Subdivisions of England
Administrative division or non-administrative ceremonial area of England
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The subdivisions of England constitute a hierarchy of administrative divisions and other non-administrative areas.
Type Number Strategic authority area 20 Unitary authority district 130 Two-tier non-metropolitan county 21 Two-tier non-metropolitan district 164 Civil parish 10,449 Sui generis 2
| Subdivisions of England | |||||||||||||||
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Subdivisions of England (as of 1 April 2023) that have a principal local authority: unitary authorities, and two-tier non-metropolitan counties and their non-metropolitan districts | |||||||||||||||
| Location | England | ||||||||||||||
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For local government, the country is divided into strategic authority areas, counties, districts and parishes. In some areas, counties and districts form a two-tier administrative structure, while in others they are combined under a unitary authority. Strategic authorities and parishes cover only part of England. The current system for local government is the result of incremental reform based on legislation that was implemented in 1965 and 1974. Exceptionally, the City of London and the Isles of Scilly are sui generis subdivisions that predate these reforms.
England is also divided into nine regions, now used primarily for statistical purposes. It is divided into 48 ceremonial counties, that are appointed a Lord-lieutenant, the representative of the monarch in those area.

ceremonial county boundary
non-metropolitan county boundary
History
The 1974 reform of local government established a two-tier structure of counties and districts in England outside Greater London. In non-metropolitan counties it was the county council that provided the majority of services, including education and social services while the district-tier councils have a more limited role.[1] Since 1996 the two-tier areas have been replaced with unitary authorities. New local administrative subdivisions in England have generally evolved through path dependence, with new units often created by merging smaller, lower-tier areas.[2]
Counties
Counties have been a subdivision of England since they were established in the period between the 7th and 11th centuries.[3] Counties have served an administrative role since then; Parr (2020) describes them as the 'most noticeable example' of path dependence in England's local government geography.[2] Between 1889 and 1974, an area with a county council was termed an administrative county.
County boroughs
County boroughs were wholly independent urban centres that existed between 1888 and 1974. County boroughs were independent of the administrative county.[2]
Districts
The districts of England originate in the 1834 Poor Law reforms, which amalgamated multiple parishes to form Poor Law unions. These areas were later used as the basis for census registration districts and sanitary districts.[4] 1984 reforms to sub-county government created urban districts and rural districts as a standard lower-tier layer of local government beneath administrative counties.[2]
The 1970s local government reforms replaced the administrative counties and county boroughs with non-metropolitan counties and metropolitan counties, covering the whole of England outside of London. The lower tier of government below the non-metropolitan counties were non-metropolitan districts.[2]
Since 1992, many local authorities have been made unitary authorities, or new unitary authorities have been established to replace the previous two-tier local authorities in a particular area. This has led to either the local government district or county being, in effect, abolished.[2]
Local government areas
Strategic authority areas
The primary administrative bodies above the upper-tier or unitary local authority are the Greater London Authority, the combined authorities and the combined county authorities. They are collectively known as strategic authorities. They do not cover all of England. Each strategic authority covers an area made up of the territory of a group of constituent councils. The term "strategic authority" was applied retrospectively. The first strategic authority was the Greater London Authority, established in 2000, and the second was the Greater Manchester Combined Authority, established in 2010, covering Greater Manchester. They have devolved powers from central government that are not available to local councils.[5] Some strategic authority areas have the same borders as metropolitan counties which formerly had county councils, such as Greater Manchester. In others areas a metropolitan county has been combined with other local government areas, such as the Liverpool City Region which consists of Merseyside and the Borough of Halton.[6][a]
Two-tier areas
The Local Government Act 1972 divided English local government into a two system of metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties and districts, with local council functions split between the two levels. Over time, the two-tier system has been replaced by a unitary system in most of England; the metropolitan counties ceased to be a unit of government in 1986.
Unitary authority areas
In most of England, council functions are carried out by a single unitary authority, as the two-tier system of local government introduced in 1974 has been abolished over time. They are categorised differently based on the method in which they were created, but all have the powers previously held separately by county councils and district councils. 56 unitary authority areas are legally simultaneously non-metropolitan counties and non-metropolitan districts, reflecting that they perform the functions of both. In Berkshire, the districts became unitary authorities in 1998 but the non-metropolitan county remained in legal existence (without a county council) to keep the title of royal county.[7]
London boroughs and metropolitan boroughs
The Greater London administrative area was created in 1965 with 32 boroughs, and the City of London.[8] In 1986, the Greater London Council and the metropolitan county councils were abolished, leading the London boroughs and metropolitan boroughs to become unitary. Unlike unitary authorities created later, they are not areas for public transport authorities, although they are highways authority areas.[9][10][11]
Sui generis
The Isles of Scilly are governed by a sui generis local authority called the Council of the Isles of Scilly. The authority was established in 1890 as the Isles of Scilly Rural District Council. It was renamed but otherwise unreformed by the changes in local government that occurred in 1974 in the rest of England outside Greater London.[12] Although effectively a unitary authority, for example it is an education authority,[13] the Isles of Scilly are part of the Cornwall ceremonial county and combine with Cornwall Council for services such as health[14] and economic development.[15]
The ancient City of London is the only part of Greater London not within a London borough; it is governed by the City of London Corporation, a sui generis authority unlike any other in England[8] that has largely avoided any of the reforms of local government in the 19th and 20th centuries.[16]
Civil parishes
The civil parish is the most local unit of government in England.[1] A parish is governed by a parish council or parish meeting, which exercises a limited number of functions that would otherwise be delivered by the local authority. There is one civil parish in Greater London (Queen's Park, in the City of Westminster),[17] and not all of the rest of England is parished. The number of parishes and total area parished is growing.
Other divisions
Regions
The largest subnational divisions are the nine regions. All of England is divided into regions that are each made up of a number of local government areas. These "government office regions" were created in 1994. They vary greatly in their areas covered, populations and contributions to the national economy.[18] All have the same status, except London which has substantive devolved powers.[19] They were the regions used for thr European Social Fund and European Regional Development Fund. The governance of the regions was regional assemblies until 1 April 2010 when they were replaced by local authority leaders' boards. The regional development agencies were abolished in 2012.[20] These regions were also used for European Parliament constituencies and the Boundary Commission considered them when drawing up United Kingdom Parliament constituencies.[21] These regions continue to be used for regional employers organisations.[22] Prior to the government office regions established in 1994, England was divided into eight economic planning regions. These originated in the civil defence regions established during the Second World War.[23]
Ceremonial counties
England is wholly divided into 48 ceremonial counties.[24] They are the areas used for appointing lords-lieutenant who are the representatives of the Crown in those areas. Ceremonial county is a modern term. Between 1974 and 1997 no special terminology was required because the areas for lieutenancy were the same as the areas used for local government.[25] They became defined separately due to reform of local government, and are now defined in reference to local government areas. The ceremonial counties have been static since they were defined in 1997.[26] As the local government structure of England has become more complex and fragmented, the ceremonial counties provide a more stable and common frame of reference.[27][b]
Metropolitan counties
Metropolitan counties were established in 1974, covering large conurbations of cities outside Greater London. Each had a county council, responsible for strategic planning, public transport, fire, civil defence, police and waste management. These services continue to be provided in these counties by joint boards and arrangements.[9][29][11]
Spatial development strategy areas
Areas for producing spatial development strategies are being introduced in 2026. Unlike strategic authorities, they will cover all of England. The areas for strategies will include those of strategic authorities where they exist.[30] Outside of these areas strategic planning boards covering multiple authorities will be created to make the plan, or the government can direct an existing local authority to produce one.[31]
List of subdivisions
See also
Notes
- In metropolitan counties the borough councils are required to form integrated transport authorities under the Local Government Act 1985 (as amended). Where unitary authorities are added to the combined authority area, they continue to be transport authorities.
- All except the Greater London Authority are combined authorities and combined county authorities
- Districts may also hold borough and/or city status
- Districts may also hold borough and/or city status
- Also a metropolitan county (no county council)
- Also a royal county and non-metropolitan county (no county council)