The 2026/27 GMS contract, imposed on 1 April 2026, has brought about a number of changes impacting general practice in England. While the headline messages talk about investment and improved access, GPs are focused on the practical reality: cost pressures continue to rise, funding is being rerouted between streams, and new contractual requirements introduce delivery risk if systems and staffing aren’t aligned.
Despite raising significant concerns about the contract when it was published earlier this year, with a huge majority (98.9% of the c55%) voting to reject it in the BMA referendum, GPs will now need to consider how they can navigate the contractual requirements and remain financially stable. Practices should prioritise cashflow forecasting, contract-year modelling, management accounts, budgeting/reforecasting, funding reconciliation and workforce affordability planning.
These changes redistribute funds and introduce new delivery requirements that can create financial volatility. To protect stability, practices will need to:
By creating a 12-18 month rolling cashflow forecast - with income streams (Global Sum, QOF, enhanced services, reimbursements, PCN funds etc) and practice costs/staff and locums - and running best, expected and worst-case scenarios, you can spot ‘pinch-points’ early and plan accordingly.
Reconcile, evidence and optimise every income stream. By tightening recall processes, clinical coding and payment reconciliation, you can maximise funding entitlements, while strengthening your governance, data and reporting. If income is shifting into QOF rather than enhanced services, the goal is to be operationally equipped to earn back what has been recycled, but ensure the reward is worth the cost investment first.
Ensure your budget reflects real staffing plans, expected pay pressures and non‑pay inflation. Reforecast this quarterly (or monthly if volatile) and agree trigger points such as when locum spend or overtime exceeds the plan.
With the new practice‑level GP reimbursement scheme (details yet to be published) and relaxed ARRS GP rules, workforce planning needs to be more deliberate than ever. This will protect partner drawings and avoid mid-year reactive decisions. Your workforce plan needs to match GP capacity to demand (with a key focus on the requirement for urgent same-day access) without destabilising cashflow. The right mix of partner, salaried staff, locums and ARRS is key, taking into account recruitment timescales and session planning, as well as how GP reimbursement funding will be used.
To meet the requirements of clinically urgent same-day requests and uncapped online consultation volumes without destabilising finances, set clear triage definitions and ensure consistent clinical decision‑making. Build demand “buffers” - protect duty‑doctor capacity, implement escalation pathways, and review admin workflows to stop urgent demand spilling into overtime.