Re-Entry
To enable disaffected young people, excluded or truanting from school to embark upon a programme that will lead to their return to mainstream education, access training and improve their job prospects.
Activities & Mission
To enable disaffected young people, excluded or truanting from school to embark upon a programme that will lead to their return to mainstream education, access training and improve their job prospects.
Areas of Operation
Where this charity is registered to operate, as self-declared to the Charity Commission. These are regulatory classifications, not a list of active programmes, and don't necessarily indicate fundraising activity in each location.
Local Authority
Financial Information
Financial Efficiency
Higher than 97% of UK Beneficiary group charities with income £100K to £1M (sample: 3459). How is this calculated?
Higher than 100% of UK Beneficiary group charities with income £100K to £1M. How is this calculated?
Lower overhead than 73% of UK Beneficiary group charities with income £100K to £1M. (Lower overhead is generally read as more efficient.) How is this calculated?
Latest Financial Breakdown
Income Sources
Expenditure Categories
Financial Trend
Annual Returns
As filed with the Charity Commission for England and Wales. Most recent filing covers the financial year ending 2018.
| Financial Year | Income | Expenditure | Charitable Spending | Net Assets | Reserves | Staff |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | £502,505 | £786,541 | £786,541 | -£466,839 | £0 | 35 / 10 |
| 2017 | £734,495 | £883,709 | £883,709 | -£182,803 | -£182,803 | 42 / 6 |
| 2016 | £734,401 | £884,275 | £884,275 | -£33,589 | £0 | 49 / 10 |
| 2015 | £723,144 | £704,794 | £684,509 | £116,285 | £103,943 | 32 / 10 |
| 2014 | £570,323 | £566,877 | £546,874 | £97,935 | £97,935 | 33 / 12 |
Staff column shows: Employees / Volunteers
Frequently asked questions about Re-Entry
What does Re-Entry do?
To enable disaffected young people, excluded or truanting from school to embark upon a programme that will lead to their return to mainstream education, access training and improve their job prospects.
How much income did Re-Entry report in 2018?
Re-Entry reported total income of £503k and reported expenditure of £787k for the financial year ending 2018, based on the most recent annual return filed with the Charity Commission.
How efficient is Re-Entry?
Re-Entry has a program ratio of 156.5%, meaning that share of its income goes directly to charitable activities. This is higher than 97% of UK Beneficiary group charities with income £100K to £1M (sample of 3459 charities). See our methodology for how this is calculated.
When was Re-Entry registered as a charity?
Re-Entry was registered with the Charity Commission for England and Wales on 9 January 1998 as charity number 1067323. It has been registered for 28 years.
Who runs Re-Entry?
Re-Entry is governed by a board of 4 trustees. The chair of trustees is ROBERT JOHN STEPHENSON. Trustees are legally responsible for the charity's governance and are listed in full on its profile.
Where does Re-Entry operate?
Re-Entry operates across 5 areas, including Dudley, Sandwell, Staffordshire and 2 others. The full list is shown on its profile.
Is Re-Entry a registered charity?
Yes — Re-Entry is a registered charity in England and Wales, charity number 1067323.
Details
13 Church Street
STOURBRIDGE
West Midlands
DY8 1LT
Registry Information
Is this your charity?
Add your logo, photos and tell the story behind the numbers in your own words. Free for our first 50 launch partners.
Claim this listing Learn more about premium profilesOther notable Beneficiary group charities
Major UK charities in the same primary sector, drawn from the curated priority cohort.
Trustees
Sectors & Classifications
Data & trust
- Register data refreshed
- 14 May 2026
- Methodology
- How metrics are calculated