UK: More than a quarter of hospitals increase car parking charges
UK: More than a quarter of hospital trusts have increased car parking charges for patients and visitors, according to new data.
Hospitals in England make millions of pounds every year from parking, which is free for most people in Northern Ireland, Wales and Scotland.
Data from 197 hospital and mental health trusts found that while some have decreased prices, 28% have upped charges, some by over 100%.
A patients’ group hit out at the “alarming” rise in fees, branding them a “tax on the sick”.
Stockport NHS Foundation Trust and the Royal Marsden cancer hospital in London charged patients 100% more in 2010/11 than 2009/10.
They increased prices from 50p an hour on average to �1 an hour.
United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust upped prices 112%, from 67p an hour to �1.42.
Most Read
- 1 Most desirable places to live in Ipswich according to estate agents
- 2 Jailed in Suffolk: The criminals locked up so far in 2022
- 3 Plans for 440 homes and visitor centre in Ipswich Garden Suburb submitted
- 4 OPINION: Free sporting activities for children return to Ipswich this summer
- 5 Woman 'froze' after seeing masked men with machetes in Ipswich
- 6 Ipswich man charged with string of sexual offences
- 7 Ipswich Music Day 2022: All you need to know
- 8 Missing 12-year-old girl from Ipswich found safe
- 9 Ipswich singer to perform UK festival tour after scoring club hit
- 10 Designer handbag stolen after car window smashed in Ipswich
North West London Hospitals NHS Trust charged �1.58 an hour on average, up 81% on the 88p it charged the year before.
Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust charged patients 200% more in 2010/11 than 2009/10, increasing prices from 25p an hour on average to 75p an hour.
The figures, analysed by data company SSentif, are provided to the NHS Information Centre by NHS trusts.
Only 16% of trusts reduced their average hourly parking charge for patients and visitors, with 54% making no concession and 28% increasing their charges.
Overall, car parks in hospital trusts in the South West were the most affordable, at an average of 52p per hour.
London and the South East had the most expensive charges at an average of �1.02 per hour.
Separate analysis found some trusts are charging much more than the national average (77p) for an hour’s hospital parking, based on the average from a three-hour stay.
Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust charges �2.50 an hour on average, with a minimum of �3.50 for up to one hour.
Ashford and St Peter’s Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in Surrey charges �2 for the first hour, �3 for one to hours and �4 for two to three hours.
Royal Surrey County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust charges �2 for up to two hours and �4 for two to four hours.
Dorset County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust charges �1.60 for one hour, �2.10 for two and �4.20 for up to four.
In September 2010, the Government announced it would not back a pledge made by Labour to scrap car parking charges in England’s hospitals, saying the plan could not be justified.
NHS trusts make more than �100 million a year from charging patients and visitors, although the Department of Health has stopped collecting the figures centrally.