27 May 2025
The UK government has announced the NHS pay rise for 2025/26 under the Agenda for Change (AfC) framework. Whether you're a nurse, healthcare assistant (HCA), paramedic, or allied health professional, you’re set to receive a pay boost.
But how much more will you actually earn? Will the increase beat inflation? And how will it affect your pension contributions or take-home pay?
In this updated guide, we break down:
Group | Confirmed Pay Rise |
---|---|
Agenda for Change staff (England) | 3.6% consolidated |
General Practice Nurses & GPs | 4% |
Junior Doctors (England) | 5.4% (includes £750 payment) |
NHS Scotland staff | 4.25% |
Most NHS staff in England covered by Agenda for Change will receive a 3.6% consolidated pay rise, backdated to April 2025.
Several health unions, including UNISON, have called the deal “modest,” citing continued pressure from rising living costs and over a decade of below-inflation increases.
"This modest uplift won’t repair the deep cracks caused by years of real-terms pay cuts." — UNISON
Here’s what NHS staff in England will earn after the 3.6% increase is applied:
Band | Typical Roles | 2024/25 Salary | 2025/26 Salary | Increase |
---|---|---|---|---|
Band 2 | HCA, Porter, Cleaner | £23,254 | £24,091 | +£837 |
Band 3 | Senior HCA, Support Worker | £23,700–£25,594 | £24,553–£26,517 | +£853–£923 |
Band 4 | Assistant Practitioner | £25,266–£27,891 | £26,176–£28,892 | +£910–£1,001 |
Band 5 | Nurse, Physio | £28,039–£34,581 | £29,046–£35,826 | +£1,007–£1,245 |
Band 6 | Senior Nurse, Paramedic | £34,780–£41,995 | £36,033–£43,506 | +£1,253–£1,511 |
Band 7 | Ward Manager | £42,809–£48,927 | £44,350–£50,690 | +£1,541–£1,763 |
Band 8a | Matron, Clinical Lead | £52,226–£58,972 | £54,110–£61,112 | +£1,884–£2,140 |
Band 8b | Head of Department | £60,324–£70,417 | £62,488–£72,948 | +£2,164–£2,531 |
Band 8c | Divisional Director | £71,341–£83,874 | £73,905–£86,898 | +£2,564–£3,024 |
Band 8d | Director of Operations | £81,986–£97,489 | £84,934–£100,999 | +£2,948–£3,510 |
Band 9 | Executive Director | £95,525–£111,703 | £98,980–£115,726 | +£3,455–£4,023 |
High Cost Area Supplements (HCAS), also known as London Weighting, remain unchanged in percentage terms but are now applied to your new base salary:
Area | % Uplift | Min Extra | Max Extra |
---|---|---|---|
Inner London | 20% | £5,610 | £8,465 |
Outer London | 15% | £4,716 | £5,941 |
London Fringe | 5% | £1,303 | £2,197 |
Here’s how the 2025/26 increase affects take-home pay for a newly qualified Band 5 nurse, before pension/student loan deductions:
Year | Gross Salary | Est. Net Pay | Monthly Take-Home |
---|---|---|---|
2024/25 | £28,039 | ~£22,200 | ~£1,850 |
2025/26 | £29,046 | ~£23,000 | ~£1,915 |
Change | +£800 | +£65/month |
💡 Use our Take Home Pay calculator for accurate salary calculators based on your tax code and pension contributions.
Not quite.
With CPI inflation in early 2025 sitting between 3%–4.5%, the 3.6% pay award roughly matches inflation but doesn’t outpace it. That means:
"Most NHS workers are earning 5–15% less in real terms today than in 2010." — Nuffield Trust
Yes, for some.
The pay rise might push you into a higher pension contribution tier, meaning:
Example:
A Band 5 nurse moving from £28,000 to £29,046 could shift from the 7.1% contribution tier to the 9.3% tier.
👉 Check your exact tier via NHS Pensions.
Major health unions, including UNISON, the Royal College of Nursing (RCN), and the British Medical Association (BMA), have criticised the deal.
Many unions are now calling for multi-year restorative pay deals that go beyond inflation-matching.
Even if the increase feels modest, here are 5 smart ways to stretch your income:
Most staff under Agenda for Change (England) will receive a 3.6% consolidated increase.
You’ll see the updated pay (with back pay from April to July 2025) in your August 2025 payslip.
£29,046 to £35,826 depending on years of experience.
No, but it applies to your new higher salary, so your total income increases.
Not really. It aligns with current inflation, offering little to no real-terms gain.
This 2025/26 pay award offers some short-term financial relief, but for many NHS workers, it still doesn’t go far enough. Inflation-adjusted wages remain below 2010 levels, and rising pension tiers may offset some of the gains.
That said, understanding how your salary changes, how take-home pay shifts, and how benefits evolve puts you in control—and helps you make the most of every pound you earn.