Economy & Markets
6 min read
Norfolk Mental Health Trust Faces Potential £29m Funding Shortfall
BBC
January 20, 2026•2 days ago

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Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust projects a £29 million budget shortfall for 2026/27. This significant funding gap raises concerns about potential job losses and the impact on patient care quality. Union representatives fear the deficit will necessitate cuts affecting services, while the trust emphasizes maintaining care quality amidst financial challenges.
The Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust (NSFT) said it faced a multi-million pound budget gap.
New figures predicted a £29m funding shortfall for 2026/27.
Peter Passingham, the regional organiser for Unison, which represents staff at the trust, feared the deficit could put jobs at risk and affect services.
Jason Hollidge, chief finance officer at NSFT, did not comment specifically on any prospective job cuts but said the "quality of care" remained at the forefront of the trust's focus.
The trust was previously called one of the worst-performing mental health trusts in the county, having been in and out of special measures for nearly a decade.
It was removed from special measures in February 2025 and now has an overall rating of Good, with some areas rated as Requires Improvement.
For 2025/26, it had a planned income of £375m, but in a report to Suffolk County Council, the trust outlined financial challenges for the next financial year.
It said it would need to find £18.7m - or 5% - in efficiencies, was "facing a gap to break even" of £29.6m, and was looking to make "permanent efficiencies".
Passingham is concerned that this could mean jobs were axed.
"You just don't take £29.6 million out of the service and expect there to be no impact on jobs or services," he said.
"When you see that your employer is being required to make £29 million worth of savings, you can't help but wonder and worry if that means your job is going to go or get harder and worse."
He is also worried that a lack of funding could result in a poorer quality of care for patients.
"The trust really needs to focus on making sure that [patients are] getting consistent, good quality care," he said.
"It's having to find money, and that money is going to impact on the people's ability to deliver services and people's ability to do their jobs.
"Ultimately, you don't cut £30m out of the service and expect it to have no impact whatsoever on what patients receive."
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