Public Inquiry into covid pandemic cost Uk government £100m

Public Inquiry into covid pandemic cost Uk government £100m

By Ben Kerrigan-

The public inquiry into the Covid pandemic has cost the UK government more than £100m to respond to so far, the BBC has learnt. This is on top of the £192m spent by the inquiry itself – taking the  cost to the taxpayer to over 50% more than previously thought.

The government spending covers legal advice and staffing costs  which included a team of 248 working across key departments to produce evidence for the inquiry.

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Over half the £101m spent on the inquiry went on legal fees,  including bringing in external lawyers. in order to maximise the attending legal expertise  for an inquiry this important. One research conducted suggest the British public find the amount of money spent excessively high, and a waist.

An inquiry source said that to some extent the spending reflected the defensive attitude of the government towards the inquiry. An example of this defensive attitude cited was when the government had to go the High Court over Boris Johnson’s Whassap messages.

Inquiry chair Baroness Hallett(pictured) and the inquiry legal team have criticised government departments for delays providing documents and blocking the release of key information.

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This most famously came to a head in 2023, when the inquiry and the government ended up in the High Court over the government’s refusal to release Boris Johnson’s WhatsApp messages, diaries and notebooks. The government lost the case.

– £56.4 million was spent by the Government on legal costs from April 2023 to June 2025 inclusive, with £26.2 million in the 12 months to March 2024, £25.0 million in the 12 months to March 2025, plus £5.2 million in the three months from April to June 2025.

– £44.6 million was spent on staff costs across this period, made up of £18.0 million in the year to March 2024, £21.6 million in the year to March 2025, and £5.0 million in the three months April-June 2025.

– The combined total for legal and staff costs for the period April 2023 to June 2025 is £100.9 million, though the true amount could be higher as the costs are “not based on a complete set of departmental figures and are not precise for accounting purposes”, according to the Cabinet Office documents.

– The number of full-time equivalent staff working on the Government’s response to the inquiry stood at 265 at the end of the 2023/24 financial year, had risen to 286 by the end of 2024/25, and then fell to 248 across April-June 2025.

Sources said the government had set up a “huge operation” which had at times seemed “hostile and difficult” to the inquiry.

Inquiry sources have accused  the government of being at times “hostile and difficult”, blocking the release of information and delivering documents late.

The Cabinet Office said it was committed to the inquiry and learning the lessons for the future.

However, the TaxPayers’ Alliance has branded it a waste of money and the Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK said while the work being done was vital, public inquiries generally needed to become more efficient and less adversarial.

The inquiry got under way in 2022, and its final report is not expected until 2027. It has already cost £192m – a figure which is expected to rise past £200m by the time it is finished, making it one of the most expensive public inquiries in history.

There are a total of 10 separate investigations – or modules as they are called. So far only two, looking at pandemic preparedness and government decision-making, have been completed.

Analysis of Cabinet Office documents by the BBC has found government departments spent around £101m from April 2023 to June 2025.

The bulk of this is thought to have been accrued by five key departments – the Cabinet Office, Home Office, Department of Health and Social Care, Treasury and UK Health Security Agency, which have been repeatedly asked to provide evidence. The costing estimates do not include time officials spend preparing and appearing as witnesses in person.

Inquiry chair Baroness Hallett(PICTURED) and the inquiry legal team have criticised government departments for delays providing documents and blocking the release of key information.

This most famously came to a head in 2023, when the inquiry and government ended up in the High Court over the government’s refusal to release Boris Johnson’s WhatsApp messages, diaries and notebooks. The government lost the case.

Sources said the government had set up a “huge operation” which had at times seemed “hostile and difficult” to the inquiry.

A Cabinet Office spokeswoman said: “The government is fully committed to supporting the work of the inquiry and to learning lessons from the pandemic to ensure the UK is better prepared for a future pandemic.”

The Cabinet Office argues the court case was brought to gain clarity on a point of principle – the right of an inquiry to request information that the provider considers irrelevant.

John O’Connell, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance think tank, said: “It’s an absolute disgrace that ministers have burnt through an extra £100m on top of what the inquiry itself has already spent.

“These new figures show the total cost to taxpayers will be far higher than previously feared.

“Ministers must urgently get a grip on the spiralling costs of the Covid Inquiry and commit to delivering answers swiftly and efficiently.”

A spokesman for the Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK said the work of the inquiry was “vital” and any costs would be recouped many times over in the future if lessons were learned by reducing the economic impact of the next pandemic as well as saving lives.

But he added: “The inquiry process is far from perfect.”

He said the group supported the Hillsborough Law, which is working its way through parliament and strengthens the legal duty on public authorities to assist public inquiries.

He said public inquiries like the Covid one needed to become more efficient and less adversarial.

“Only then can we bring down the cost of future inquiries while protecting access to justice.”

A spokesman for the Covid Inquiry said:

The UK Covid-19 Inquiry is unlike any previous public inquiry. It was given a very broad scope because it is investigating multiple aspects of a pandemic that affected everyone in society.

“On opening the inquiry in 2022, the chair, Baroness Hallett, set out the substantial task it faced and made clear that to do this properly would take time and have a significant cost.

“The inquiry is working faster than any previous public inquiry of comparable size.

“By the end of this year the inquiry will have completed nine of its 10 sets of hearings and reports will be published throughout 2026 and early 2027.

“The families who lost loved ones, the key workers who risked their lives and the general public who made enormous sacrifices deserve to learn the truth of what happened during the pandemic and see meaningful change.

“The inquiry’s recommendations are intended to better protect the United Kingdom when the next pandemic strikes and it is imperative that the UK’s four governments implement them.”

He said the chair had made clear at the start that would take time and have significant cost, but it would result in recommendations that are intended to better protect the UK when the next pandemic strikes. He said the inquiry would not comment on the nature of the relationship with the government.

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