U.S. and U.K. Seal Drug-Pricing Deal: Britain Agrees to Pay More, U.S. Lifts Tariffs
London will raise costs for new medicines by 25 % in exchange for zero tariffs on British pharmaceuticals exported to America
The United States and the United Kingdom have struck a landmark agreement on drug pricing and trade that will reshape transatlantic pharmaceutical commerce.
Under the accord, London has committed to increasing the price its public health system pays for new patented medicines by 25 per cent and reducing the rebate rate pharmaceutical firms must pay back — in exchange for Washington lifting all tariffs on UK-origin medicines, active ingredients and medical technologies for at least the next three years.
As part of the deal, rebates under Britain’s drug-pricing framework will drop to 15 per cent for branded medicines sold to the National Health Service from 2026 to 2028, a marked cut from previous rates.
Regulators in Britain will also relax cost-effectiveness thresholds, widening access to high-cost innovative drugs — including therapies for cancer, rare diseases and other conditions that may previously have been rejected on value grounds.
The change is expected to allow between three and five additional new medicines per year to pass approval.
U.S. officials framed the agreement as a key victory for the administration’s global pricing strategy, aimed at ensuring other wealthy nations contribute more fairly to the cost of drug development rather than relying on American markets as a “free-rider.” The tariff exemption is viewed as a reward for the U.K.’s new commitment.
Many pharmaceutical firms, which had warned that strict pricing policies in Britain were undermining investment and research, have welcomed the change as an opportunity to re-invest in UK facilities and restore confidence in life-sciences growth.
In Britain, supporters argue the pact revives investment in homegrown research and development, strengthens supply of cutting-edge therapies and signals renewed commitment to science and innovation.
Some critics, however, caution that reallocating NHS funds toward costly new drugs may strain funding for other health services, given the increased long-term medicines bill under the National Health Service.
The agreement arrives after a fraught year for the UK’s life-sciences sector, during which major drug manufacturers paused or cancelled investment following bitter negotiations over pricing reforms.
With tariffs off the table and a more favourable pricing environment now in place, the sector may be primed for renewed growth and global competitiveness.
For now, the deal stands as a significant rebalancing of costs and trade incentives — reshaping how drugs are priced, paid for and traded across the Atlantic in a way that could influence global pharmaceutical norms.