A man in a suit and tie stood at an open window, turned to look at a heritage blue plaque on a wall next to him
Robert Steele, Ms Steele's son, takes in the blue plaque honouring the life and work of his mother. © Historic England.
Robert Steele, Ms Steele's son, takes in the blue plaque honouring the life and work of his mother. © Historic England.

How to Make a Nomination

Propose a plaque by completing one of our online nomination forms. Here's what you need to know before you start.

This is your opportunity to get involved and suggest a person, group, or building to be honoured with a national blue plaque.

You can make a nomination by signing in to a Historic England account and completing one of the online nomination forms. Read the 'Make a nomination' section of this page to find out more.

Before you start, please check that:

  • The person you want to nominate has been dead for at least 20 years
  • If nominating a group, that it was formed at least 20 years ago and is no longer running
  • The proposed address is in England (but not in Greater London, which the English Heritage blue plaque scheme covers)
  • The suggested address has a strong and provable link to the nominated person or group
  • The suggested address survives in a form that the nominated person or group would recognise (we don't install plaques on sites of former buildings)
  • The general public will see a plaque on the proposed property
  • The proposed address is closely linked to the nominated person or group, but does not already bear their name (we do not, for instance, install plaques on birthplace museums. We also do not typically commemorate a person or group on a building that is also associated with many other people, such as a place of worship, school, or theatre)

For more information, read this page or see the eligibility criteria.

Before starting your nomination

All plaque proposals need to fit with the overall aims of the scheme and meet the eligibility criteria, so please read these before you start your nomination.

Key points to consider are:

  • Anyone nominated must have died at least 20 years ago. This is to help ensure that the decision about whether or not to shortlist a candidate is made with a sufficient degree of hindsight
  • The National Blue Plaque Scheme celebrates the relationship between people and place. For this reason, we only erect a plaque if there is a surviving building closely associated with the person in question and it has a meaningful, provable link to their life. It might be the house where they were born or lived during a significant part of their life. It can be anywhere in England outside Greater London
  • It is essential that national blue plaques can be seen easily by the public. As shown in the pictures below, we want as many people as possible to see them and be intrigued to find out about the person behind the plaque

Who to nominate

We are looking for nominations for inspirational people who have made an exceptional impact in their field, community or wider society, with an accompanying address for a building intrinsically linked to their life and achievements.

Some may be famous – like music icon George Harrison – while others may not be so well known but of significant national importance, like Daphne Steele, the first Black matron in the NHS.

This year, we are accepting nominations for duos, groups, organisations, and societies, as well as individuals.

As resources allow, nominations to commemorate buildings with wider historical associations will also be considered.

Researching your candidate

Our nomination process asks you to:

  • Explain why you believe the person you want to nominate deserves a plaque and how they meet the National Blue Plaque Scheme eligibility criteria
  • Provide a suggested address for the plaque and explain the nature of the link between the person you are nominating and the building. For example, were they born in England? Was this address a residence or workplace? Did they undertake work of particular significance whilst at this address?
  • Tell us how you know that the person you are nominating is connected to the proposed address

You could support your application by researching and then listing where you found your information. Examples of sources include:

For more detailed information on your proposed addresses, you could also look at sources such as:

  • Census returns
  • Electoral registers
  • Rate books
  • Local directories

You can find many of these sources available online on sites such as ancestry.com, which you may be able to use free of charge at many public libraries and local archives.

It would help us if you could supply as much information as possible about the proposed address, including dates of residence and any interesting details about the person's connection to the building.

Make a nomination

You can propose a plaque online during our annual nomination period.

For 2025, the nomination period starts on Friday 16 May and ends at midnight on Thursday 10 July.

We can only accept 1 application per person. Please read the eligibility criteria before you start.

To complete a nomination form, you must first create or sign in to a Historic England account. This will allow you to save information that you add to the form as you go along and complete the process at your own pace.

Using the button below will give you 3 categories to choose from:

  • Nominate an individual
  • Nominate a duo, group, organisation or society
  • Nominate a building with wider historical associations

Make a nomination

The nomination forms can also be accessed via the left-hand navigation of the 'Manage my Account' screen by clicking 'National Blue Plaque Nominations'. Here, you'll find your saved incomplete and submitted nominations.

What happens next?

Historic England will process applications once the nomination period ends on Thursday 10 July 2025.

We will aim to notify nominators on the outcome of their applications by the end of January 2026.

The National Blue Plaque scheme is very popular. If we receive a high volume of entries, it may take longer for us to contact you.

How does the selection process work?

We aim to install around 7 national blue plaques a year. The shortlisting and selection process is highly competitive as Historic England receives hundreds of nominations.

There is a 3-stage selection process:

Stage 1

Plaque proposals are assessed against the eligibility criteria.

Nominations that meet the eligibility criteria are then sifted with a particular focus on:

  • Evidence to support claims about the nominee's contribution to human welfare or happiness and/or their impact in their field, community or on society at large
  • Provable links to a surviving building associated with them. Any information you can list on your nomination form, highlighting evidence of the connection between the person and the place, would be very helpful
  • Existing commemoration

Stage 2

A longlist of candidates is then researched by Historic England's historians and presented to the National Blue Plaques Panel, an impressive and diverse group of academics and cultural commentators. They discuss and debate the proposed candidates to produce a shortlist of figures, who will then be researched in-depth by our historians.

Stage 3

Research into the candidate's life, their contribution to human welfare and happiness, and their address history is presented to the National Blue Plaques Panel, who decide if they should be approved for commemoration.

Other plaque schemes

Many other organisations run plaque schemes using criteria different from those of Historic England.

If your nomination for a national blue plaque is not selected, you could consider approaching other schemes run by civic societies, local authorities and organisations.

Your local council or borough archive may hold further information on specialist societies which support the installation of plaques and other forms of local commemoration.

You can look up existing plaques by visiting the Open Plaques website. Some local authorities also list plaques in their area.

Frequently asked questions (FAQs)

Nomination process

We have an annual call-out for nominations when we invite the public to submit suggestions for people they would most like to see commemorated with a national blue plaque.

This year, you can submit your nomination online from Friday 16 May to Thursday 10 July 2025.

We have aimed to make the form easy to use. Before you begin, please read the eligibility criteria. If you have all the information ready before you start, completing the form could take as little as 10 to 15 minutes.

Yes, the completed form will be emailed to you.

Our nomination process asks you to explain why you believe the person you want to nominate should be commemorated and to provide an address where you think the plaque should be installed.

We do not require physical documents at the nomination stage. However, it would be helpful if you could list sources of evidence showing how the figure in question meets the eligibility criteria and why you believe there is a connection between the person and the property you suggest as the plaque's site.

The proposed address should be:

  • In England, but not in Greater London, as the English Heritage scheme covers this area
  • Have a strong and provable link to the nominated person or group
  • Survive in a form that the nominated person or group would recognise (we don’t install plaques on sites of former buildings, for example)
  • Easily accessible, so that as many people as possible would see the plaque
  • Closely linked to the nominated person or group, but not a building that already bears their name, such as a birthplace museum
  • Not associated with many other people, such as a school, theatre, or place of worship

Historic England's National Blue Plaque Scheme celebrates people from all walks of life who have made a significant contribution to human welfare or happiness, and/or have made an exceptional impact in their field, community, or on society at large.

Some plaques commemorate famous people – like music icon George Harrison or influential ceramicist Clarice Cliff - while others honour those who perhaps aren't widely known but should be, like Daphne Steele, the first Black matron in the NHS.

All nominations must meet our eligibility criteria, so please read these before you complete your nomination form.

Requirements include:

  • The person you want to nominate has been dead for at least 20 years
  • If nominating a group, that it was formed at least 20 years ago and is no longer running
  • The proposed address is in England (but not in Greater London, which is covered by the English Heritage London blue plaque scheme)
  • The suggested address has a strong and provable link to the subject you are nominating
  • The suggested address survives in a form that the person being commemorated would recognise (we don't install plaques on the sites of former buildings)
  • The public would see a plaque on the proposed address

A significant contribution to human welfare or happiness means that the person's life or work, in any field, has had an exceptional impact on a community or society at large. This can be in many different areas.

For example:

  • Daphne Steele made history when she became the first Black matron in the National Health Service in 1964, inspiring others to follow her
  • George Harrison's music, songwriting, film and humanitarian work have inspired and helped people all over the globe
  • Clarice Cliff started work at the age of 13 in the Potteries in Stoke-on-Trent and went on to become one of the most influential ceramicists of the 20th century. Her vibrant, creative designs transformed homeware in the interwar years, bringing modernity to the kitchen table
  • Cary Grant, the working-class boy from Bristol who became one of the brightest movie stars in the golden age of Hollywood, entertained millions through a film career spanning 4 decades and ranging from action thrillers to screwball comedies

You can find out more by reading our eligibility criteria page.

You can't submit a nomination for an address in Greater London via Historic England and the National Blue Plaque Scheme.

English Heritage runs the blue plaque scheme in the capital. For more information, please visit the English Heritage website.

No, as we cannot install plaques on the sites of former buildings.

The National Blue Plaque Scheme celebrates the relationship between people and place. For this reason, we only erect a plaque if there is a surviving building closely associated with the person or group and it has a meaningful, provable link to their life.

Selection process

We will process applications once the nomination period ends on Thursday, 10 July 2025.

We will aim to notify nominators of the outcome of their applications by January 2026.

The National Blue Plaque scheme is very popular, so if we receive a high volume of entries, it may take longer for us to contact you.

We aim to install around 7 national blue plaques a year. The shortlisting and selection process is highly competitive as Historic England receives hundreds of nominations.

There is a 3-stage selection process:

Stage 1: Plaque proposals are assessed against the eligibility criteria.

Nominations that meet the eligibility criteria are then sifted and prioritised with a particular focus on evidence to support any claims about the proposed person, provable links to a surviving building associated with them and levels of existing commemoration.

Stage 2: A longlist of candidates is then researched by Historic England's historians and presented to the National Blue Plaques Panel, an impressive and diverse group of academics and cultural commentators. They discuss and debate the proposed candidates to produce a shortlist of figures, who will then be researched in-depth by our historians.

Stage 3: Research into the candidate's life, their contribution to human welfare and happiness, and their address history is presented to the National Blue Plaques Panel, who decide if they should be approved for commemoration.

The Historic England National Blue Plaque Scheme runs alongside the English Heritage scheme for London. It is essentially 1 programme delivered by 2 organisations; both schemes use the same eligibility criteria.

After the selection process

The shortlisting and selection process is highly competitive as Historic England receives hundreds of nominations. T

There are many reasons a nomination may not be shortlisted. For example:

  • The highly competitive nature of the scheme and the number of outstanding candidates nominated for commemoration
  • The proposed candidate's historical significance may not be sufficiently clear
  • The connection to a surviving building may not be strong enough, or the property may not survive in a form that the person being commemorated would recognise
  • A plaque on the building would not be visible to the public
  • There is already a high level of commemoration

We plan to install around 7 plaques a year. If the panel selects your nomination, we will get in touch and explain the next steps.

The plaques are handmade by dedicated craftspeople and are made of blue ceramic. They take around 2 months to make, and each one is unique.

It can take up to 2 years for a plaque to be installed once a candidate has been shortlisted.

Although this may sound like a long time, it's because we go through a rigorous process of assessing the candidate, verifying potential addresses, and obtaining the relevant permissions to install a plaque on a building.

Not necessarily. We ask for a suggested address to ensure that there is a possible plaque site.

However, if your candidate is shortlisted, we will research all possible addresses connected to them to determine the most suitable option. There is no guarantee of a plaque in a particular location.

You can propose a plaque online during our annual nomination period. For 2025, the nomination period starts on Friday 16 May and ends on Thursday 10 July.

If you miss the window for 2025, you will have another opportunity in 2026.

Contact us

National Blue Plaque Scheme