Main Estimates data: Government spending plans for 2026/27
Use our interactive dashboard to explore data on Main Estimates (spending plans submitted to Parliament by government departments).
One of Parliament’s longest-standing functions is considering and authorising the government’s spending plans, requiring the government to obtain parliamentary consent before spending public money. The government’s spending plans are presented to Parliament in documents known as ‘Estimates’. There is a separate Estimate for each government department.
Initial plans (‘Main Estimates’) for the current financial year are usually presented by departments in May, and final revised plans (‘Supplementary Estimates’) are usually presented in February.
The dashboard below shows details of the latest Main Estimates (for 2026/27), published on 29 April 2026. It shows:
- trends in planned departmental spending, as presented in the Estimates for different years
- how departmental budgets have changed since the last Supplementary Estimates (for 2025/26), published on 10 February 2026
- how departments initially plan to allocate their spending within the department
If you would like to access this information in an alternative format please email papers@parliament.uk and we will review your request.
Notes and sourcesSpending control totals
Proposed budgets are divided into separate limits for the following categories:
- Resource: day-to-day spending (also called 'current spending') that includes spending on staff and other running costs, and on goods, services, and grants.
- Capital: investment spending that covers the purchase and sale of assets, loans and capital grants.
Proposed budgets are further divided into:
- Departmental Expenditure Limits (DEL): spending is subject to fixed limits, based broadly on plans outlined in the most recent Spending Review.
- Annually Managed Expenditure (AME): less predictable and more demand-led spending, re-forecast each year.
Effective from the Main Estimate 2026/27, the Resource DEL figures presented exclude depreciation and impairment charges (non-cash accounting costs arising from the consumption or revaluation of assets). This is now instead scored in Resource AME.
The inclusion of depreciation in Resource DEL was considered to create volatility and to weaken the link between department spending allocations and the cash resources required to deliver public services. Following the switch to Resource AME they no longer count against the departments’ day-to-day spending limits. This also allows easier comparison to Spending Review and Budget plans, which have are presented as Resource DEL excluding depreciation.
Resource DEL excluding depreciation can be added to Capital DEL to calculate Total DEL. Combined DEL and AME in the Estimate is still referred to as ‘total spending’ as depreciation is now included in AME; this would need to be excluded to calculate Total Managed Expenditure.
Estimates memorandaGovernment departments are each required to produce an explanatory memorandum to explain the content of each Main Estimate and Supplementary Estimate. Estimates memoranda should compare spending plans with previous years and explain the reasons for any changes that are proposed.
Select committees currently publish Estimates memoranda on their webpages. Details of spending changes are taken from these memoranda.
Government departments and machinery of governmentMachinery of government changes in 2023 created three new government departments:
- Department for Business and Trade
- Department for Energy Security and Net Zero
- Department for Science, Innovation and Technology
The three new departments replaced the Department of International Trade and the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy. There is no historic Estimates data for the new departments, but consistent outturn data has been published (see Sources below).
The Department for Education budgets include the net spending of academies, although funding for academies is not approved through the Estimates.
SourcesEstimates data is from past vintages of the HM Treasury Main Estimates, HM Treasury Supplementary Estimates and departmental Estimates memoranda.
In the Estimates publications:
- DEL totals and departmental figures are shown in Table 3 and Table 5
- For Main Estimate 2026/27 Table 3 shows Resource DEL excluding depreciation. For prior years these figures are now taken from the Departmental DEL budgets: tables that are published alongside each Estimate. These give both ‘RDEL’ and ‘RDEL ex’ budgets for the departments shown in Table 3
- AME totals are shown in Table 2. For prior years there are no equivalent ‘Resource AME including depreciation’ figures
Outturn data is from HM Treasury Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses 2025 (July 2025). Note that only 5 years of outturn data are published.
Spending Review data is from HM Treasury Spending Review 2025 (June 2025).
Budget data is from HM Treasury Budget 2025 (26 November 2025)
Budgets adjusted to real terms using HM Treasury gross domestic product deflators (March 2026). The deflator for 2020/21 has been smoothed to remove distortions created by the covid-19 pandemic.
Detail of spending changes is taken from departments’ Estimates memoranda. Estimates memoranda will be published on departmental select committee webpages.
Data updatesA separate dashboard for the latest Supplementary Estimate is available. This will be updated when then next Supplementary Estimates are published. Supplementary Estimates 2026/27 are expected in February 2027.
The Main Estimates dashboard will be updated when the next Main Estimates are published. Main Estimates 2027/28 are expected in May 2027.