional units, but were modified by the Conservative government to retain county identities and avoid wholesale urban-rural fusion. County councils in these non-metropolitan areas assumed responsibility for strategic functions including education, social services, highways, planning, and fire services, while districts handled localized duties such as housing, environmental health, and waste management, with shared powers in areas like libraries. This division aimed to balance economies of scale at the county level with community responsiveness at the district level, though early implementation revealed tensions over resource allocation and boundary logic. Elections for the inaugural councils occurred in 1973, ensuring continuity from the outset, with the first full terms beginning post-1974 transition. The establishment marked a shift toward professionalized, population-based governance, though critics noted the arbitrary nature of some amalgamations, such as Rutland's absorption into Leicestershire despite its distinct identity.

Early Adjustments and Boundary Reviews

Following the entry into force of the Local Government Act 1972 on 1 April 1974, which established the non-metropolitan counties as the upper tier of a two-tier local government system in England outside metropolitan areas and Greater London, initial adjustments primarily involved the refinement of internal district boundaries rather than alterations to county perimeters. The Local Government Boundary Commission for England, created under the same Act, was charged with periodically reviewing local authority areas, but its early efforts focused on implementing and tweaking the division of counties into districts as outlined in the English Non-Metropolitan Districts (Definition) Order 1972. These district configurations, finalized prior to 1974, underwent limited post-implementation reviews to address practical issues like population distribution and administrative efficiency, with changes approved via Secretary of State orders under section 7 of the 1972 Act. County boundary reviews in the 1970s were infrequent and minor, as the 1972 Act prioritized stability in the newly drawn county lines to facilitate the transition from pre-1974 administrative counties and county boroughs. The Commission received proposals for small-scale territorial transfers—typically involving hamlets, farms, or road segments—to correct anomalies arising from the 1974 redrawings, such as mismatched or community ties, but these affected negligible land areas and did not prompt systemic reconfiguration. For instance, provisions under section 69 of the Act enabled the Secretary of State to implement such tweaks without full Commission-led structural overhauls, reflecting a governmental emphasis on operational continuity over radical shifts. By the early 1980s, emerging criticisms of the two-tier model's inefficiencies—particularly in shire counties with dispersed populations—led to preliminary discussions on potential , but no comprehensive boundary examinations materialized until the mid-1980s. The Commission's mandate shifted toward electoral arrangement periodic under section 56, ensuring councillor numbers and ward divisions aligned with demographic changes, rather than county-level . This period of relative stasis underscored the 1974 framework's intended durability, with structural pressures deferred amid fiscal constraints and political reluctance to revisit the recent reforms. The LGBCE's structural powers lapsed with its dissolution in 1986, paving the way for governmental interventions thereafter.

Major Structural Changes

1995–1998 Reorganizations

The Local Government Act 1992 established the Local Government Commission for to review and recommend alterations to local government structures in non-metropolitan areas, primarily to assess the viability of replacing the two-tier system of county and district councils with single-tier unitary authorities. The Commission's guidelines emphasized criteria such as community identity, effective service delivery, and cost efficiency, conducting periodic reviews in tranches across shire counties from 1993 onward. Parliamentary approvals for these recommendations occurred between 1995 and 1998, implementing structural changes in 25 non-metropolitan counties and creating 46 new unitary authorities that absorbed both district and county-level responsibilities. This process involved issuing structural change orders under section 17 of the 1992 Act, with effective dates phased from April 1996 to April 1998 to minimize disruption. For example, the Humberside (Structural Change) Order 1995 abolished the county of Humberside, establishing the East Riding of Yorkshire as a unitary authority alongside the unitary areas of Kingston upon Hull, North Lincolnshire, and North East Lincolnshire. These reorganizations significantly fragmented several non-metropolitan counties by excising districts into independent unitaries, reducing the geographic scope and administrative authority of surviving s. In counties like , the elevation of all six districts to unitary status in 1998 led to the abolition of the county council, leaving only a ceremonial lord-lieutenancy structure. Similar outcomes occurred in former counties such as Avon and , where wholesale replacement by unitaries eliminated the two-tier model entirely. The changes aimed to foster more responsive local but incurred transition costs estimated in the hundreds of millions of pounds, including redundancies and system overhauls, without conclusive evidence of long-term efficiency gains in all cases.

2009 Interventions

In 2009, the UK Labour government implemented structural reforms to in seven non-metropolitan counties under powers granted by the Local Government and Public Involvement in Health Act 2007, resulting in the creation of nine unitary authorities effective 1 April 2009. These changes abolished the two-tier system of county and district councils in the affected areas, transferring all principal functions to single-tier bodies to promote administrative efficiency and service integration. The reforms followed invitations for proposals issued in 2006, with selected schemes confirmed by the Department for Communities and Local Government in 2007 after assessing criteria including financial viability, strategic leadership, and value for money. The interventions targeted , , , , , , and , where district councils were dissolved and county-level responsibilities consolidated. In and , the county councils were abolished entirely, replaced by two unitary authorities each: and from ; and from . In the remaining five counties, existing county councils were redesignated as unitary authorities after absorbing district functions: , , , , and . These new entities served populations ranging from approximately 300,000 in to over 600,000 in , covering rural and semi-urban shire areas previously governed under the 1972 Local Government Act framework. The reforms incurred transition costs estimated at over £200 million nationally, including redundancies, system migrations, and property rationalizations, with proponents arguing for long-term savings through reduced duplication estimated at £100-200 million annually across the authorities. Critics, including opposition parties and some local stakeholders, contended that the process lacked sufficient cross-party consensus in certain cases and disrupted established without guaranteed efficiencies, as evidenced by subsequent audits showing variable implementation outcomes. Separate proposals for unitary status in other counties, such as and , faced in 2009, with the quashing them for procedural flaws, though the selected 2009 schemes proceeded via statutory instruments.
County AffectedNew Unitary Authority(ies)Key Changes
; County council abolished; districts integrated into two UAs.
; County council abolished; split into two UAs.
Districts abolished; county became UA.
Districts abolished; county redesignated UA.
NorthumberlandDistricts abolished; county redesignated UA.
ShropshireDistricts abolished; county redesignated UA.
Districts abolished; county redesignated UA.

2019–2023 Unitary Conversions

Between 2019 and 2023, the UK government approved proposals from several non-metropolitan counties to transition to unitary authorities, eliminating the two-tier structure of county and district councils in favor of single-tier governance responsible for all local services. These changes were initiated through local authority proposals under the Local Government and Public Involvement in Health Act 2007, with final implementation orders made via secondary legislation, aiming to improve efficiency, reduce duplication, and enhance service delivery amid fiscal pressures. The conversions affected Dorset, Buckinghamshire, Northamptonshire, Somerset, North Yorkshire, and Cumbria, covering rural and semi-rural areas with populations ranging from approximately 500,000 to over 800,000. In Dorset, the Dorset (Structural Changes) Order 2018 established Dorset Council as a on 1 April 2019, absorbing the functions of Dorset and the district councils of East Dorset, North Dorset, Purbeck, West Dorset, and Weymouth and Portland Borough; simultaneously, the adjacent urban area formed as a separate unitary, leaving Dorset Council to govern a predominantly rural expanse of 2,644 square kilometers serving around 380,000 residents. Buckinghamshire followed on 1 April 2020 with the creation of under the Buckinghamshire (Structural Changes) Order 2019, merging Buckinghamshire with the districts of , Chiltern, South Bucks, and Wycombe to form a for 540,000 residents across 1,565 square kilometers, justified by local leaders as streamlining decision-making in a growing . Northamptonshire's reorganization, imposed by government intervention following the county council's effective in 2018—marked by a Section 114 notice halting non-essential spending—was enacted via the Northamptonshire (Structural Changes) Order 2019, effective 1 April 2021; this divided the county into two unitaries, North Northamptonshire Council (covering , East Northamptonshire, , and districts, population 359,000) and West Northamptonshire Council (encompassing , , and South Northamptonshire districts, population 425,000), abolishing the and all seven districts to address chronic financial mismanagement evidenced by overspending and poor financial controls. The final wave in 2023 saw four non-metropolitan counties convert: Somerset Council formed on 1 April 2023 under the Somerset (Structural Changes) Order 2022, integrating Somerset County Council with the districts of Mendip, Sedgemoor, Somerset West and Taunton, and South Somerset to serve 570,000 residents over 3,451 square kilometers. North Yorkshire Council emerged the same day per the North Yorkshire (Structural Changes) Order 2022, replacing North Yorkshire County Council and districts of Craven, Hambleton, Harrogate, Richmondshire, Ryedale, Scarborough, and Selby (excluding the pre-existing unitary City of York), governing 620,000 people in England's largest county by area at 8,038 square kilometers. In Cumbria, the Cumbria (Structural Changes) Order 2022 created two unitaries on 1 April 2023: Cumberland Council (merging Allerdale, Carlisle, and Copeland districts with county functions, population 274,000) and Westmorland and Furness Council (combining Barrow-in-Furness, Eden, and South Lakeland, population 227,000), dissolving Cumbria County Council and its six districts across 6,768 square kilometers of diverse terrain including the Lake District.
Original Non-Metropolitan CountyNew Unitary Authority(ies)Effective DatePopulation Served (approx.)Area (sq km)
DorsetDorset Council1 April 2019380,0002,644
1 April 2020540,0001,565
North Northamptonshire Council; Council1 April 2021359,000; 425,0001,027; 1,120
Somerset1 April 2023570,0003,451
1 April 2023620,0008,038
; 1 April 2023274,000; 227,0003,124; 3,644
These reforms reduced the number of principal local authorities in England by 21, with proponents citing projected savings of £10-20 million annually per authority through , though critics noted potential risks to localized services and democratic representation in vast rural areas. No further unitary conversions from non-metropolitan counties occurred until 2024 proposals.

2024–Present Reforms and

In December 2024, the government published the English , which outlined a programme to restructure two-tier systems in non-metropolitan counties by inviting proposals for reorganisation into unitary authorities, typically serving populations of at least 500,000 residents, with exceptions possible for viable smaller units. This initiative aims to eliminate overlapping responsibilities between county and district councils, streamline decision-making, and achieve efficiencies, as evidenced by prior unitarisation in yielding projected savings of £40 million by March 2026. The emphasises aligning structural reform with enhanced , proposing the creation of Strategic Authorities—such as Combined County Authorities (CCAs)—to oversee broader functions across non-metropolitan areas, with a preference for mayoral leadership to ensure accountability. Powers devolved to these authorities include strategic transport planning, adult skills funding (from 2026/27 in eligible cases), housing development via compulsory purchase for regeneration, and initiatives, building on earlier trailblazer deals but extending coverage to remaining two-tier . Non-mayoral options are available for foundation-level devolution, subject to statutory tests, as progressed in like , , , and following invitations issued in July 2024. Initial implementations include the establishment of CCAs in & and , with mayoral elections scheduled for May 2025, granting them immediate control over local transport and skills. A Priority Programme, announced in early 2025, fast-tracks six areas—including Greater and Hull & East —for deeper powers and reorganisation, targeting mayoral elections by May 2026, while the reserves powers to impose Strategic Authorities if local agreements stall. By October 2025, proposals from two-tier areas continue to be reviewed under the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill, introduced to legislate these changes, though full rollout remains phased over the parliamentary term amid concerns over transition costs and rural representation.

Governance Structure and Functions

Role of County Councils

County councils in non-metropolitan counties, also known as shire counties, function as the upper-tier local authorities responsible for delivering strategic services across their entire geographic area, which typically encompasses multiple lower-tier district or councils. Established under section 2 of the Local Government Act 1972, these councils manage functions that require coordination at a county level, providing approximately 80% of local services in two-tier areas, including , social care, and infrastructure maintenance. Key responsibilities include overseeing education services, such as maintaining schools, supporting special educational needs, and managing adult learning programs; adult and children's social care, encompassing safeguarding, fostering, and support for vulnerable populations; and highways and , which involves road maintenance, traffic management, public passenger transport subsidies, and on-street parking enforcement outside district boundaries. Additional functions cover and development control for minerals, waste, and county-wide infrastructure; initiatives, including oversight; libraries and cultural services; trading standards enforcement to protect consumers and es; fire and rescue services coordination (often through joint authorities); and waste disposal management, distinct from district-level collection. These roles emphasize county-wide efficiency, with councils funded primarily through precepts, central government grants, and business rates retention, enabling them to address needs spanning rural and semi-urban districts alike. County councils exercise democratic oversight via elected members serving four-year terms, with typically through cabinet systems or committees, and they collaborate with councils on shared priorities like strategy while retaining powers over certain strategic decisions. In practice, this structure supports causal linkages between population density, service demands, and fiscal allocation, as evidenced by counties like and handling multimillion-pound budgets for transport and care amid varying demographic pressures.

Interaction with District Councils

In the two-tier local government structure of non-metropolitan counties, county councils oversee strategic and county-wide services, while district councils manage more localized functions, necessitating ongoing coordination to avoid service gaps or overlaps. County councils typically handle responsibilities such as (including schools and ), adult and children's social care, highway maintenance and planning, fire and rescue services, libraries and cultural services, trading standards, and strategic aspects of and minerals planning. District councils, by contrast, focus on housing allocation and development, waste collection and recycling, processing of local planning applications, environmental health enforcement, provision of leisure and recreational facilities, and collection of (including precepting for the county). This division, established under the Local Government Act 1972 and refined through subsequent legislation, aims to leverage at the county level for resource-intensive services while allowing districts to respond to hyper-local needs. Interaction between the tiers is facilitated through financial interdependence and statutory collaboration requirements. District councils act as billing authorities, collecting council tax across the county and remitting the county council's precept—typically comprising about 70-80% of the total bill—to fund upper-tier services. In areas like , districts prepare and adopt local plans for development control, but these must align with county-level strategies on transport infrastructure, minerals extraction, and waste disposal sites, often requiring joint consultations and evidence bases. Economic regeneration and skills initiatives may involve shared delivery via local enterprise partnerships (now integrated into local growth plans as of 2024), where county and district representatives collaborate on funding bids and project implementation. Formal mechanisms for coordination include ad hoc joint committees under the Local Government Act 1972 for specific functions like flood risk management or public health outbreaks, as well as voluntary shared service arrangements to reduce costs—such as pooled procurement for IT or back-office functions, which have been adopted in counties like and since the 2010s austerity measures. Statutory duties under the Localism Act 2011 and the Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023 mandate cooperation on community strategies and , with government guidance emphasizing joint needs assessments to integrate social care and delivery. Despite these frameworks, tensions can arise from differing political control or priorities, prompting calls for enhanced joint oversight bodies, though from shared service pilots indicates modest efficiency gains of 5-15% in operational costs without compromising . As of 2025, ongoing proposals under the English Devolution White Paper encourage deeper integration in two-tier areas to support growth deals, potentially through combined county-district boards for investment decisions.

Powers, Responsibilities, and Funding

Non-metropolitan county councils, as upper-tier authorities in England's two-tier system, hold responsibility for strategic and county-wide services that require coordination across multiple . These include provision, encompassing school organization, pupil admissions, and special educational needs; adult and children's social care services; highways maintenance and transport ; fire and rescue operations; library services; trading standards enforcement; and strategic and disposal. They also oversee functions devolved under the Health and Social Care Act 2012, such as commissioning certain services, and strategic land-use under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. Responsibilities are delineated by statute, primarily the Local Government Act 1972, with county councils delegable to act on behalf of districts in shared areas like emergency planning. District councils in these areas handle complementary lower-tier functions, such as allocation, refuse collection, local permissions, leisure facilities, and , ensuring a division that avoids overlap while allowing for inter-authority agreements under section 101 of the Local Government Act 1972. County councils may additionally assume devolved powers through bespoke deals, such as or funding trails, though these vary by county and remain subject to approval. Funding for non-metropolitan county councils derives from a combination of local taxation, central grants, and retained revenues, allocated via the annual finance settlement announced by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities. The county precept, a proportion of set annually by the council and collected by councils, constitutes the primary local revenue source, funding approximately 50-60% of expenditures depending on the county's tax base and service demands. In 2023/24, aggregate local authority funding in comprised 52% from , 27% from retained business rates (with counties sharing proceeds based on growth above baselines), and 22% from revenue support and specific grants, though county-specific allocations reflect needs-based formulas incorporating population, deprivation, and service costs. Capital funding supplements this through borrowing, grants for infrastructure like roads, and Loan Board loans, with total local authority spending reaching £91.8 billion in 2023/24 amid rising pressures from demographic shifts and . Recent reforms, including the Levelling Up and Regeneration Act 2023, aim to enhance retention of business rates growth, potentially increasing fiscal autonomy for counties.

Current Status and List

Enumeration of Existing Counties

As of 2023, 20 in operate under a two-tier structure, featuring an upper-tier responsible for strategic services and multiple lower-tier councils handling local matters. These counties are:
  • Cambridgeshire County Council
  • Derbyshire County Council
  • Devon County Council
  • East Sussex County Council
  • Essex County Council
  • Gloucestershire County Council
  • Hampshire County Council
  • Hertfordshire County Council
  • Kent County Council
  • Lancashire County Council
  • Leicestershire County Council
  • Lincolnshire County Council
  • Norfolk County Council
  • Nottinghamshire County Council
  • Oxfordshire County Council
  • Staffordshire County Council
  • Suffolk County Council
  • Surrey County Council
  • Warwickshire County Council
  • Worcestershire County Council
Proposals for reorganization into unitary authorities were invited for all two-tier areas in February 2025, with implementation expected to proceed in phases, potentially reducing the number of such counties.

Demographic and Geographic Overview

Non-metropolitan counties constitute the primary administrative divisions for two-tier in rural and semi-rural , spanning regions from the South West to the and parts of the North. They exclude the densely urbanized six metropolitan counties—, , , Tyne and Wear, West Midlands, and —as well as and areas under unitary authorities. Geographically, these counties dominate 's land area, encompassing approximately 80% of the national territory outside metropolitan zones, including vast agricultural plains, uplands, and coastal stretches that support farming, tourism, and small-scale industry. As of mid-2024, England's overall population stood at around 57.4 million, with non-metropolitan counties hosting diverse demographic profiles characterized by lower densities averaging 200-400 persons per square kilometer, far below the over 1,000 in metropolitan counterparts. Population sizes among the approximately 24 extant two-tier non-metropolitan counties range widely, from under 100,000 in to over 1.5 million in and , reflecting a mix of market towns, villages, and commuter belts adjacent to cities. These areas generally feature older age structures, with higher proportions of residents over 65 compared to urban centers, driven by net from younger urban populations seeking and countryside lifestyles. Ethnic diversity is comparatively lower in non-metropolitan counties, where the population often exceeds 90% in rural districts, contrasting with metropolitan counties' higher shares of Asian, , and other ethnic minorities due to historical patterns concentrated in industrial cities. Rural sparsity influences service provision, with challenges in healthcare access and exacerbated by aging demographics and out-migration of youth to employment hubs. Nonetheless, recent in select counties, such as those in the South East, has been robust, fueled by economic spillovers from .

Application in Wales

Historical Implementation

The Local Government Act 1972 established a uniform two-tier system of across , effective from 1 April 1974, dividing into eight new counties—Clwyd, Dyfed, Gwent, , , , , and —each governed by an elected county council responsible for strategic services such as education, social services, transportation, and planning. These Welsh counties operated under the same non-metropolitan framework as their English counterparts, lacking the metropolitan status applied to six urban conurbations in , and featured subordinate councils handling localized functions like , refuse collection, and . The reform abolished pre-1974 administrative counties and boroughs, aiming to create larger, more efficient units based on population and geography, with county councils comprising elected councillors and a chairman, elected every three years initially via first-past-the-post in multi-member wards. Implementation involved boundary commissions delineating areas to balance urban and rural needs, resulting in 37 districts across the eight counties, though Powys remained a single-district due to its sparse of approximately 110,000. County councils assumed powers previously fragmented among quarter sessions, standing joint committees, and ad hoc bodies, centralizing oversight while districts retained operational autonomy, funded primarily through rates (property taxes) and government grants. This structure persisted without major alterations until the mid-1990s, despite criticisms of duplication and inefficiency in service delivery, particularly in rural counties like Dyfed and where geographic challenges hindered coordination. The 1974 counties reflected a deliberate policy to preserve some historic identities—such as incorporating former into Gwent—while prioritizing administrative viability over strict adherence to pre-1536 Welsh principalities or the 13 historic counties established by the Laws in Wales Acts 1535 and 1542. Elections for the inaugural councils occurred in , allowing a transitional year for staffing and asset transfers from abolished authorities, with full operations commencing in 1974 amid logistical challenges including the merger of over 1,000 former councils into the new tiered system.

Abolition and Replacement with Unitaries

The non-metropolitan counties in , comprising eight counties and 37 districts established under the Local Government Act 1972 and operative from 1 April 1974, were abolished by the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994. This legislation dissolved all existing county and district councils, ending the two-tier structure that had allocated strategic functions like education and planning to counties while districts handled localized services such as housing and refuse collection. Effective 1 April 1996, the Act replaced these entities with 22 unitary authorities, designated as principal areas and styled either as counties or county boroughs (11 of each). These single-tier councils assumed full responsibility for local government services, including those previously split between tiers, with boundaries drawn to reflect population densities, geography, and community identities as recommended by the Welsh Local Government Boundary Commission. The new authorities included preserved counties for ceremonial purposes, such as lieutenancy, but administrative powers centralized under the unitaries to reduce duplication and enhance accountability. The transition involved transferring assets, liabilities, and staff from the abolished councils via subordinate orders, with the Welsh Office overseeing implementation to minimize service disruptions. By consolidating governance, the reform eliminated approximately 45 councils into 22, aiming for in a with a population of about 2.9 million at the time, though subsequent evaluations have noted varied impacts on service delivery efficiency. This unitary model has remained in place, with minor boundary adjustments in later years but no reversion to two-tier non-metropolitan counties.

Comparisons and Debates

Versus Metropolitan Counties

Non-metropolitan counties, often referred to as shire counties, were established alongside metropolitan counties under the Local Government Act 1972 to reorganize England's local government into a two-tier system effective from 1 April 1974. Metropolitan counties—comprising Greater Manchester, Merseyside, South Yorkshire, Tyne and Wear, West Midlands, and West Yorkshire—were specifically designated for densely populated urban conurbations, covering a combined area of approximately 3,580 square kilometers and serving over 14 million residents as of 1974, with population densities exceeding 2,000 people per square kilometer in most cases. In contrast, non-metropolitan counties encompass larger, predominantly rural or semi-rural areas outside these conurbations and Greater London, totaling 62 such counties by 2023 after adjustments for unitary reconfigurations, with average population densities below 500 people per square kilometer and areas often spanning thousands of square kilometers, such as North Yorkshire at 8,038 square kilometers. A core structural distinction lies in the persistence of upper-tier governance: non-metropolitan counties retain active county councils responsible for strategic services including , social care, highways, and waste disposal planning across their districts, while metropolitan county councils were abolished by the Local Government Act 1985, effective 31 March 1986, devolving most functions to the constituent metropolitan boroughs or joint committees. This abolition, enacted amid political tensions between and Labour-dominated metropolitan authorities, resulted in metropolitan areas operating without a unified county-level body for core services; instead, metropolitan boroughs assumed responsibilities akin to non-metropolitan county councils, such as and , supplemented by joint authorities for specialized functions like policing, fire services, and passenger transport. Non-metropolitan districts, by comparison, focus on localized services like , , and refuse collection, lacking the broader powers held by metropolitan boroughs. Functionally, this divergence reflects adaptations to urban versus rural needs: metropolitan counties, designed for coordinated urban management, emphasized integrated transport and but saw their strategic role fragmented post-1986, leading to criticisms of inefficiency in cross-borough collaboration until recent combined authority formations under agreements since 2011. Non-metropolitan counties, serving more dispersed populations, maintain centralized county-level oversight to address geographic challenges like rural service delivery, though this two-tier model has faced scrutiny for duplication, with some counties transitioning to unitary authorities since the to streamline operations. Funding mechanisms also differ, with non-metropolitan county councils receiving a larger share of grants for county-wide services—averaging 40-50% of budgets from revenue support grants as of 2023—while metropolitan boroughs rely more on due to their unitary-like status, exacerbating fiscal pressures in high-need urban areas.
AspectNon-Metropolitan CountiesMetropolitan Counties
Upper-Tier GovernanceActive county councils (e.g., for , )Abolished in 1986; functions devolved to boroughs or joint bodies
Lower-Tier UnitsDistricts/boroughs with limited powers (e.g., housing, waste)Metropolitan boroughs with expanded powers (e.g., , )
Typical Population Density<500 people/km²; rural/suburban focus>2,000 people/km²; urban conurbations
Strategic CoordinationCounty-led for highways, Joint authorities or combined authorities post-devolution

Versus Unitary Authorities

Non-metropolitan counties operate within England's two-tier system, where a shares responsibilities with multiple or councils beneath it, handling strategic services such as , highways, and social care at the county level while s manage localized functions like , , and . In contrast, unitary authorities function as single-tier entities that consolidate all principal powers, eliminating the division between county and district levels to provide comprehensive services including those typically split in two-tier areas. This structural divergence arose from the Local Government Act 1972, which established non-metropolitan counties as primarily rural or mixed areas, whereas unitary authorities emerged later through reforms like the Local Government Changes for England (1994) Regulations, converting certain s or creating new entities to streamline administration in more urban or standalone locales. Functionally, unitary authorities exercise undivided authority over both upper- and lower-tier responsibilities, enabling integrated decision-making on issues like and without inter-council coordination, which proponents argue reduces administrative duplication and enhances service delivery efficiency. Non-metropolitan counties, however, rely on collaborative frameworks such as joint committees for , which can lead to delays or inconsistencies, as evidenced by reports of fragmented planning in two-tier areas compared to the cohesive approach in unitaries. Funding mechanisms differ as well: both receive grants, , and business rates, but two-tier systems distribute precept-based across layers, potentially complicating resident accountability, whereas unitaries centralize revenue collection and allocation. Debates on efficiency highlight projected cost savings from unitary structures, with a 2020 PricewaterhouseCoopers analysis estimating that consolidating two-tier non-metropolitan counties into single unitaries could yield £2.94 billion in savings over five years through and reduced overheads, though actual implementations like those in Dorset (2019) have shown mixed results with transitional costs exceeding £50 million initially. Critics of unitarisation contend that larger single-tier authorities risk detachment from local needs, particularly in expansive rural non-metropolitan counties where councils preserve granular community representation, supported by evidence from Local Government Association reviews indicating no definitive superiority of unitaries in service outcomes or resident satisfaction metrics. Empirical data from the Institute for Fiscal Studies on 2010-2024 spending trends reveals two-tier counties often maintain lower per-capita administrative costs in specialized functions like adult social care (£2,300 average in 2023) compared to some unitaries, underscoring that efficiency gains depend on scale and rather than tier alone. Ongoing reforms, including the 2024 English White Paper's emphasis on unitaries with populations over 500,000, reflect a tilt toward single-tier models for fiscal resilience amid pressures, yet preserve two-tier non-metropolitan counties in 26 areas covering about 40% of England's as of 2025.

Criticisms and Efficiency Debates

The two-tier structure of non-metropolitan counties has faced criticism for creating bureaucratic fragmentation, where responsibilities split between county and s lead to duplicated efforts in areas like and service delivery, resulting in slower decision-making and higher administrative costs. A 2020 PwC analysis estimated that replacing all two-tier systems with unitary authorities could yield £2.9 billion in savings over five years through reduced overlap, though upfront reorganisation costs—often exceeding £100 million per area—have deterred full implementation without comprehensive reviews. Critics, including advocates, argue this division confuses residents about accountability, with surveys showing public preference for the over mergers due to fears of diminished local representation in rural settings. Efficiency debates center on empirical comparisons between two-tier non-metropolitan counties and unitary models, with proponents of reorganisation citing streamlined operations in existing unitaries, such as integrated social care and highways management, which enhance coordination absent in shire counties. However, evidence from past reorganisations, like those in the and , indicates mixed outcomes: while some unitaries achieved modest per-capita savings (e.g., 1-3% in operational budgets post-merger), others experienced service disruptions and councillor turnover rates up to 20% higher due to larger electoral wards diluting community ties. Reports from district-focused groups contend that non-metropolitan two-tier systems better preserve "localness" for services like and leisure, where district-level proximity correlates with higher resident satisfaction scores (e.g., 10-15% above unitary averages in rural polls), challenging claims of inherent inefficiency without accounting for geographic scale. Ongoing governmental pushes, including Labour's 2025 devolution plans targeting two-tier abolition in favor of unitaries with minimum populations of 500,000, highlight causal tensions: larger entities may improve for (potentially 5-10% cost reductions) but risk alienating sparse rural populations, as seen in stalled shire proposals where combined authorities mismatched local economies. Commons Library analyses note drawbacks like reduced democratic granularity—fewer councillors in unitaries—potentially eroding scrutiny, with no universal that two-tier inherently underperforms when constraints, rather than , drive most shortfalls (e.g., 40% real-terms cuts since ). These debates underscore that efficiency gains depend on implementation, with reorganisation often yielding net fiscal strain in the first 3-5 years absent robust transition .

References

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