2025 Index: Active Travel Saves NHS £1.94B, Spurs Call for Cycling Infrastructure Boost

March 17, 2026
2025 Index: Active Travel Saves NHS £1.94B, Spurs Call for Cycling Infrastructure Boost
  • Cycling saves the NHS about £72.7 million per year in the studied areas, equivalent to the cost of 1.6 million GP appointments, with 5,736 long-term health conditions avoided and 545 early deaths prevented annually.

  • The 2025 Walking and Cycling Index, produced by the Walk Wheel Cycle Trust and 17 regional partners, finds that active travel saved the NHS about £1.94 billion in 2025 by preventing roughly 156,000 long-term health conditions across the UK.

  • The report underscores the need for long-term funding and stronger policies to create an inclusive, integrated transport system that connects new developments with communities.

  • Within 17 Index areas, active travel prevented more than 28,000 serious health conditions, including around 8,700 hip fractures, nearly 6,800 dementia cases, and over 2,300 depression cases, delivering £346.7 million in NHS savings annually in those areas.

  • Around a quarter of residents not currently cycling are interested in starting, while over half say secure home parking access would encourage cycling, and there is strong support for more off-road, separated cycle paths.

  • The full Walk Wheel Cycle Trust’s Walking and Cycling Index 2025 is linked for deeper reading.

  • Major regions covered include Greater Manchester, Liverpool City Region, North East Combined Authority, and Leicester in the Midlands; London and the South East are not included, suggesting nationwide figures could be higher.

  • Anecdotes such as Aminah in Leicester illustrate personal health benefits from walking to university, highlighting the human impact of active travel.

  • Environmental benefits include about 500,000 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions avoided annually and the removal of up to 2.9 million cars from roads daily, easing congestion.

  • Strong public support exists for walkable, wheelable, and bike-friendly neighborhoods, with about 80% backing nearby shops, schools, green spaces, and public transport within a short walk or wheel.

  • More than half of residents (54%) support shifting funding from road-building to walking, wheeling, cycling and public transport investments.

  • Public safety perceptions show 45% feel cycling is safe locally, versus 80% for driving and 74% for public transport, underscoring safety as a barrier.

Summary based on 2 sources


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