Getting Emergency Prescriptions in the UK

Your options when you urgently need medication outside normal channels
Updated 7 February 2026 from official DHSC & NHS data
Run out of medication? Lost your pills? Pharmacy can't get your usual medicine? There are several emergency routes to get prescription medication in the UK — even outside GP hours.

Option 1: Pharmacy Emergency Supply

Any community pharmacy can provide an emergency supply of most prescription medicines without a prescription. This is your quickest option.

Rules

Option 2: NHS 111

Call 111 or use the NHS 111 online service. They can:

Option 3: Out-of-Hours GP

Outside surgery hours, the out-of-hours GP service (accessed through 111) can issue prescriptions for urgent medication needs. These may be sent electronically to a pharmacy or you may need to collect a paper prescription.

Option 4: Walk-In Centre or Urgent Treatment Centre

Walk-in centres and UTCs can issue prescriptions for urgent needs. They're open extended hours including weekends and don't require an appointment.

Option 5: A&E (Emergency Only)

A&E should only be used for genuinely life-threatening medication emergencies — for example, if you're insulin-dependent and completely out of insulin, or if you're at risk of seizures from epilepsy medication withdrawal.

Tips for Emergency Situations

Related

Get free shortage alerts

Be the first to know when your medication is affected

Sign up free →
Data sources: DHSC Medicine Supply Notifications · NHSBSA Serious Shortage Protocols · NHS England
Page last updated: 7 February 2026. Data checked daily.
🏥 Data sourced from official DHSC and NHS England publications · Updated daily · Free service