Teachers in England to vote on striking over pay

Hazel ShearingEducation correspondent
News imageGetty Images A large group of teachers and education staff on strike are gathered in a street raising their hands and holding flags and placards. In the foreground, a woman with dark hair tied back, hoop earrings and sunglasses, holds a sign that says "fund our schools". She wears a red t-shirt under a black coat. Behind her, a man wearing a blue hat, striped top and a high-vis pink vest holds a flag.
Getty Images
Members of the National Education Union walked out over pay in 2023

Teachers and school support staff in England will vote on whether or not to go on strike if the government stands by its pay recommendation for the next academic year.

The National Education Union (NEU), England's largest teaching union, says it will hold a formal ballot in the autumn if the government "does not take urgent action".

The government has recommended a 6.5% pay award spread over the next three years, but the NEU has said that is unlikely to match inflation and called it an "insult".

The Department for Education said the NEU's announcement was "extremely disappointing", saying it would be children and parents that "pay the price" for any strike action.

The NEU wants the pay offer for teachers to be above inflation, which has risen following the start of the Iran war.

The Consumer Prices Index measure of inflation was 3.3% in the year to March, but the Bank of England warned it could increase still further this year following a "significant energy price shock".

The teaching union also wants the government to fully fund pay rises so schools do not have to find money for them in existing budgets - and says the current recommendation is not enough.

NEU general secretary Daniel Kebede said "no member wants to be taking strike action", but pay and workload issues had fuelled a "recruitment and retention crisis that is directly impacting" education.

"Unfunded below-inflation pay increases are an insult. The government is well aware that schools do not have the money to fund them," he said.

"To avoid this collision course the government needs to step up and deliver the properly funded education system our children and young people deserve."

A Department for Education (DfE) spokeswoman said: "Ultimately, it will be children, young people and hard-working parents who will pay the price for any industrial action.

"We've taken action to restore teaching as the highly valued profession it should be including boosting pay, and tackling poor pupil behaviour, high workload, and poor wellbeing so more teachers stay on in the profession and thrive."

Each year, the independent School Teachers Review Body (STRB) receives submissions about pay from the government, unions and others. It then makes recommendations to ministers, who ultimately decide how much to award.

The DfE's submission proposed a 6.5% pay award over 2026-27, 2027-28 and 2028-29, with "the level of awards weighted towards the latter part".

It said higher awards in the last two years would give schools more time to "plan for changes to their operations, provisions or staffing".

The STRB's report has not yet been published, and so a final pay offer has not been announced.

However the NEU said "early reports" suggested it would not be enough "for schools to prevent redundancies and rises in workload".

An informal indicative ballot held already this year, with a turnout of 48.6%, suggested 90.5% of teachers who are members of the NEU would be prepared to take industrial action over pay.

NEU members went on strike over pay in the first half of 2023, forcing many schools to close on eight days of action.

The NEU called off further action after the government revised its 2023 offer to 6.5%.

Teachers were then given a 5.5% rise in 2024 and a 4% rise in 2025.