Evidence

NHS Employers' evidence to the NHS PRB 2025/26

Read our 2025/26 evidence to the NHS Pay Review Body.

10 December 2024

Read PRB submission 2025/26 External link icon

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

  • 1. Competitive pay for entry-level roles: Establish a futureproofed plan to create and retain a sustainable competitive market position on pay for entry-level roles to align with planned changes to the statutory National Living Wage and the expected trajectory of Living Wage Foundation rates of pay (band 2 and closed spot salary for band 1).  

    2. Additional targeted action at the entry point of band 5, supporting the attraction, recruitment and retention priorities by supporting new graduates across all roles and professions to align with priorities in the NHS Long Term Workforce Plan (LTWP). 

    3. Pay incentives for promotion: Develop a sustainable and targeted plan for more appropriate pay increases to be received on promotion between the pay bands. This process to start with action to address the gaps between band 6 and band 7 and band 7 and band 8a. Further structural reform is required across the whole system, but it is recognised that this will need to be addressed over the longer term. 

    4. Pay progression: Identify options and agree a preferred approach and implementation plan to support future pay and earnings progression - particularly for graduate entry roles and pay bands - that is short of the additional responsibilities (and pay) shouldered on promotion. 

    5. Anomalies in unsocial hours payments: Targeted action to address anomalies created by the implementation of consolidated pay changes in 2023/24 and successive years of investment in base-pay changes to band 1 (closed) and band 2 in relation to unsocial hours premium payments.  

    6. Pay for apprentice roles: Introduction of a consistent national pay framework to govern the rate of pay for apprentices in the NHS (NB: this will need to assess the position for medical apprenticeships).  

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. 

View previous PRB submissions

  • Read the 2024/25 (PDF)

    Key messages

    • Employers continue to express their concerns about the impact of the delay of the pay award and the inability to implement this from its effective date of 1 April each year.  We recommend that the timetable in relation to the pay-setting process is adjusted, thereby enabling a return to prompt implementation and more timely payment of awards. Any pay award should be fully funded across the whole of the health sector and not just provider trusts.
    • The publication of the LTWP is a positive step forward in addressing the ways in which staff are recruited, trained and retained in the NHS. However, employers welcome more clarity on the sustainable longer-term funding commitments needed to deliver the priorities set out in the plan. The same applies to the new workforce strategy for adult social care in terms of government support and sustainable financial investment.
    • The position on entry-level pay in the NHS should be considered on a longer-term basis alongside the future trajectory of the National Living Wage, to ensure it remains competitive and sustainable and avoids the need for further temporary adjustments to be made.
    • The nursing and midwifery national profile review work is continuing. It has already noted that a considerable number of job descriptions have not been reviewed in recent years, resulting in out-of-date and inaccurate job descriptions where additional duties have been taken on and/or work procedures have changed over time. As a result, there is likely to be an increase in the number of requests to review job descriptions at an employer level. 
    • Offering flexibility across the NHS Pension Scheme for the entire workforce makes the scheme a stronger tool for reward, recognition and retention. We welcome conversations to explore the options around introducing greater flexibilities and how these could be implemented.
    • Staff engagement, health and wellbeing and workload pressures have been highlighted as key factors that affect the retention of staff. While pay is also a factor in why people leave their NHS career, to improve retention and achieve the goals set out in the LTWP, more action is needed to improve staff experience. 
  • Read PRB 2023/24 (PDF)

    Key messages

    • The additional £3.3 billion revenue budget funding announced in the recent Autumn Statement is welcomed, however, this needs to be backed up with a sustainable and longer-term financial settlement to enable the NHS to address the underlying challenges facing the health and social care system.
    • The current competitive labour market is adding to NHS employers’ workforce challenges around attraction, recruitment and retention, particularly in lower-banded roles where other sectors can offer competitive reward packages.
    • Employers are increasingly concerned about the impact of the delay of the pay award and the inability to implement this from its effective date of 1 April each year.
    • We strongly urge that every effort is made to get the pay award timetable back on track to support future annual pay award uplifts being implemented on time and on the effective date (1 April).
    • Base pay and take-home pay in the NHS are becoming an increasingly important issue with the rising cost-of-living pressures impacting on NHS staff. Increasing competition between sectors also means that base pay rates are becoming a recruitment and retention challenge for employers.
    • Pay in the NHS and across the public sector has also been falling relative to the private sector. This is shaping views of staff on the attractiveness of alternative employment offers for working outside of the NHS, even for relatively small and marginal differences. 

    In addition to the key messages above, there are some specific workforce challenges:

    • There are simply not enough people working in health and social care to meet rising levels of demand for services. While NHS workforce numbers have increased by 2.4 per cent (headcount) in the year to August 2022, employers have told us that this growth has not been sufficient to keep pace with rising demand on services.
    • High vacancies have impacted on service provision as employers cover vacant posts with agency staff and other temporary staff, which comes with significant financial impact. It can also create challenges in ensuring continuity of care.
    • In addition to increased demand, employers are dealing with a reduction in workforce capacity due to rising sickness absence rates. NHS staff were working under pressure even prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, but the pandemic brought increases in the amounts of pressure on NHS staff and has led to many staff experiencing symptoms of burnout.
    • For the NHS to fully recover long-term from the pandemic, tackle the waits for treatment for our patients, and support its staff, it will need the government to provide the necessary investment for an ambitious and sustainable long-term plan for the workforce.
  • Read PRB 2022/23 (PDF)

    Key messages

    • The ongoing effects of the COVID-19 pandemic continue to present the NHS with the biggest set of challenges that it has ever faced. Demand levels continue to rise and service delivery pressures show no sign of reducing.
    • A long period of funding at levels below the long-term average, combined with inadequate workforce planning and insufficient investment in training, have resulted in a workforce which is not sufficient in size and capability to deal with the multiple challenges the NHS (and social care) is facing.
    • There are not enough staff to meet demand in health and social care.
    • Recruitment and retention do not depend only on pay or wider reward. Employers believe it is important to create a culture and environment where people want to work; where they feel safe to raise concerns and to learn from mistakes; where employers listen to and empower their people, work hard to keep them safe, and ensure bullying and harassment is not tolerated.
  • Read PRB 2021/22 (PDF)

    Key messages:

    • The NHS Long Term Plan continues to set the future direction for the NHS in England and is the basis for a five-year funding programme up to 2023/24. While this provides some stability for longer-term planning, the overall level of investment is still lower than in previous years.
    • The NHS We are the NHS People Plan 2020/21 – Action For Us All , along with Our People Promise, sets out what our staff can expect from their leaders and from each other. It builds on the creativity and drive shown by our staff in their response, to date, to the COVID-19 pandemic and the interim NHS People Plan . It focuses on how everyone in the NHS must continue to look after each other and foster a culture of inclusion and belonging, as well as take action to grow the workforce, train staff, and work differently to deliver patient care.
    • The NHS faces the multiple challenges of rising demand for services, insufficient capital investment, tackling the causes of trust financial deficits and growing workforce shortages. While the NHS must focus on the immediate demands of the pandemic it must not become a reason for avoiding policy decisions on these critical longer-term issues.
    • Workforce shortages remain the highest concern for employers and the supply issues need to be addressed. Employers remain committed to retaining staff but the health and wellbeing of staff and the risks of staff burnout, especially considering the pandemic, coupled with gaps in the workforce make this a greater challenge.