All staff working for the NHS in England on Agenda for Change contracts should expect to see the 5.5% pay increase implemented in their October pay. The pay award will be backdated to 1 April 2024.
The RCN has reported to the UK government that members in the NHS in England have rejected the 2024/25 pay award. The government must now demonstrate its commitment to nursing and show that its NHS reform plans will transform nursing as a central part of improving patient care.
This was not a ballot on action, it was a consultation regarding a pay award. By law, a statutory ballot by post would be required to authorise industrial action. RCN members took action over six months from December 2022 and this vote has seen even greater levels of engagement. It is up to the government to demonstrate that another RCN ballot on strike action is not needed for nursing staff to see the change they expect and deserve.
This consultation was not a ballot on strike action, it was a consultation regarding a pay award. By law, a new statutory ballot by post would be required to authorise industrial action. It is up to the government to demonstrate that another RCN ballot on strike action is not needed for you to see the change you expect and deserve.
The result of the consultation shows the strength of feeling amongst our members that fundamental change is required for the nursing profession in the NHS and beyond.
The government must now demonstrate its commitment to nursing and show that its NHS reform plans will transform nursing as a central part of improving patient care.
Nursing staff need to see pay justice and the profession respected for the essential and safety-critical role they play in the NHS and all health and care settings.
Nursing staff do not feel valued and are looking for urgent action. Their concerns relate to understaffed shifts, poor patient care and nursing careers trapped at the lowest pay grades in an outdated structure that can no longer expertly evaluate modern nursing. RCN members need to see that the government’s reform agenda will transform their profession as a central part of improving care for the public.
A 5.5% consolidated pay award for all directly employed NHS staff employed on Agenda for Change terms and conditions was announced by the Westminster government on 29 July 2024, it will be backdated to 1 April 2024. The 5.5% pay increase should have been reflected in your October pay, with back pay to be paid in the November pay round.
The increase to salaries and intermediate pay point for bands 8 and above is expected to be implemented with retrospective pay in November salaries. You can find more detail and some scenarios of how the intermediate pay point will be implemented from NHS Employers.
If you have not received the award, there is an error in how your pay increase has been implemented or you’ve been assigned an emergency tax code please contact employer’s payroll or People/Human Resources Department.
The Westminster government accepted the recommendation of the NHS PRB, to add an intermediate pay point at each of bands 8a, 8b, 8c, 8d and 9 to which staff should progress after two years at the respective band.
This recommendation has also been ratified by the NHS Staff Council, and NHS Employers expects the intermediate pay point increase to salaries and retrospective pay (backdated to 1 April 2024) to be paid in November salaries. You can find further detail on these changes here.
You are the RCN and if you want to be a part of nursing activism and lead on the issues that matter most to you, you can find out more about activism and organising, our forums and networks and how to become an RCN rep.
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We encouraged every eligible RCN member to vote in the consultation. Each eligible member had one vote.
Your vote is secured with your member details, and could only be cast when logged in. If you attempted to vote multiple times, only your last vote was counted.