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Cost of private psychology soars in UK as practitioners turn away clients

about 24 hours ago
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The cost of seeing private psychologists is soaring and many are so busy they are turning away new clients, research has found.The prices psychologists charge have risen by 34% since 2022 and 12 sessions now cost an average of £1,550, compared with £1,152 just three years ago, according to a survey by myTribe Insurance, which tracks the cost of private medical care.Almost three in 10 (29%) psychologists are already treating so many patients that they are not taking on new ones, according to a survey of practitioners across the UK.The sometimes months-long delays people face in their efforts to access NHS mental healthcare and the record number of people seeking help, usually for anxiety or depression, appear to underlie the double-whammy facing patients of fee uplifts and closed waiting lists.Chris Steele, the founder of myTribe Insurance, said: “What we’ve seen over the last three years is a market that has become significantly more expensive for patients.

A 34% rise in consultation fees is not just a statistic.It shows how private talking therapies are moving further out of reach for many people who need them.”While many people are seeking help from a psychologist in private practice, the survey of 349 practitioners found that doing so can involve high prices, long waits and online-only care.The findings include:The average cost of a consultation in the UK has risen from £96 in 2022 to £129.20 in 2025.

Psychologists in England charge the most (£131) per session and those in Scotland the least (£124).Those in Scotland have the shortest waiting times (16.9 days), and people in Wales the longest (23.8 days).Leicester-based psychologists charge an average of £164 for a session, with London second on £160.

Colchester, Bath and Coventry charge £85, £99 and £100 respectively.Steele advised people seeking help to shop around and be prepared to accept online support provided far from their home in order to beat delays and pay less.The British Psychological Society, which represents 19,000 of the UK’s 27,774 psychologists, said they had increased their charges to help cover rises in the cost of living.A spokesperson said: “With the continuing postcode lottery for accessing NHS mental health support, increasing numbers are seeking out private treatment.This is causing private providers to reach capacity and [be] unable to take on new clients.

Demand is outstripping supply on all fronts.”Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionOne in three people waiting for NHS mental health care end up going private because of delays, according to research last year by Rethink Mental Illness.The rising cost of private psychology is “troubling”, and the trend towards private care could lead to a “two-tier system”, it said.Jeremy Bernhaut, the charity’s head of policy and influencing, said: “There are an estimated 1.8 million people waiting for [NHS] mental health care [in England] and the consequences are severe: suicide attempts, lost jobs and hospitalisation, which puts strain on the wider NHS.

”The number of people on the waiting list for support from NHS community-based mental health and learning disability services in England has risen from 1.56 million last year to 1.79 miillion.NHS England said more than a million people a year received help from its talking therapies services.A spokesperson said: “We plan to expand the service further, increasing the therapist workforce and reducing waiting times.

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Share your views on the fallout between Corbyn and Sultana over their new party’s membership portal

Disagreement surrounding a membership portal of the new leftwing party formed by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana has resulted in a split between the two.The former Labour leader said the site had been set up without approval, describing it as a “false membership system” that collected money and data without authorisation. He confirmed the party had referred the matter to the ICO and urged supporters to ignore an earlier email requesting funds and cancel any payments.Responding to claims from Sultana that she had been frozen out by a “sexist boys’ club” inside the party, Corbyn said late on Thursday that she had not been “excluded from any discussions”.Sultana rejected those claims, saying she acted because she was sidelined and frozen out of official accounts

about 10 hours ago
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Reform UK receives £100,000 donation from design firm that faced winding-up petition

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK has received a £100,000 donation from a design and architecture firm that faced a winding-up petition from the tax authorities earlier this year.The party, which is leading in the polls, has been raising money from a wider range of private sources in recent months, with its treasurer, Nick Candy, talking of targeting high net worth individuals both in the UK and in low-tax jurisdictions.Farage has also been challenged over his own tax affairs after it emerged his Clacton constituency home was bought by his partner, Laure Ferrari, in a move that meant a higher rate of stamp duty was not paid. Farage has said his partner bought the house with her own money for security reasons.It can now be revealed that the £100,000 donation was made in three tranches in June this year from a company called Interior Architecture Landscape, which was originally set up in 2013 by a British Virgin Islands-based company of the same name

about 12 hours ago
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Corbyn clashes with Sultana over membership portal as split emerges in new party

An extraordinary split has opened between Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana in the formation of their new leftwing party, with the former Labour leader confirming a referral to the Information Commissioner’s Office over an unauthorised membership portal promoted by his co-leader.Corbyn said the site had been set up without approval, describing it as a “false membership system” that collected money and data without authorisation. He confirmed the party had referred the matter to the ICO and urged supporters to ignore an earlier email requesting funds and cancel any payments.Responding to claims from Sultana that she had been frozen out by a “sexist boys’ club” inside the party, Corbyn said late on Thursday that she had not been “excluded from any discussions” and remained part of a process “rooted in inclusivity and mutual respect”.Sultana rejected those claims, saying she acted because she was sidelined and frozen out of official accounts

about 21 hours ago
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The Sunbed King stifles a yawn at Chequers while Keir twitches at the press | John Crace

It takes all sorts. Standing around under gun-metal skies watching soldiers isn’t many people’s idea of fun but world leaders are a different breed. No bit of pageantry and flattery goes unnoticed. So why not give Donald Trump the full Disney treatment he craves? After all, it wasn’t as if he was going to be allowed to stray outside the Windsor Castle compound and it was better than making the king sit indoors and watch Fox News.But if Wednesday was the softening up – “You’re great, you’re the best, the world would stop without you

1 day ago
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John Windle obituary

My friend John Windle, who has died aged 75, three years after a diagnosis of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, was a committed socialist for all his adult life and supported the successful campaign to elect Tony Benn as MP for Chesterfield, Derbyshire, in the fiercely contested byelection of 1984. John devoted much of his earlier life to supporting his local Labour party in Chesterfield and various community associations in Sheffield.Born in Chesterfield to Kathleen (nee Ashmore), a school cook, and Roy Windle, a steelworker, John attended the local grammar school and left aged 16 to work in administration at Chesterfield Tube Works, which produced weldless steel cylinders, tubes and forgings. He continued his education part-time, gaining an HNC in business studies at Chesterfield College, then a diploma in the same subject at Sheffield Polytechnic in the early 1980s, followed later by a master’s degree from the University of Hull in 1997.In 1980, John joined the management of the University of Sheffield students’ union (SUSU); in 1982 he was appointed its general manager, where he worked with six students (“sabbaticals”), who were given a year off their studies to take up paid roles within the union

1 day ago
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UK politics: Trump suggests Starmer use army to tackle migration and says Putin ‘really let me down’ over Ukraine – as it happened

Q: [From Jack Elsom from the Sun] To Trump, have you any advice for Starmer on immigration?Trump says he has got illegal immigration into the US down to zero.This was one of the issues that made him run for president.He says he told Starmer to stop it. They could use the military, he suggests. But it does not matter how – you have to stop it

1 day ago
recentSee all
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Pound slides after UK government borrowing jumps in August and insolvencies rise – as it happened

about 3 hours ago
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Overbaked prices? What Greggs’ sausage roll and Pret’s meal deal say about how much Britons will pay

about 3 hours ago
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Meta announces first Ray-Ban smart glasses with in-built augmented reality display

1 day ago
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Google DeepMind claims ‘historic’ AI breakthrough in problem solving

2 days ago
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World Athletics Championships 2025: Lyles and Jefferson-Wooden take 200m titles, Benjamin and Bol win 400m hurdles – live

about 3 hours ago
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Ireland v England: second men’s T20 cricket international abandoned due to rain – as it didn’t happen

about 3 hours ago