NHS Employers' evidence to the NHS PRB 2025/26
We have submitted our 2025/26 written evidence to the NHS Pay Review Body (NHS PRB). Our submission reflects the views of employers on the combined effect of the financial, economic and workforce challenges the NHS is continuing to face.
In our 2024/25 evidence to the NHS PRB, we set out a number of strategic pay priority areas that would help address some of the wider structural issues. Making progress in these areas has remained a priority for employers for the 2025/26 pay round.
This year, our evidence builds on these priorities, which support the views of employers to improve and futureproof the agenda for change (AfC) pay and reward structure.
Our evidence has been informed by a continuous cycle of engagement with a full range of NHS organisations about their strategic priorities, opportunities, and challenges. Below are some of the key messages.
Key messages
- Employers welcome the ambition and vision the government has set out in its response to Lord Darzi’s diagnosis. They share the commitment to build a health and social care system fit for the future around three clear priorities on the future delivery of care and services.
- The government’s planned agenda to ‘make work pay’ places a new emphasis on enhancing workers’ rights, with the aims to create a fairer and more equitable working environment for everyone. While many of the changes proposed by the government to take effect in 2026 are already part of NHS employment in whole or large part, there are several areas where employers across the NHS will need to think through the implications due to the minimum standards changes being proposed for all workers across the UK.
- Employers want to see that the ten-year plan and any refresh of the LTWP is matched with and supported by sustainable funding that builds on the investment to stabilise NHS finances.
- Employers share their concerns around the levels of workforce-related cost savings they are having to make to contribute to overall financial saving plans. Employers do not see this as being a sustainable set of measures to be operating in, in light of their obligation to provide safe and effective care.
- Industrial action has seen significant disruption to services, with waiting lists growing for access to services and care, and additional cost pressures for employers across the NHS. Relationships across the system and with trade unions have been put under enormous strain and pressure. Resuming normal partnership working relationships will require significant and continued efforts from all parties.
- There has been recognition of efforts made to return the pay setting process back to an April implementation date. As this will not be completed in time for April 2025, we strongly recommend that this progress continues to be prioritised and the timetable in relation to the pay-setting process is adjusted by the government as early as possible, thereby enabling a return to prompt implementation and more timely payment of awards.
- Challenges continue to be felt by employers across the NHS because of the interaction with the National Living Wage (NLW), salary sacrifice and net deduction schemes. This has resulted in organisations having no option but to prevent those staff, usually the lowest-earning staff, from accessing such an important part of the NHS total reward package which is having a huge impact on morale and motivation.
- Employers express continued concerned about the lack of ability to monitor job evaluation compliance with operational requirements or banding outcomes at either an integrated care system (ICS), regional or national level.
- Apprenticeships across the NHS continue to grow, with low dropout rates and high retention rates post-training, Employers believe a lack of post-training substantive posts counters the grow your own approach, and the appetite to offer apprenticeships. The current recruitment freezes faced by trusts have halted apprenticeship onboarding for 2024/25.
Employer strategic pay priorities
About the NHS NHSPRB
The independent NHS PRB makes recommendations to the government on pay awards for nurses, health professionals and other NHS staff. NHS Employers submits evidence to the review body, based on information collected from our policy board, and engagement with a wide range of stakeholders and employers. Final decisions on pay awards are made by the government.