
UK patients are furious because the BMA’s proposed “Plan B” ballot could open the door to paid GP appointments, something that strikes at the heart of the NHS principle of free care at the point of use. The frustration is real — and the reasoning behind it is clear once you look at what’s being proposed and why.
The British Medical Association (BMA) intends to ballot GPs before June 2027 on an alternative GP contract model that would allow means-tested subscription fees for GP services, more private work within GP practices, and a model comparable to NHS dentistry, where patients already pay for numerous treatments.
This is being described as a “Plan B” because GPs say the current NHS contract is financially unsustainable and restricts what they can safely deliver.
According to reporting, patients fear that paying to see a GP for the first time in NHS history will mean high costs for people with chronic illness, who use GP services the most. There will be deepening health inequalities, since poorer patients would be hit the hardest, and this would slide toward a two-tier health system like dentistry, where those who can pay get fast access.
A pharmacist warning the public said this shift could “disproportionately affect” people with long‑term conditions and worsen existing inequalities.
GPs said that they are being pushed into a corner because their workload has exploded, but funding hasn’t kept pace. They have to deal with staff shortages, which means fewer GPs handling more patients. Government restrictions limit what services they can provide under the NHS, and many practices say the current model is not financially sustainable.
The BMA argues that politicians have ignored warnings for years, leaving GPs ‘deeply frustrated’ and with ‘no choice but to explore alternatives.’
However, the Department of Health and Social Care has strongly rejected the idea, ‘We do not believe that moving towards private, means‑tested or subscription‑based GP services is in the interests of patients or the NHS.” “A two‑tier system would deepen health inequalities.’
They insist the founding NHS principle — free at the point of use — must be protected.
This ‘Plan B’ threat comes after GPs overwhelmingly rejected the government’s 2026-27 contract changes, which 98.9 per cent voted against. The new contract would force GPs to deliver unlimited same-day urgent access, even when already at capacity. Still, GPs say this is unsafe and impossible without more staff and funding.
And guess what? We will still have to pay National Insurance because that pays for our State Pension, which we will probably never see, New-style ESA, New-style JSA, maternity allowance, and part of the NHS budget, but not all of it.
What impact will this have on those receiving benefits?
Benefit recipients will be more severely affected than anybody else, as they are the group most dependent on GP access and have the smallest financial safety net. In actuality, none of the benefits system’s safeguards is intended for a future where GP visits are expensive.
People on benefits would face a ‘double penalty,’ because if GP appointments became paid or subscription-based, people on Universal Credit, ESA, PIP, Carer’s Allowance or Pension Credit would still be expected to meet all the same health-related requirements, but with less access to the healthcare they need to stay compliant, and that’s the trap!
For example, if someone with a chronic illness can’t afford a GP appointment, they can’t get fit notes, medication reviews, referrals and condition monitoring, and without those, the DWP can say they’re ‘non-compliant’ or ‘not providing evidence.’
No benefit currently includes money for GP fees. There is no line Universal Credit, ESA, or PIP that covers GP appointment charges, subscription fees or private assessments, and that will risk putting people into crisis for people on benefits because if they cannot pay for a doctor, their conditions will worsen, there will be more A&E visits, more hospital admissions, and more deaths.
So, the darker side is that people will die; now there’s a plan with no drawback, but evidently, there is no UK government, regulator, or medical body that is planning any such thing, but this is why people are enraged because the consequences are obvious, even if nobody says them out loud.
There is now fear of abandonment, and what people are really feeling is that the system doesn’t care if they live or die.









