New Office for National Statistics data shows years of good health declining sharply for both men and women, with stark differences emerging across regions.
The Office for National Statistics has released concerning figures showing that healthy life expectancy in the UK has fallen to its lowest level since official records began in 2011-13, raising fresh alarm bells about public health outcomes and regional inequalities across the country.
Girls born between 2022 and 2024 can expect to enjoy just 60.9 years of good general health, down from 63.4 years in the 2019-21 period and 63.7 years a decade earlier in 2012-14. This represents a decline of nearly three years over the past decade alone. Boys have experienced a similar though slightly less pronounced decline, with those born in 2022-24 expecting 60.7 years of good health, compared to 62.4 years in 2019-21 and 62.9 years in 2012-14.
The drop of approximately two years for males underscores a troubling trend affecting the entire population. Both figures represent the lowest recorded since the ONS began tracking this crucial health metric fifteen years ago.
What Does Healthy Life Expectancy Mean?Healthy life expectancy differs from overall life expectancy. Whilst Britons continue to live longer in absolute terms, healthy life expectancy measures the number of years a person can expect to live in “good” general health—free from limiting long-term illnesses or conditions that significantly impact quality of life. A declining healthy life expectancy therefore indicates that whilst people are living longer, they are spending a greater proportion of their later years managing health problems or disabilities.
Greg Ceely, Head of Population Life Events at the ONS, commented on the findings: “Today’s figures show that, while people in the UK are living longer than at the height of the pandemic, the proportion of their lives spent in good health is still getting smaller. Back in 2011, when the ONS first collected this data, men were expected to remain in good health until around the age of 63, and women 64. Today, they could both expect around 61 years of healthy life.”
The Geography of Health InequalityPerhaps the most striking aspect of the new data is the pronounced geographical divide in healthy life outcomes across the UK. England has the highest healthy life expectancy of the four nations, with females averaging 61.3 years and males 60.9 years in 2022-24. Northern Ireland follows with 60.7 years for females and 60.8 for males, whilst Scotland records 59.4 years for females and 59.1 for males. Wales shows the lowest figures at 58.5 years for females and 59.2 years for males.
However, the most alarming disparity exists between individual local areas within England. Richmond upon Thames in London shows the highest healthy life expectancy for girls born in 2022-24 at a substantial 70.3 years, yet areas such as Blackpool, Hartlepool and Sandwell struggle significantly below the national average.
Blackpool, which has recorded the lowest male healthy life expectancy across the entire UK since 2016-18, has seen its figure plummet from 55.5 years in 2012-14 to just 50.9 years today—a devastating drop of 4.6 years in a single decade. Female residents in Blackpool fare only marginally better, declining from 56.7 years to 51.8 years. Similar patterns emerge in Hartlepool, where males dropped from 56.2 years to 52.1 years, and Sandwell, falling from 57.8 years to 52.7 years.
The overall gap between the areas with highest and lowest healthy life expectancy has widened sharply. For women, this gap has grown from 14.8 years in 2012-14 to 19.1 years in 2022-24—nearly a five-year expansion of inequality in just ten years. For men, the gap has increased from 14.5 years to 18.4 years over the same period.
Underlying Causes and Expert CommentaryDr Jamie O’Halloran, senior research fellow at the Institute for Public Policy Research, emphasised that health outcomes remain profoundly shaped by geography and social factors: “Today’s figures show that where you live determines how many years you spend in good health – and that gap isn’t closing. Reforming the NHS and bringing care closer to communities can help reduce health inequalities, but most of what shapes our physical and mental health lies outside the health system. Without tackling those root causes, we won’t see the gains we need.”
This assessment highlights that addressing declining healthy life expectancy requires interventions extending well beyond healthcare provision alone. Factors including income, employment, housing quality, education, and access to healthy food and green spaces all significantly influence health outcomes in later life.
Source: @ONS
Key Takeaways
- Healthy life expectancy for both men and women in the UK has fallen to 13-year lows, with girls at 60.9 years and boys at 60.7 years for those born 2022-24
- The decline represents approximately 2-3 years lost over the past decade, indicating people are spending a greater proportion of their longer lives managing health conditions
- Regional inequalities have widened dramatically, with a 19.1-year gap between the highest and lowest areas for women—up from 14.8 years a decade ago
- Areas including Blackpool, Hartlepool and Sandwell face particularly acute challenges, with some recording drops exceeding four years in a single decade
What This Means for Kent Residents
For Kent households, these figures underscore broader public health challenges affecting employment productivity, healthcare costs and social services demands. Whilst Kent’s specific figures are not highlighted in this latest release, the national trend suggests rising pressure on both the NHS and local authority services supporting people with long-term health conditions. Rising inequality between regions means that access to preventive healthcare, mental health services and community support becomes increasingly critical. Kent residents should be aware that their local health outcomes depend not only on NHS investment but on wider factors including local employment opportunities, housing affordability and community facilities—all areas where councils and regional bodies can influence public health outcomes for decades to come.


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