Drawing on a unique survey of 2,774 adults who self-identified as having experienced a change in their religious belief, this report presents the most detailed picture to date of how, why, and in what direction Britons are moving between faiths, spiritualities, and non-belief
Each pathway reflects a different model of how Britons seek meaning, identity, and stability in an age of rapid cultural change. Taken together, the findings reveal that Britain is not secularising in a straightforward way. Instead, the country is undergoing a re-composition of belief, a shift away from inherited institutional structures towards personalised, practice-based, and wellbeingoriented forms of faith. Religion in contemporary Britain functions less as a set of communal obligations and more as an existential toolkit, an array of resources for healing, clarity, purpose, and identity. Far from fading, faith is being remade according to one’s own needs.
Below are the key findings from the report.