Coronavirus cases in the UK: daily updated statistics
The latest number of coronavirus (COVID-19) tests, cases and deaths in the UK.
Dashboard of coronavirus cases and deaths
The coronavirus dashboard is updated daily. It shows the number of cases and deaths in the UK, broken down by region and local authority area.
You can download the data in csv format.
Number of coronavirus deaths and cases
Deaths
As of 5pm on 15 July, of those tested positive for coronavirus in the UK, 45,119 have died across all settings.
Daily | Cumulative | |
---|---|---|
Deaths in all settings | 66 | 45,119 |
Coronavirus deaths and cases give a sense of the spread of the epidemic. Deaths are counted where a lab-confirmed positive coronavirus test result is reported in any setting. This means that not all deaths reported here are caused by coronavirus. Further information is available in the ‘Notes on deaths figures’ section.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) publishes further statistics of deaths with breakdowns. This covers death registrations where coronavirus was mentioned, so will include deaths where a person did not have a lab-confirmed positive result.
Positive cases
As of 9am on 16 July, 292,552 people have tested positive for coronavirus in the UK (pillar 1 and 2, see descriptions below).
Daily | Cumulative | |
---|---|---|
Positive cases (pillars 1 and 2) | 642 | 292,552 |
Cases are reported when lab tests are completed and confirmed positive. There are more cases in the UK than are confirmed, for example where people are asymptomatic or have mild symptoms and do not get tested.
Number of tests
Definition of testing pillars
- pillar 1: swab (antigen) testing in Public Health England (PHE) labs and NHS hospitals for those with a clinical need and health and care workers
- pillar 2: swab (antigen) testing for the wider population
- pillar 3: serology testing to show if people have antibodies from having had coronavirus
- pillar 4: blood and swab testing for national surveillance supported by PHE, ONS, and research, academic, and scientific partners to learn more about the prevalence and spread of the virus and for other testing research purposes, such as the accuracy and ease of use of home testing
Overall volume of tests
As of 9am on 16 July, there have been 12,669,634 tests (either processed or sent out) across all 4 pillars in the UK. Of these, 9,524,251 tests were processed in total.
Daily | Cumulative | |
---|---|---|
All tests made available (pillars 1 to 4) | 202,912 | 12,669,634 |
All tests processed (pillars 1 to 4) | 152,063 | 9,524,251 |
The government’s testing strategy sets out a challenge to massively increase testing capacity over a range of areas and for a range of purposes. The total number of tests has been used as a summary measure of the volume of tests that have been made available (‘all tests made available’). Within this summary measure, different tests are counted at different points.
Tests that remain within the control of the central programme are counted when they are processed in a lab (tests processed). Any tests that go outside the control of the central programme are counted when they leave the programme (tests sent out). These include tests that are mailed out to people at home and tests that are sent out through satellite sites.
‘All tests processed’ counts tests that have remained within the control of the programme (and were counted at the time of when it was processed in labs) and those that have been sent out and subsequently returned to be processed in a lab. This is a useful additional measure as it shows how many tests we have received results for. The publication of this measure is also in line with the UK Statistics Authority recommendations.
‘People tested’ figures are published as part of the weekly Test and Trace publication. Many people are retested multiple times for valid reasons, such as regular testing of health and care workers over several months.
The ‘people tested’ measure was initially used to avoid counting one person tested several times in a short space of time. It no longer usefully reflects the volume of tests carried out as, for example, a healthcare worker receiving their second, third or fourth test since the start of the pandemic would not be counted as they have been tested once before. Therefore, the people tested figure will be published on a weekly basis within the NHS Test and Trace statistics rather than daily.
Testing capacity
In early May, the government set out another challenge to increase testing capacity to 200,000 tests per day by the end of May. This target was met on 29 May and continues to be met daily.
Overall lab capacity is important to ensure the programme is able to meet potential demand and deliver large numbers of tests.
At 9am on 12 July, testing capacity was 337,626 in the UK.
Pillar 1 | Pillar 2 | Pillar 3 | Pillar 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lab capacity | 79,526 | 132,000 | 120,000 | 6,100 | 337,626 |
Coronavirus tests are processed in several separate labs. Projected lab capacity is an estimate of each lab’s constrained capacity each day based on the staff, chemical reagents and other resources it has available. These estimates are made locally by the labs themselves.
Further information on the methodology of how capacity is reported is available in the testing methodology.
Antigen tests (pillars 1 and 2) (UK)
These are swab tests targeted at those who are sick and with symptoms. They look for the presence of the virus itself.
All tests in pillar 1 are counted when they are processed by a lab. Tests in pillar 2 are administered in 2 different ways:
- counted when they are sent out
- counted when they are processed by a lab
Not all tests sent out will be returned to the labs.
Daily | Cumulative | |
---|---|---|
Pillar 1 tests processed | 53,790 | 3,588,561 |
Pillar 2 tests processed | 63,869 | 2,849,342 |
Pillar 2 tests sent out | 67,839 | 4,018,552 |
Tests that are counted at the time of dispatch are typically returned to the labs a few days later. Therefore, the daily figures of tests processed are not directly comparable to tests dispatched for that day.
Positive results are often used as an indicator of the progress of the pandemic. Positive test results are an international standard and are reported to the World Health Organization. However, it is important to look at a wider range of indicators, as the proportion of people testing positive in this section is heavily influenced by the number of tests being done and who is being tested.
PHE’s surveillance report and the ONS coronavirus Infection Survey offer detailed information on the incidence and prevalence of the virus.
Daily | Cumulative | |
---|---|---|
Pillar 1 positive cases | 151 | 199,386 |
Pillar 2 positive cases | 491 | 93,166 |
Total positive cases | 642 | 292,552 |
Results from pillars 1 and 2 will drive the NHS Test and Trace programme and devolved test and trace systems.
Antibody tests (pillar 3) (England)
These tests are designed to identify if a person has antibodies in their system, which means that they have had coronavirus at some point, but they do not test for the presence of the virus itself (as in pillars 1 and 2).
Tests in pillar 3 are counted when they are processed by a lab.
Daily | Cumulative | |
---|---|---|
Pillar 3 tests processed | 13,532 | 1,284,707 |
This pillar does not report people tested or positive cases because tests are anonymised before being sent to a lab. Positive cases for pillar 3 are different to pillars 1 and 2 so should not be classed together.
Surveillance tests (pillar 4) (UK)
Testing in this pillar is designed to understand the spread of the virus and the reliability of different testing methods.
As in pillar 2, pillar 4 tests are counted either when they are sent out or when they are processed by a lab.
This includes antigen and antibody testing. People tested and positive cases are not reported due to this covering a variety of different studies that do not currently allow to deduplicate individuals.
Daily | Cumulative | |
---|---|---|
Pillar 4 tests processed | 3,882 | 273,800 |
Pillar 4 tests sent out | 0 | 654,672 |
See the results of the ongoing ONS study, which gives the best estimates of what proportion of the population has the virus now.
Time series documents
- (updated every Tuesday at 9:30am)
16 July notes
The total number of positive cases has been revised since yesterday’s total following changes to the historical data to remove a control sample. The daily positive cases reported today have been added to this revised total rather than the total reported yesterday, so the cumulative total today is 1 lower than if you added the daily tests to yesterday’s total.
The total number of tests made available has been revised since yesterday’s total after the following changes to the historical data:
- 3,485 tests added to the pillar 1 cumulative total
- 1,368 tests added to the pillar 2 cumulative total
The daily tests made available reported today have been added to this revised total rather than the total reported yesterday, so the cumulative total today is 4,853 higher than if you added the daily tests to yesterday’s total.
The total number of all tests processed has been revised since yesterday’s total following changes to the historical data. The daily all tests processed reported today have been added to this revised total rather than the total reported yesterday, so the cumulative total today is 3,485 higher than if you added the daily tests to yesterday’s total.
Due to data not being made available, it’s likely that pillar 2 numbers for 16 July are over-reported. The figures will be revised once the necessary data has been made available. This affects the ‘tests made available’ and the ‘tests processed’ totals.
Further information:
- NHS Test and Trace guidance
- NHS Test and Trace statistics (England): methodology
- NHS Test and Trace statistics: statement of voluntary application of the Code of Practice for Statistics
Correspondence with the Office for Statistics Regulation about testing data
The Chair of the Office for Statistics Regulation wrote to us about presentation of statistics about testing.
Read the letter from the regulator on 11 May
Read our response, published on 27 May
Read the letter from the regulator on 2 June
Read our response, published on 12 June
General notes
Data on UK tests, positive cases and deaths is updated on this page daily at 2pm or shortly after. The figures for test results and for deaths are compiled from different sources. This is why the figures for deaths are reported from an earlier point in time than the figures for test results.
Daily totals reflect actual counts reported for the previous day. Each day there may be corrections to previous reported figures. This means that previously published daily counts will not necessarily sum to the latest cumulative figure. It also means that today’s cumulative count may not match the previous day’s cumulative count plus today’s daily count.
Notes on deaths figures
From 29 April, figures for deaths include all cases where there is a positive confirmed test for coronavirus. The figures include deaths with lab-confirmed COVID-19 in all settings, not just those in hospital, and this provides us with a single figure on an equivalent basis for the whole of the UK.
These UK figures are compiled from validated data provided by each of the four nations of the UK. Figures from Health Protection Scotland, Public Health Wales and the Public Health Agency (Northern Ireland) have always included tested cases outside hospital. Figures for England from 29 April onwards are provided by Public Health England and draw together several different data sources, including data from NHS England and Improvement, to produce this broader measure.
This approach allows us to compile deaths data on a daily basis using up-to-date figures across all settings. The data includes deaths with lab-confirmed COVID-19 reported as at 5pm the previous day. The amount of time between occurrence of death and reporting in these figures may vary slightly and in some cases could be a few days, so figures at 5pm may not include all deaths for that day.
The PHE method draws on data from 3 data sources and individual records of deaths are included in the figures as soon as they are available in any of these 3 sources.
As announced previously, from 1 June we have stopped publishing a separate count of deaths in hospital as our daily count now provides a count of deaths in all settings. Figures for deaths in hospital in England continue to be published by NHS England.
In addition to these figures, ONS publishes weekly counts of deaths in which coronavirus was mentioned on the death certificate. This publication is issued every Tuesday, starting on 31 March 2020. The ONS series includes cases in all settings, and also includes some cases where coronavirus is suspected but no test has taken place. ONS detailed data covers England and Wales only, but from 28 April their publication includes a headline summary of registered deaths in the whole of the UK. Their report each Tuesday covers deaths registered up to 11 days before publication.
Read the joint DHSC and ONS transparency statement about coronavirus deaths figures.
Related coronavirus testing publications
Last updated 16 July 2020 + show all updates
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated daily figures and added a new type of time series for positive cases by specimen date.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated weekly testing capacity figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated testing capacity figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated daily stats and CSV files
-
The figures have been updated and the page has been rewritten to make it clearer what each testing pillar covers and to help users understand the statistics. This is in line with comments from the UK Statistics Authority.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated testing capacity figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Added daily figures.
-
Updated 'time series of daily deaths' attachment.
-
Updated daily figures. The 'time series of daily deaths' document will be updated later.
-
Updated testing capacity figures. Changed the first column heading in the table 'Pillar 4 breakdown of test types' from 'In-person (tests processed)' to 'Tests processed'. This is to clarify that it includes a number of samples tested as well as people tested.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated daily figures.
-
Updated daily figures and removed section on risk level.
-
Daily figures added.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated testing capacity figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated with weekly testing capacity figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Corrections have been made to the table 'Pillar 4 breakdown of test types'.
-
Updated figures and added new table: 'Pillar 4 breakdown of test types'.
-
Notes about testing data sources and methodology have been moved to a new page: 'Coronavirus (COVID-19): testing data methodology'. Figures will be updated later today.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures
-
Updated figures and added pillar 3 definition under testing capacity
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Added new information about testing and capacity times series
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated the daily figures for number of cases and deaths. Due to technical difficulties with data collection we cannot provide people tested figures today.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures
-
Figures updated.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated on 2 May with daily figures
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated with figures reported on 29 April, including deaths in all settings, and updated notes on reporting of deaths figures. Figures for 30 April will follow later today.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures
-
Updated figures
-
Updated figures
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures
-
Changed the total number of tests concluded from 352,974 to 350,575. The updated figure only includes tests carried out under pillars 1 and 2 of the government’s national testing strategy
-
In breakdown by pillar section, corrected total people tested figure in cumulative table
-
Updated figures
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures and included breakdown of people tested under pillars 1 and 2 of the government's national testing strategy.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures and added figures table.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures to include cumulative tests.
-
Updated figures
-
Updated figures
-
Updated daily figures
-
Updates figures for testing
-
Updated figures.
-
Added information on how figures for deaths are compiled and reported.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures. From today, 26 March 2020, recorded deaths will be as of 5pm the previous day.
-
Update to the figures for testing in UK
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated test result figures.
-
updated figures.
-
updated figures.
-
Updated figures on test results.
-
Added updated figures.
-
Updated figures and time
-
Updated test figures
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures on test results.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated test result figures.
-
Update on case numbers, those who have tested positive and those who have sadly died.
-
Updated numbers.
-
Updated test result figures.
-
The UK risk level has been raised to high.
-
Added new guidance for people with symptoms of coronavirus (COVID-19).
-
Updated test result figures.
-
Update to figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated Italy advice.
-
Updated figures.
-
"to be determined" figures corrected - from 22 to 20.
-
Updated lockdown areas.
-
Regions updated.
-
updated figures.
-
Now with regional breakdown
-
Update on stats and switch to 7am to improve reporting. Regionalised data to be published later today
-
Updated test result figures.
-
Updated returning traveller advice for Italy.
-
Added updated figures for test results, including number of cases in each NHS England region.
-
Updated test result figures.
-
Updated figures for tests
-
Added updated figures on UK test results.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated stats and also made clear from now on stats will be accurate as of 0900 that day for consistency and accuracy.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated test result figures.
-
Updated advice for returning travellers.
-
Updated test result figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated numbers.
-
Update to test figures
-
Updated test figures.
-
Updated daily figures on test results.
-
Updated daily figures on test results.
-
Updated figures.
-
Daily update to testing numbers.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated test result figures.
-
Updated test result figures.
-
Updated figures.
-
Updated figures for those tested in the UK.
-
Updated figures for those tested in UK
-
Updated statistics on coronavirus tests.
-
Fourth case of coronavirus in England
-
Updated test figures
-
Updated figures for coronavirus checks and removal figures of passengers returned from Wuhan as all are outside the incubation period.
-
Updated advice from the Chief Medical Officer.
-
Updated figures
-
Updated figures - no new cases
-
Updated advice for travellers
-
Added link to FCO travel advice for British nationals.
-
Updated test figures – no further positive cases.
-
Added Northern Ireland contact number for those who have returned from Wuhan or Hubei Province in the last 14 days, or from elsewhere in China and have developed symptoms.
-
updated figures - no new cases
-
Updated figures - no new cases.
-
Updated test figures – no further positive cases.
-
Added coronavirus public information video.
-
Updated the advice for travellers from China.
-
Updated test figures.
-
Update regarding first confirmed cases of coronavirus in England.
-
Addition of CMO statement
-
Updated information on risk level
-
Updated figures – no confirmed cases
-
Updated figures - no confirmed cases.
-
Updated figures - no confirmed cases
-
Updated advice for travellers from Wuhan.
-
Updated advice for travellers from Wuhan.
-
Updated test figures - no confirmed cases
-
Updated figures - no confirmed cases.
-
Tests figure update - no confirmed cases.
-
Updated advice
-
First published.