When are resident doctors going on strike in 2025 and why?

When are resident doctors going on strike in 2025 and why?
Resident doctors holding orange placards in strike action against pay and job shortages
Resident doctors will go on strike for five days in November over disputes about pay and job prospects (Picture: EPA)

Doctors will take part in a fresh round of strikes in December after talks with the government fell through again, the British Medical Association announced.

Resident doctors, formerly known as junior doctors, across England will stage a five-day walkout after the union and the government failed to agree on a deal regarding pay.

The long-running pay dispute has been ongoing since March 2023.

These fresh strikes will mark the 13th over the last two years, if it goes ahead, but when are the strikes happening, and why are they happening now?

When are doctors going on strike in 2025?

Sign up for all of the latest stories

Start your day informed with Metro's News Updates newsletter or get Breaking News alerts the moment it happens.

The BMA has said the five-day walkout will begin in November as a result of ‘pay erosion and job shortages’ across the medical field.

The strike will take place from 7am on November 14 until 7am on November 19.

The BMA’s resident doctors committee has repeatedly called for the government to mandate a multi-year pay deal or in-year improvements to resident doctors’ pay.

A sign reads 'Fair pay to keep health workers in the UK' as doctors strike over ongoing pay disputes
Resident doctors will stage a five-day walkout over onoing pay disputes since 2023 (Picture: Owen Humphreys/PA Wire)

However, following talks with Health Secretary Wes Streeting, it felt the government’s plans for pay and job restoration were not credible enough, prompting the strikes next month.

Resident doctor leaders met with Mr Streeting on October 13, calling for a solution to issues regarding underpayment and job shortages, but they felt there was ‘little option but to call for strike action’.

Why is it happening now?

Members of the BMA will strike for five days in November as resident doctors campaign for pay restoration.

Resident doctors have received a pay rise of 28.9% over the last three years, but the BMA argues wages are still 20% lower in real terms than in 2008.

The strike action was announced after a meeting with Mr Streeting, which was described as ‘disappointing but not unredeemable’ and has urged the health secretary to resume talks.

Dr Jack Fletcher, chair of the BMA’s resident doctors committee, said: ‘This is not where we wanted to be.

‘We talked with the Government in good faith – keen for the health secretary to see that a deal that included options to gradually reverse the cuts to pay over several years, giving newly trained doctors a pay increase of just a pound an hour for the next four years.

A medium shot of Wes Streeting outside 10 Downing Street
Health Secretary Wes Streeting has called the BMA’s strikes as ‘preposterous’ (Picture: Getty Images)

‘While we want to get such a deal done, the Government seemingly does not, leaving us with little option but to call for strike action.’

He cited ‘better employment prospects and restoring pay’ as being the more credible ways the government can help resident doctors.

However, Mr Streeting has called the strike action ‘preposterous’, calling the walkouts ‘unreasonable and unnecessary’.

‘It is preposterous that the BMA have rushed headlong into more damaging strike action a week after its new leadership opened discussions with the Government,’ he said.

‘After resident doctors have received a 28.9% pay rise, the Government has been clear that we simply cannot go further on pay this year.

‘But by walking out on strike, the BMA are walking away from an offer to improve resident doctors’ working conditions and create more speciality training roles to progress their careers. The BMA are blocking a better deal for doctors.’

He argued the walkouts ‘do not have the public’s support, nor did a majority of resident doctors vote for them’.

Doctors hold placards reading 'Pay restoration for doctors' as they stage walkouts over pay disputes
The strikes scheduled for November will mark the 13th since March 2023 (Picture: AFP)

How will patients be affected?

It is possible the strikes could cause disruption and possible cancellations, as had happened during previous strikes.

While it is not yet clear exactly how many patients might be impacted, strikes in previous years have resulted in thousands of cancelled appointments.

Patients may expect to see their appointments rescheduled as resident doctors walk out next month.

The Health Secretary warned the strikes could harm patients in the long run, describing the BMA’s announcement as ‘reckless posturing’.

He said: ‘We will not allow the BMA to wreck the NHS’s recovery.

‘I urge the BMA to call off these needless strikes and come back to the table. They have a Government that wants to work with them to improve the working lives of resident doctors and create an NHS fit for the future.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at [email protected].

For more stories like this, check our news page.

Category Europe
Published Oct 24, 2025
Last Updated 47 minutes ago