- The Chancellor is extending the freeze on NHS prescription
charges next year to keep prescriptions under a tenner, saving
patients around £12 million next year.
-
announces cost
of a single prescription will remain at £9.90,
as she takes firm action to tackle the cost of living ahead of
next week's Budget
- The move is further evidence of the government's
commitment to keep bills down for working
people and ensure all patients can receive the
treatment they need.
The Chancellor has announced that NHS prescription
charges will remain frozen next year, which
will help millions
of hard-working people with the cost of living
and ensure patients have access to the care
they need.
Ahead of next week's Budget, confirmed that the cost
of a single prescription will be frozen at £9.90 –
saving patients around £12 million next year.
This will not only continue to support patients with the cost of
living but also help ensure that no patient places themselves at
risk by not taking their medication due to the cost of picking it
up.
It comes as the Chancellor sets out the fair choices she will
take at the Budget to deliver on the public's priorities to cut
NHS waiting lists, cut national debt and cut the cost of living.
Chancellor of the Exchequer,
said:
“No one should put their health at risk because they can't
afford their medication, and as the cost of living still puts
pressure on households I'm extending the cash freeze on
prescription charges.
“Since taking office, we've been committed to
fixing the NHS, and waiting lists are down by 230,000 over the
past year. At next week's Budget I will take the fair choices to
deliver what matters most to the
country: cutting waiting lists, cutting the
cost of living and cutting the national
debt”
At last year's Budget, the Chancellor took action to freeze
NHS prescription charges for the first time in three years and in
her efforts to ease the cost of living, this year the
Chancellor has decided to extend the freeze over the next
year.
Around 89% of prescriptions in England are already dispensed free
of charge to children, over-60s, pregnant women, and those with
certain medical conditions.
Three month and annual prescriptions prepayment certificates will
also be frozen for 2026/27 keeping costs low for those with a
regular need for prescriptions.
In addition to the freeze on charges, the NHS Low Income Scheme
offers help with prescription payments, with free prescriptions
for eligible people in certain groups such as pensioners,
students, and those who receive state benefits or live in care
homes.
Extending the freeze on prescription costs is part of this
Government's wider action to ease the cost of living, having
already rolled out free breakfast clubs, increased the National
Living Wage worth an extra £1,400 per year for millions of
working people and protected the pensions triple
lock.
Thanks to the choices of this Government, for the first time in
15 years waiting lists have begun to fall through record
investment and modernisation. The backlog has been
cut by more than 230,000 and the government has
met its promise of delivering more than 5 million extra
appointments since the election.
Next week's Budget will deliver on the Government's mandate for
change and the priorities of the British people: cutting waiting
lists, cutting the national debt and cutting the cost
of living.
It will be a Budget that builds a fairer,
more prosperous Britain with an economy that works for
everyone.
Notes to editors
NHS prescription charges apply in England only.
A 3-month prescription prepayment certificate (PPC) will be
frozen at £32.05 and a 12-month PPC will remain at
£114.50.
Groups exempt from prescription charges
include:
- Children under 16 and those in full-time education aged 16 to
18
- People aged 60 and over
- Pregnant women and those who have had a baby in the last 12
months
- People with specified medical conditions like diabetes or
cancer and who have valid exemption
certificates
- Those receiving qualifying benefits including Universal
Credit (with criteria)
- NHS inpatients
The freeze will also apply to NHS wigs and fabric supports -
these prices will remain at current levels:
- Abdominal or spinal support: £49.05
- Stock modacrylic wig: £80.15
- Partial human hair wig: £212.35
- Full bespoke human hair wig: £310.55
Patients on a low income, who do not qualify for an exemption,
can apply for help with health costs through application to the
NHS Low Income Scheme.