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NHS services · 7 min read

NHS Pharmacy First in 2026: what it is, how it works, and why the evidence says it's working

Two years on from launch, Pharmacy First is quietly changing how millions of people in England access NHS care. Here's a plain-English guide to what it covers, who can use it, and what to expect.

A pharmacist in a white coat stands behind a pharmacy dispensing counter, medicine shelves behind them — Hyde Park Pharmacy, Leeds

If you've got a sore throat, a UTI, earache, or shingles, there's a good chance you don't need to wait for a GP appointment — you can walk into a pharmacy and be seen today, for free, under the NHS Pharmacy First scheme.

Pharmacy First launched in England in February 2024. The idea is straightforward: train and accredit community pharmacists to diagnose and treat seven of the most common minor illness presentations that were flooding GP surgeries, and let patients access that care directly at the pharmacy counter — without a referral, without waiting three weeks, and without cost.

By 2026, the scheme has become well-established. Millions of consultations have been completed, GP practices have reported a measurable reduction in minor-illness demand, and patients are consistently rating the experience highly. This article explains what Pharmacy First actually covers, what happens during a consultation, and why the evidence so far points firmly in the right direction.

Hyde Park Pharmacy is an NHS Pharmacy First provider. We offer same-day Pharmacy First consultations at our Leeds LS3 premises and also accept referrals from local GP surgeries. No appointment is needed — just walk in or call ahead if you prefer.

What is Pharmacy First?

Pharmacy First is an NHS-funded advanced service that allows accredited community pharmacists to assess, diagnose, and treat patients presenting with seven specific conditions. Before it existed, a patient with a UTI or an ear infection would typically have to book a GP appointment (often days away), be prescribed antibiotics over the phone or in person, then collect them from the pharmacy — a process that could take days.

Under Pharmacy First, the same patient can walk into their local pharmacy, have a face-to-face clinical assessment with a pharmacist, and leave with a prescription or supply of medicine if clinically appropriate — all in a single visit.

The service is commissioned and paid for by NHS England. Patients pay nothing. If you're exempt from prescription charges (under-16s, over-60s, those with certain conditions, low-income exemptions), the medicine is free. If you would normally pay the prescription charge, the standard £9.90 charge applies — the same as any NHS prescription.

The seven conditions Pharmacy First covers

Pharmacy First — the 7 clinical pathways
No GP referral needed. Click any condition to learn more or start your consultation.

Age and eligibility criteria apply. The pharmacist assesses each patient individually. © Hyde Park Pharmacy 2026.

Here's a brief breakdown of each condition and the key eligibility rules:

Condition Who's eligible What the pharmacist can supply
Sinusitis Aged 12 and over Antibiotics if clinically indicated (symptom scoring applied)
Sore throat Aged 5 and over Antibiotics where FeverPAIN score warrants them; OTC advice otherwise
Acute otitis media (earache) Aged 1–17 Antibiotics if clinically indicated; pain management guidance
Infected insect bite Aged 1 and over Antibiotics for secondary bacterial infection (not allergic reactions)
Impetigo Aged 1 and over Topical or oral antibiotics depending on extent of infection
Shingles Aged 18 and over Antivirals (within 72 hours of rash onset for best effect)
Urinary tract infection Women aged 16–64 Antibiotics if UTIS score and dipstick confirm infection

One thing worth flagging on shingles: antivirals must be started within 72 hours of the rash appearing to be most effective. If you think you have shingles, come in that day — don't wait for a GP appointment that might be days away. This is exactly the kind of situation Pharmacy First was designed for.

What GPs and the NHS say: does it work?

Pharmacy First was not without sceptics when it launched. Some GP organisations raised concerns about the pace of rollout, the adequacy of IT links between pharmacy and GP systems, and whether the referral pathway would work smoothly in practice.

Two years on, those concerns have largely given way to cautious — and in many quarters, enthusiastic — endorsement.

NHS England's early data showed that within the first months of launch, pharmacies were completing hundreds of thousands of consultations per week. Patients presenting at pharmacies were being seen same-day, antibiotics were being prescribed where clinically appropriate (and withheld where they weren't), and GPs were reporting a reduction in minor illness demand at the front desk.

A GP colleague's view (composite of feedback we've heard in practice): "The honest answer is it's working better than I expected. The patients coming back to us from Pharmacy First are either the ones who genuinely need a GP — more complex presentations, abnormal findings — or it's been handled appropriately and we're not seeing them at all. The duplication we worried about hasn't materialised in the way we feared."

Community pharmacists, for their part, have found that the clinical protocols are well-designed for the job. The FeverPAIN scoring tool for sore throat, the UTIS dipstick pathway for UTI, and the shingles antiviral criteria all align with the evidence base that pharmacists were already working from in their clinical training. The main adaptation has been in documentation, referral pathways, and the IT systems connecting pharmacy records to GP systems — all of which have improved substantially through 2024 and into 2026.

From a patient perspective, the feedback is overwhelmingly positive. Same-day access, no need to take half a day off work for a GP appointment, and the ability to have an antibiotic prescription generated on the spot if needed are benefits that matter, especially for working-age adults and parents of young children.

What about antimicrobial stewardship?

A legitimate concern raised when Pharmacy First launched was whether pharmacists would prescribe antibiotics more liberally than GPs — effectively creating a low-resistance pathway to antibiotics that might worsen antimicrobial resistance.

The evidence from the first two years suggests the opposite. The clinical protocols built into Pharmacy First are specifically designed with antimicrobial stewardship in mind. For sore throat, for example, the FeverPAIN tool means most patients are advised on self-care and don't receive antibiotics — the same outcome a well-resourced GP surgery would produce. For sinusitis, antibiotics are only recommended if symptoms have persisted beyond ten days or are severe. The pharmacist assessment is not a rubber stamp for antibiotics.

In fact, several analyses have suggested that pharmacists — trained specifically in medicines and their appropriate use — are, if anything, more conservative with antibiotic prescribing than time-pressed GPs operating on short appointment slots.

How to access Pharmacy First

You don't need a GP referral. You can simply walk into any pharmacy displaying the Pharmacy First logo and ask to be seen. The pharmacist will:

  1. Take a short medical history and ask about your symptoms
  2. Conduct a clinical assessment — this may include looking in your ears, throat or at a skin condition, and taking a urine dipstick for UTI
  3. Apply the appropriate clinical protocol for your condition
  4. Either supply medicine directly, recommend OTC products, or — if your presentation is outside the Pharmacy First criteria — refer you onward to your GP or elsewhere
  5. Send a summary of the consultation to your GP electronically (with your consent)

The whole process typically takes 15–25 minutes. You don't need to bring anything specific, though it helps if you know the names of any regular medicines you take.

GPs can also directly refer patients to Pharmacy First via the NHS referral pathway — so if your surgery calls and suggests you pop to the pharmacy, that's a referral under this scheme.

Who can't be seen under Pharmacy First?

Not everything falls within the scheme. Some presentations that look like Pharmacy First conditions are actually outside scope:

If you come in and your presentation is outside Pharmacy First, we won't just send you away. We'll point you to the right next step and, where possible, give you useful advice in the meantime.

Access Pharmacy First at Hyde Park Pharmacy

We're a registered Pharmacy First provider. No appointment needed — just walk in. If you'd prefer to call ahead or have a quick question before visiting, our team is here.

See our Pharmacy First service Call 0113 244 1551

This article is general information from a registered pharmacy team and does not replace personal medical advice. Clinical decisions under the Pharmacy First scheme are made by the pharmacist at the time of consultation, based on individual presentation. Always seek urgent medical attention for serious or worsening symptoms. Last clinically reviewed: 16 June 2026.

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