Revealed: 2024/25 contract cash uplift already paid

Following this week’s announcement of the long-awaited pharmacy funding deal, C+D has learned that contractors have already received the additional £106 million in retrospective funding for 2024/25.

exclusive
Close-up shot of pills with stamped pound sterling GBP symbol on them
Contractors have already received the extra £106m in retrospective funding for 2024/25

Earlier this week, the Department of Health and Social Care (DH) and Community Pharmacy England (CPE) announced a retrospective increase in funding for 2024/25 under the new pharmacy funding deal.

They said that they had agreed an uplift in funding of £106 million (4.1%) to £2.698 billion for the financial year that ended this week (March 31) to “cover the activity delivered by the sector” in that period.

But it remained unclear how the cash would actually reach contractors.

Read more: BREAKING: New 2025 CPCF funding deal - uplift revealed

Now, C+D has learned that pharmacy contractors have already received the additional sum earmarked for retrospective funding for 2024/25.

A DH spokesperson said that the government has paid contractors £106m more than the original contract amount of £2.592bn for work done in 2024/25.

It has now agreed to include this extra amount in the official funding for 2025/26 and future years, they told C+D.

Read more: Funding breakdown: Write-offs, service payments and activity fees

A CPE spokesperson also told C+D that the DH committed to paying for actual activity during the year at drug tariff rates.

The sector delivered services to the value of £106m more than the original contract amount - meaning contractors have already received the additional money as payments for the services they delivered, they added.

And they reiterated that the government would consolidate this additional sum into the 2025/26 position.

“Not profitable”

The new pharmacy deal represents an 18.6%, or £481m, increase on 2023/24 sector funds – which had stayed at a fixed rate of £2.592bn since a five-year contract was agreed in 2019 – and will see funding for 2025/26 rise to £3.073bn.

The DH also announced that it would fund an additional £215m for Pharmacy First and other primary care access recovery plan services “to enable the service to continue to grow”.

And it said it would write off £193m of “historic medicines margin over delivery” debt that was “primarily accrued” by pharmacists during the pandemic.

Read more: New Pharmacy First cash, bands and thresholds agreed

It comes after the economic review of the pharmacy sector, which was finally published last week, found that “around 47% of pharmacies were not profitable in their last accounting year”.

The analysis estimated that the “full economic cost” of providing NHS pharmaceutical services in England was “in the range of £4.397-5.730bn” in the 12 months to March 31 2024”.

And it concluded that 99% of pharmacies in England are funded at less than this, meaning they are “not sustainable in the long-run”.

Check the C+D site for the latest coverage on this developing story

Sign in or register for free

Molly Bowcott

Read more by Molly Bowcott

Molly Bowcott joined C+D as a digital reporter in October 2024 after graduating from a master’s in journalism at City, University of London. She previously worked as a news reporter at the U.S. Sun, covering business and politics, among other things.

Latest from Funding

PDA releases ‘six-step test’ for the next funding contract

 
• By 
 • comment

It assesses whether the next funding contract will support pharmacists, keep patients safe, and offer long-term sustainability.

NICs hike: Has anything changed for pharmacies post contract?

 
• By 
 • comment

Last week saw the funding deal finally drop, and while pharmacies were waiting to see if the contract came with a funding allocation for this month’s NICs hike, they were left disappointed. So what does this mean for the sector now?

Govt to ‘streamline’ NHSBSA claims via ‘up to’ £8m IT budget

 
• By 
 • comment

‘Up to’ £8 million is set to be spent on pharmacy “digital developments” over the next year, the Department of Health and Social Care (DH) has announced.

More from News

Assisted dying: Pharmacists’ voices are ‘missing’ from dialogue

 
• By 
 • comment

Experts have long been calling for pharmacists to be able to conscientiously object to taking part in the assisted dying process, but one researcher argues that pharmacists’ voices are “missing” from this dialogue.

sponsored

Tisserand elevates health and wellness routines with new duo kit launch for April 2025

 • comment

Tisserand, the UK’s leading essential oil brand, is launching its new Wellbeing Routine kits this April 2025 to help capitalise on key wellness trends.