The programme was designed and piloted in 2009 by social integration charity the Challenge. It was formally announced in 2010 by
Prime Minister David Cameron as part of the
Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition government's
Big Society initiative, and it was launched in 2011. When the scheme was launched critics expected it to be an unpopular and unsuccessful non-military version of
national service. Subsequently, however, it achieved cross-party support in
Parliament. A pilot took place in
Wales in 2014 and a report examining whether it duplicates or complements existing schemes was commissioned. Cameron urged the
Welsh Government to consider taking up the scheme and offering it across Wales. After the
2015 general election, the programme was continued under the Conservative government. In October 2016 Cameron, who had resigned as Prime Minister, became chairman of the NCS Trust's patrons' board. In the 2016 Queen's Speech it was announced that the scheme would be made permanent through the National Citizen Service Bill which was then introduced into the
House of Lords by
Lord Ashton of Hyde. The bill received
Royal Assent in April 2017 and the resulting National Citizen Service Act created a statutory framework for the programme. The scheme was made permanent through the National Citizen Service Act 2017. With cross-party support, NCS became a Royal Charter Body in 2018. In 2019, NCS created a network of Management and Delivery Partners for the 16 and 17-year-olds who took part in NCS. A Youth Voice Forum was also introduced, which won the Youth Friendly Employer Awards for Youth Voice in 2021. In 2023 the Youth Voice Forum grew into the Youth Advisory Board with 12 paid members aged between 18 and 24. During the Covid-19 pandemic, NCS provided digital programmes. However, setting the NCS up at arm’s length, because its users were likely to distrust a government programme, contributed to a lack of financial control in its early years. The
Institute for Government concluded that governance arrangements must be prioritised when a public body is established, so they must be correct from the off; independence and accountability should be carefully calibrated and any legislation, in particular, should be sufficiently flexible so as not to require updating for many years. In 2023–24, NCS provided away-from home youth development activities to 178,000 16 and 17-year-olds, through a supply chain of over 300 frontline youth organisations. In November 2024, it was announced that the programme would be wound down as part of the
Labour government's National Youth Strategy, with operations ceasing from March 27th 2025. ==Finances==