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2026 Guide to Buying School Compliance and Premises Software

Most schools buying compliance software in 2026 will make the wrong choice — not because good platforms don't exist, but because they won't know what to ask.

The DfE's Education Estates Strategy (February 2026), backed by £38 billion, has permanently shifted school estate management from reactive patch and mend to proactive, data-led renewal. From Autumn 2026, responsible bodies must submit a light-touch annual return through the new Manage Your Education Estate (MYEE) platform, self-assessing progress against the School Estate Management Standards (SEMS).

So spreadsheets, basic compliance platforms, and estate knowledge locked in one site manager's head no longer cut it. The software you choose is now a governance decision, not an administrative upgrade. Here is what to look for.

1. Core Capabilities

The market for compliance and premises management software is crowded. You need to be careful to avoid generic, repackaged corporate health and safety software that has simply been re-badged for schools.

When evaluating providers, these are the capabilities that separate a genuinely useful platform from one that just looks the part:

Granular, Specialist-Backed Compliance Tracking

I would suggest steering clear of systems that just hand you an empty shell, a blank slate, or a generic library of templates and expect your over-stretched staff to build their own compliance schedules. Your software supplier should work with the leadership team and arrive pre-configured for your site team with a bespoke, ordered testing programme based on expert advice. It must demand specific evidence uploads before it ever lets a status turn green.

Differentiated Site and Contractor Test Management

Compliance checks generally fall into two distinct workflows. For internal tasks, your software needs to be frictionless and simple for your site staff to use. But for external contractor tasks, the software needs to act as a strict gateway. It should automatically handle contractor onboarding and track public liability insurance expiries before any work is allowed to start.

Condition and Asset Data

Because the SEMS Level 3 benchmark demands strategic lifecycle planning, your software can't just record that an asset exists. It needs to absorb complex data from formal condition surveys. It should track how an asset degrades, estimate its end-of-life date, and model projected capital replacement costs.

Multi-Site Capability for MATs

If you're a Multi-Academy Trust, you want a system with genuine, native multi-site capability. It needs to give your central executive team a macro-level overview while providing individual site managers with a focused, site-specific interface. If a critical check becomes overdue at just one primary school, the system should automatically flag that failure to the central trust board.

2. Core Modules

Many popular systems are simple compliance, policy, and training management tools rather than comprehensive estate strategy platforms. A truly effective system functions as a complete operational ecosystem. Look for platforms that seamlessly integrate these tools:

  • Capital Programme Management - You need live tracking of how funding is being used as projects proceed. This module should absorb architectural survey data so you can accurately allocate funding from multiple streams across your entire portfolio.

  • Strategic Survey - The better systems feature an interactive tool that standardises condition data from various external professionals, automatically generating prioritised and costed strategic plans of works.

  • Project Management and CDM Compliance - If your school self-manages small improvement projects, the system must enforce a structured approach. It needs to track safety milestones and prevent users from skipping vital statutory approvals, especially regarding CDM regulations.

  • Integrated Helpdesk Collaboration - You need a space where staff, consultants, and contractors can log issues. These tickets should automatically link back to specific assets, projects, or compliance tasks so everyone can monitor progress together.

  • Dynamic Contractor Procurement - Look for a fully searchable, vetted contractor database. You need the ability to quickly find contractors using filters like trade, location, accreditations, and DBS checks, while tracking past performance.

  • Document Management - The system should include a multipurpose space to manage critical documents, from statutory certificates to supplier agreements. By automating reminders for notice periods and expiry dates, you take back control of your procurement and avoid expensive rolling contracts.

  • Integration with DfE Data Standards (MYEE) - The DfE is rolling out common data standards from 2026, with the goal of all responsible bodies collecting and sharing estate data by the end of the decade. A plan to integrate with the MYEE APIs is not the same as a working integration, but it's the minimum you should expect — so make sure your supplier has a concrete one.


3. Questions to Ask Any Supplier Before Buying

To cut through the marketing spin, I recommend asking potential software vendors these direct questions during your procurement process:

Who precisely configures the initial compliance schedules for our sites?

  • Why it matters: This validates whether the system relies on genuine specialist knowledge or if it simply outsources the heavy lifting back to your team.

  • Watch out if they say: "Your site manager can easily build their own task lists from our library." This approach shifts the burden of compliance setup onto busy operational staff instead of providing a pre-configured, legally robust framework.

How does the software handle condition data alongside daily compliance?

  • Why it matters: This ensures the platform can support strategic capital planning at SEMS Level 3, rather than just acting as a digital checklist.

  • Watch out if they say: "You can upload your condition survey spreadsheet for reporting." This introduces significant administrative burdens. It tells you the data lives in disconnected silos, meaning you will spend your time managing spreadsheets rather than planning investments.

Can you demonstrate your technical roadmap for integration with DfE systems?

  • Why it matters: This prevents you from buying a system that will become obsolete when data sharing across the education estate becomes mandatory.

  • Watch out if they say: "We allow you to export your data to a CSV or Excel
    file." An export button is not an integration. This response indicates a lack of true API capability, or suggests the system might not hold the right structured data in the first place.

How does the system physically prevent a user from falsifying a statutory record?

  • Why it matters: This tests true data integrity and legal defensibility. You need to know how the platform holds up if the HSE ever audits your estate.
  • Watch out if they say: "Users input correct dates and click complete." This fails basic audit standards. A robust platform should secure the audit trail automatically, rather than relying entirely on human error-free entry.

Conclusion

Buying new software isn't the same as achieving compliance. Software can't physically inspect a fire door or sit down to negotiate a complex capital bid with the DfE.

However, it is the vital digital infrastructure that makes risk management and strategic planning actually manageable (especially at scale). The regulatory demands of 2026 have raised the bar permanently. Trying to run an educational estate using manual systems or basic platforms is no longer a viable option.

By investing in structurally sound, specialist-backed compliance and premises software, you are doing far more than digitising a filing cabinet. You are securing the capital funding you need to keep your learning environments safe, inspiring, and fit for the future.


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