Waiting list and long waits continue to fall in Wales

Waiting times in Wales have fallen to their lowest level in almost three years.

Waiting room (c) ManuelTheLensman/Unsplash

Waiting room (c) ManuelTheLensman/Unsplash

The overall waiting list fell for the seventh month in a row in December. It was 16,900 lower than November and is now at its lowest level since March 2023.

Long waits are also falling sharply. Fewer than 5,300 people were waiting more than two years for treatment in December, down by around 1,600 from November. That's a 92.5% reduction from the peak in March 2022.

The latest figures show the Welsh Government's £120m plan to cut long waiting times, and the overall waiting list is working, as more outpatient appointments, tests and operations are provided across Wales.

First Minister, Eluned Morgan, said: 'I made a commitment to the people of Wales to cut the waiting list and the longest waits. That's exactly what is happening.

'These aren't just numbers – they are real people having treatment in Welsh hospitals and clinics from hard-working and dedicated NHS staff. What they do matters enormously.

'It's important this momentum is kept up. We will continue to work hard every day alongside the NHS so everyone who needs it receives timely treatment.'

The average waiting time for treatment in Wales has fallen to 19 weeks, and the number of people waiting more than 36 weeks for treatment has also fallen to the lowest level since March 2021.

Provisional data for January 2026 suggests this positive progress will continue with further significant reductions in the overall waiting list and one-year waits.

In December, all health boards except Betsi Cadwaladr had either no one waiting longer than two years or less than 1%.

Across Wales, just over 32,700 people are waiting longer than a year for their first outpatient appointment, the lowest figure since September 2020. Swansea Bay and Powys health boards have no one-year waits for a first outpatient appointment, while Hywel Dda has less than 1%.

The Welsh Government has invested in helping people get seen faster. This has already delivered more than 153,000 additional outpatient appointments across Wales, with more planned.

U-turn on autism and ADHD referrals pause

U-turn on autism and ADHD referrals pause

By Lee Peart 19 February 2026

Healthcare leaders confirmed the removal of a pause on autism and ADHD referrals.

NHS Lanarkshire welcomes new director of dentistry

By Liz Wells 19 February 2026

NHS Lanarkshire has appointed of Geraldeen Irving as its new director of dentistry, strengthening leadership for dental services across the region.

Women attending first NHS mammogram hits 10-year high

By Liz Wells 19 February 2026

Hundreds of thousands more women attended NHS breast screening last year and thousands more cancers were diagnosed early in England.


Popular articles by Liz Wells