Does the NHS Work at Weekends?
Does the NHS Work at Weekends? A common question for patients is whether the NHS provides the same level of care on Saturdays and Sundays as it does during the week. The short answer is: The NHS...

As of the 2025/26 fiscal year, the planned budget for the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) in England has risen to approximately £203.4 billion.
When we look at the UK as a whole, including the devolved nations, the total public health expenditure is estimated at roughly £242 billion. With a UK population of approximately 68 million, the cost breakdown is as follows:
NHS Spending per Person: Approximately £3,550 per year.
Monthly Cost: This equates to roughly £296 per month for every man, woman, and child in the UK.
Regional Differences in Spending
Health is a devolved matter, meaning Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland manage their own budgets. Historically, spending per head is higher outside of England due to sparser populations and specific health needs:
Wales: Typically the highest spend per person (est. ~£3,800).
Northern Ireland & Scotland: Mid-range (est. ~£3,600 – £3,700).
England: Generally the lowest per-capita spend (est. ~£3,500), despite having the largest total budget.
If you broaden the definition to include Adult Social Care, local authority public health grants, and other government health bodies (like the UKHSA), the figure jumps significantly.
Total Healthcare Expenditure: Estimated at £285 billion for 2026.
Comprehensive Cost per Person: Approximately £4,190 per year.
This “total” figure reflects the reality that healthcare doesn’t just happen in hospitals; it happens in care homes, through community nursing, and via mental health support services funded by local councils.
To understand why the NHS costs “so much,” we have to look at the three biggest “budget eaters”:
1. Staffing (The Lion’s Share)
Approximately 45-50% of the entire NHS budget is spent on salaries. The NHS is one of the world’s largest employers, with over 1.5 million staff in England alone. Recent multi-year pay deals and the use of agency staff to cover vacancies have kept this cost high.
2. Pharmaceutical Bill
The cost of medicines is rising. In 2024/25, the NHS in England spent £20.9 billion on medicines (after rebates). By 2026, this is expected to rise further due to:
Specialist Drugs: Treatments for cancer and rare genetic conditions are becoming more effective but significantly more expensive.
NICE Thresholds: In April 2026, the “cost-effectiveness” threshold was increased to £25,000–£35,000 per QALY, allowing the NHS to fund more expensive, cutting-edge treatments.
3. “Bricks and Clicks” (Capital Investment)
In 2026, the NHS is undergoing a “digital and tech transformation.” The government has ring-fenced roughly £1 billion a year specifically for technology, including AI tools and the expansion of the NHS App.
If you ask three economists for the “cost of the NHS,” you might get three different answers. This is because the “NHS” isn’t one single thing. It includes:
Arm’s Length Bodies: Organizations like NICE (the drug watchdog) and the CQC (the inspector).
Public Health: Spending on vaccines and pandemic preparedness.
Health and Justice: Providing medical care within the prison system.
Armed Forces Health: Specialized care for veterans and active service members.
Depending on whether you include these “extra” categories, the final “per person” cost can fluctuate by hundreds of pounds.
No, not at all. Whilst the NHS remains “free at the point of use,” it is funded almost entirely through general taxation and National Insurance.
| Metric | Estimated Cost (2026) |
| Annual NHS Spend (England) | ~£203 Billion |
| Annual UK Health Spend | ~£242 Billion |
| Cost Per Person (NHS Only) | £3,550 |
| Cost Per Person (Inc. Social Care) | £4,190 |
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