# How the NHS Is Funded and Why Its Finances Are Always in Crisis

> The NHS is the largest public health system in the world. Here is how it is funded, what that money buys and why the money always seems to run out.

*Section: News — By James Whittaker (SME Finance Writer) — Published December 13, 2025 — 2 min read*

Canonical URL: https://dailyjunction.org/news/how-the-nhs-is-funded
Tags: nhs, uk health, funding, healthcare, politics

## Key takeaways

- The NHS is primarily funded through general taxation and National Insurance contributions
- England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland each have their own NHS with different funding arrangements
- NHS England's budget has grown in real terms but not as fast as demand — driven by an ageing population
- The Wanless Review (2002) set out the long-term funding trajectory that subsequent governments have struggled to follow

## Where NHS money comes from

The NHS is funded primarily through general taxation (income tax, VAT, corporation tax) and National Insurance contributions. In England (which accounts for the majority of NHS spending), NHS England receives its budget through a parliamentary grant, allocated by HM Treasury. The annual budget is set in spending reviews, with funding pledges often expressed in real-terms percentage increases per year. Patient charges for prescriptions, dental treatment and eye tests account for a small fraction of total funding.

## Funding across the four nations

Following devolution, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland each have their own health services with their own budgets determined by their devolved legislatures. The Scottish Government abolished prescription charges in 2011; Wales followed in 2007. NHS provision and performance varies significantly between the four nations.

## The demand problem

NHS funding has grown in real terms for most of its history, but demand has consistently outpaced funding. The key drivers: an ageing population (older people use NHS services more intensively than younger people), advances in medical technology (more conditions are now treatable but at cost), rising incidence of long-term conditions (diabetes, obesity, mental health problems), and, more recently, the legacy of the pandemic (which both reduced capacity for planned care and created a significant backlog).

## The structural debate

The persistent underfunding debate involves two competing assessments. One view: the UK spends significantly less on healthcare as a proportion of GDP than comparable European countries (France, Germany), and the NHS is structurally underfunded. The counter-view: the NHS model — a comprehensive system free at point of use — is structurally efficient (low administrative overhead, strong preventive care incentives) and the problem is management and structure rather than total funding. The Wanless Review in 2002 modelled the long-term funding the NHS would need to be sustainable; subsequent governments have consistently committed to that trajectory while funding below it.

## Frequently asked questions

### How often is this content updated?

Our editorial team reviews and updates articles when significant new information is available.

### Where can I find more on this topic?

Browse related articles in our news section or use the search function to find specific topics.

## Sources

- [Reuters](https://www.reuters.com)
- [Associated Press](https://apnews.com)

---
Daily Junction — https://dailyjunction.org/news/how-the-nhs-is-funded
