NHS hospital league rankings have returned for the first time in over two decades, revealing the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in King’s Lynn, Norfolk, as the lowest performer, while Moorfields Eye Hospital in London leads the list. Health Secretary Wes Streeting said the tables aim to reduce the “postcode lottery” in care quality across England. Experts, however, warned that ranking hospitals as simply “good” or “bad” may mislead patients and influence where they seek treatment.
“We must be honest about the state of the NHS to fix it,” Streeting said. “Patients and taxpayers need to know how local services compare to the rest of the country.” The tables cover all 205 NHS trusts in England, including acute, mental health, community, and ambulance services. Updated every three months, the rankings use 30 different metrics, such as emergency department wait times, delays in planned treatment, financial health, and patient experience scores.
The Department of Health and Social Care described the publication as a “new era of transparency and accountability,” designed to raise standards, reduce care variation, and ensure high-quality NHS services nationwide. Top-performing trusts will gain more freedom from NHS England oversight, while lower-performing trusts will receive extra support to improve. League tables were first introduced as “star ratings” in 2000 under Tony Blair but were scrapped in 2010. Their revival reflects efforts to address declining public satisfaction with NHS services. A health department official said the tables aim to “identify challenges” rather than “name and shame” hospitals.
Thea Stein, chief executive of the Nuffield Trust, warned that including financial performance in the rankings limits their usefulness for patients choosing hospitals. She added that low scores could discourage patients from seeking care or staff from joining certain trusts. Small and remote trusts may be particularly disadvantaged, Stein noted. Danielle Jefferies, analyst at the King’s Fund, said hospital performance is complex. A trust may excel in emergency care but fall short in non-urgent or cancer treatments. She also noted that trusts managing multiple hospitals, such as Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, cannot be fairly represented by a single score.
Under the new system, all trusts are divided into four segments and given a score based on the 30 metrics, with a lower score indicating higher performance. Specialist hospitals dominate the top ranks, including Moorfields Eye Hospital, the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, Christie Cancer Hospital in Manchester, and Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital. Northumbria NHS Trust ranked as the highest-performing non-specialist acute hospital, followed by University College London. Internal documents from Moorfields show the hospital performs well on elective care wait times, diagnostics, and A&E four-hour targets.
The league tables also carry political weight. Research for the Independent Commission on Neighbourhoods warned Labour could lose the next election to Reform UK if local NHS services in deprived areas are not improved. The report stressed that establishing “neighbourhood health centres” in disadvantaged regions is crucial. Timely delivery of these centers could influence whether the government is re-elected or returns to opposition.

