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Government commits to 250 neighbourhood centres ahead of Budget

Government commits to 250 neighbourhood centres ahead of Budget
Bevan Goldswain / E+ / via Getty Images
By Beth Gault
25 November 2025



The Government has committed to opening 250 neighbourhood health centres, with 100 of these opening by 2030, with funding for these to include private and public finance.

It’s ‘neighbourhood rebuild programme’ will deliver a mixture of refurbishments to expand and improve sites over the next three years, and new-build sites that would have more of a medium-term timeline.

These neighbourhood health centres will be ‘one stop shops’, including GPs, nurses, dentists and pharmacists under one roof, with the most deprived areas prioritised first.  

The announcement comes ahead of the Autumn Budget, expected to be delivered by Chancellor Rachel Reeves tomorrow (26 November).

During the budget, Ms Reeves is also expected to announce £300m of new capital investment for NHS technology to support productivity.

Achieving 2% productivity growth will result in £17 billion savings over the next three years, according to the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC). This will then be reinvested into the NHS in England to improve patient care, it added.

The commitment to more than 100 of the neighbourhood centres being opened by 2030 follows on from a speech health secretary Wes Streeting made in July, where he aimed for 250-300 centres by 2035, and 40-50 over the course of this parliament.

The announcement mentioned several centres that would see refurbishment as part of the plans. These included Alfred Barrow Health Centre in Barrow-in-Furness, the Stockland Green and Summerfield Primary Care Centres in Birmingham and the Jubilee Gardens Centre in Ealing.

It added that the centres would be delivered through a combination of public-private partnerships and public investment to ‘build further evidence and compare different models of delivery’.

Health Minister, Karin Smyth said the centres would ‘fundamentally reimagine’ how the NHS works.

‘The Chancellor is rightly boosting investment in the NHS after we inherited a health service on its knees – with Lord Darzi’s investigation uncovering a £40 billion black hole. But funding will only get us so far. We need to use every measure available to us, which is why we’re leveraging in private investment to construct some of these centres, making the most of all expertise and every tool at our disposal,’ she said.

‘Our new NHS Rebuild approach will give the health service the investment it needs, repurposing and building a new generation of Neighbourhood Health Centres across the country. It will go hand in hand with reform and efficiency – ensuring proper value for money for taxpayers.’

Responding to the news, Ruth Rankine, director of primary care the NHS Confederation said: ‘The creation of a Neighbourhood Health Service has the potential to empower the NHS to deliver even more patient-first, joined-up care.

‘Working in partnership with local authorities, the VCSE sector and other partners is key to maximising the impact of these services, so it is welcome that the government is committed to ensuring local leaders have the flexibility to shape them to meet the specific needs of their communities. Bringing teams together under one roof can significantly improve services for the public and patients and provide more cohesive relationships between health and care professionals.

‘Innovative use of existing estate across the whole of the NHS as well as local authorities, with the potential for new private sector investment, will support the delivery of neighbourhood services and ensure patients can access them more easily closer to home.’

Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves added: ‘At the Budget I’ll set out how we’ll deliver on the country’s priorities to cut NHS waiting times, cut debt and cut the cost of living.

‘We’re driving down waiting lists by bringing healthcare to patients’ doorsteps and turbocharging NHS productivity with cutting-edge technology.

‘Our record investment, combined with ruthless efficiency and reform, will deliver the better care and better outcomes our NHS patients deserve.’

It comes as GP leaders are concerned that enhanced services funding will go to neighbourhoods.

A version of this story was first published on our sister title Pulse PCN.

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