NHS Waiting Time Calculator

NHS Waiting Time Calculator | UK Treatment Targets
calculatorsonline.co.uk

NHS Waiting Time Calculator

Calculate how long you have been waiting for NHS treatment and check if you are within the official UK waiting time targets for routine, cancer, and mental health care.

🏥 NHS
⏱️ Waiting Time
🇬🇧 UK Targets
📋 Referrals

Referral & Treatment Details

Enter your referral date and treatment type to calculate your wait time

📋 Referral Details

The date the hospital received your referral.

The date you are calculating the wait up to.

🏥 Treatment Type

Select the category of treatment you are waiting for.

Waiting Time Calculation

Check your status against NHS official targets

🏥

Enter your referral date and treatment type above, then click Calculate Wait Time to see your status.

Official NHS Waiting Targets

The NHS has strict targets for how long patients should wait for treatment. Here are the maximum waiting times for the most common referral pathways in the UK.

Treatment Type NHS Target Maximum Wait
Routine Consultant-Led18 Weeks126 Days
Urgent Suspected Cancer2 Weeks14 Days
Mental Health RoutineStandard65 Days
Diagnostic Tests6 Weeks42 Days

NHS Waiting Times FAQ

Everything you need to know about NHS waiting targets, your rights as a patient, and how referral times are calculated.

The NHS 18-week waiting time target ensures that patients should wait no longer than 18 weeks (126 days) from the date of their first referral to the start of consultant-led treatment. This applies to routine, non-urgent conditions.

For urgent suspected cancer referrals, the NHS target is a maximum wait of 2 weeks (14 days) from the date of referral to your first appointment with a specialist. This ensures rapid assessment and diagnosis for potentially life-threatening conditions.

If your wait exceeds the NHS target, you have the right to contact your local Integrated Care Board (ICB) or patient advice and liaison service (PALS). They can help facilitate your treatment, potentially offering you the option to be treated at an alternative hospital or independent provider to reduce your wait.

The waiting time is calculated from the date the hospital or service receives your referral (Referral to Treatment or RTT start date) until the date your treatment begins or you are contacted to confirm your first appointment. Certain pauses, such as if you decline an offer of treatment, may stop the clock.

The NHS has a target that 75% of patients referred to specialist mental health services should begin treatment within 18 weeks. Additionally, there is a stricter standard that patients experiencing early intervention in psychosis should begin treatment within 2 weeks, and routine mental health treatment should begin within 65 days.

Similar Posts