Wheatsheaf Court Care Home, Daventry

Reviewed by the carehome.page editorial team · Last updated 13 March 2026
Rating
Requires improvement
Beds
55
Type
Nursing
Inspected
Apr 2024
Address 44 Sheaf Street,Daventry, NN11 4AB
Beds 55
Type Care home with nursing

CQC Inspection Breakdown

Safe Good
Effective Requires improvement
Caring Requires improvement
Responsive Requires improvement
Well-led Requires improvement

About Wheatsheaf Court Care Home

Wheatsheaf Court Care Home is a care home providing personal and nursing care to up to 55 people. The service provides support to people with nursing needs, mental health needs and people living with dementia. At the time of our inspection there were 40 people using the service. The home supports people over 3 floors.

Source: CQC inspection report

Specialisms

Caring for adults under 65 yrsDementiaMental health conditionsCaring for adults over 65 yrs

About Wheatsheaf Court Care Home

Situated in the NN11 postcode district of Daventry, West Northamptonshire, Wheatsheaf Court Care Home operates as a care home with nursing focused on personalised, compassionate care. The home is operated by Interhaze Limited and can accommodate up to 55 residents. Following their most recent inspection on 06/04/2024, the Care Quality Commission rated Wheatsheaf Court Care Home as Requires improvement. Across the five inspection categories, the home scored Good for Safe; Requires Improvement for Effective and Caring and Responsive and Well-led. The home caters to a range of care needs, including caring for adults under 65 yrs, dementia, mental health conditions and caring for adults over 65 yrs. The service supports dementia, mental health, older people, younger adults. Regulated activities at the home include accommodation for persons who require nursing or personal care and treatment of disease, disorder or injury. The NN11 postcode area has 10 registered care homes with a combined 373 beds — so there are options to compare in the local area.

Finding the right care home is a deeply personal decision, and we hope this information helps you and your family feel more confident as you explore your options. Every person deserves care that respects their individuality, and the right home will feel welcoming from the moment you walk through the door.

Wheatsheaf Court Care Home is one of the care homes in West Northamptonshire — a local authority with 105 CQC-registered homes, 72 of which are rated Good or Outstanding.

Respite Care at Wheatsheaf Court Care Home

As a nursing care home, Wheatsheaf Court Care Home in Daventry can often provide respite care — short-term stays designed to give family carers a planned break while their loved one receives professional care. Respite placements typically last from a few days to several weeks, depending on need and availability.

Who might use respite care here?

Families caring for someone with dementia, physical disabilities, or complex nursing needs at home often use respite care to manage caregiver burnout, attend to personal health matters, or take a holiday knowing their loved one is safe and cared for. With 55 beds and nursing staff on-site, Wheatsheaf Court Care Home can manage residents with higher care needs during their stay.

How respite care works

Respite stays are usually arranged in advance through the local authority's adult social care team or directly with the home. Your relative receives the same level of care as permanent residents — meals, medication, activities, and staff support — for a fraction of the permanent weekly fee. Funding may come from the local council, your savings, or a combination. The home will need a recent care assessment and details of your relative's medical conditions and medication.

Questions to ask about respite

When contacting Wheatsheaf Court Care Home, confirm they accept respite placements, check their availability calendar (respite beds fill quickly in peak seasons), ask about their cancellation policy if your plans change, and whether they offer flexible lengths of stay or minimum-length requirements. It's also worth asking how they handle the settling-in period — some homes assign a key worker for respite residents to aid continuity.

Contact Wheatsheaf Court Care Home directly or speak with your local authority commissioning team to arrange a respite assessment.

Researching care homes in Daventry?

Get our free comparison checklist — the questions families wish they'd asked before choosing a care home.

Further Reading & Official Sources

We link to official and independent sources so families can verify the information on this page.

What to Expect When Visiting

When visiting a nursing care home, it helps to see the clinical environment in action alongside the day-to-day living spaces. A good visit should leave you feeling reassured about both the medical and emotional care on offer.

  • Try to visit at different times of day, including mealtimes, to see the home in action.
  • Speak with staff and, if possible, current residents or their families about their experience.
  • Ask about the nurse-to-resident ratio, especially during nights and weekends.
  • Check whether the home can manage any specific medical conditions or equipment needs.
  • Check whether outside spaces are secure and whether activities are tailored for people with dementia.

Questions to Ask When Visiting

It can be hard to know what to ask during a care home visit. Here are some questions tailored to Wheatsheaf Court Care Home's type of care that may help guide your conversation:

  1. 1 What medical conditions do your nurses have experience managing?
  2. 2 How quickly can a nurse attend to a resident in an emergency?
  3. 3 Are there regular GP visits, or do residents need to travel for appointments?
  4. 4 What is your approach to pain management and end-of-life care?

For a more complete checklist, see our guide to choosing a care home.

Official CQC Inspection Report

The Care Quality Commission last inspected Wheatsheaf Court Care Home on 06/04/2024 and rated it Requires improvement. The full report includes detailed findings on safety, staffing, and quality of care.

Read the full CQC report

What families typically look for

  • - Whether nurses are on-site 24 hours and their qualifications
  • - How the home manages medication and medical emergencies
  • - Staff-to-resident ratios, especially overnight
  • - Specialist dementia training and secure outdoor spaces

These reflect common priorities we see from families researching care homes. For personalised advice, we recommend visiting in person and speaking to current families.

Frequently Asked Questions

What medical conditions do your nurses have experience managing?

Wheatsheaf Court Care Home has nursing staff experienced in supporting people with caring for adults under 65 yrs and dementia. In the most recent CQC inspection on 06/04/2024, the home was rated Good for Safe care — a category that covers clinical training, medication management, and infection control. Ask the nursing team directly about any specific medical conditions during your visit.

How quickly can a nurse attend to a resident in an emergency?

CQC inspectors rated Wheatsheaf Court Care Home as Good for Safe care on 06/04/2024. The Safe domain covers emergency protocols, staffing ratios, and risk management. Ask the home about nurse-to-resident ratios specifically during night and weekend shifts, when response times are most critical.

Are there regular GP visits, or do residents need to travel for appointments?

Residents at Wheatsheaf Court Care Home typically remain registered with a local GP who can visit the home for routine and urgent appointments. As a nursing care home, on-site nurses handle day-to-day clinical care. Ask the home which GP surgery they work with and how specialist referrals are managed.

What is your approach to pain management and end-of-life care?

CQC inspectors rated Wheatsheaf Court Care Home as Requires Improvement for Caring on 06/04/2024. This domain specifically assesses how staff treat residents with compassion and dignity, including during palliative and end-of-life care. Ask the nursing team about their approach to pain management and whether they work with a local hospice or palliative care team.

What is the CQC rating for Wheatsheaf Court Care Home?

Wheatsheaf Court Care Home in Daventry is rated Requires improvement by the Care Quality Commission. The most recent inspection was on 06/04/2024. The home has 55 beds.

How many beds does Wheatsheaf Court Care Home have?

Wheatsheaf Court Care Home has 55 beds and operates as a care home with nursing in Daventry.

Location

View on Google Maps →

Helpful Guides for Families

Choosing care is a big step. These guides can help you feel more prepared.

Are you Wheatsheaf Court Care Home?

Display your CQC rating on your website. Free — no account needed.

Copy and paste this code into your website:

<a href="https://carehome.page/care-home/wheatsheaf-court-care-home-daventry/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" style="display:inline-flex;align-items:center;text-decoration:none;border-radius:8px;overflow:hidden;box-shadow:0 1px 4px rgba(0,0,0,0.18);font-size:13px;line-height:1.2;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,'Segoe UI',Roboto,sans-serif;"><div style="background:#d97706;color:white;display:flex;align-items:center;gap:6px;padding:10px 12px;font-weight:600;white-space:nowrap;"><svg width="18" height="18" viewBox="0 0 24 24" fill="none"><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="10" stroke="white" stroke-width="1.5" fill="none"/><path d="M8 12l3 3 5-5" stroke="white" stroke-width="2" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round"/></svg> CQC Requires improvement</div><div style="background:white;color:#1a3557;padding:10px 12px;display:flex;flex-direction:column;gap:1px;"><div style="font-weight:600;color:#1c1917;font-size:12px;">Wheatsheaf Court Care Home</div><div style="font-size:10px;color:#78716c;">Verified by <span style="color:#1a3557;font-weight:600;">carehome.page</span></div></div></a>
Last CQC inspection: 6 April 2024
Re-inspection overdue — was due: April 2025

Data from the Care Quality Commission, last updated March 2026. View on CQC website → How we use this data

0 homes saved