Skip to main content

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust: A&E 4-Hour Performance

Real NHS England A&E waiting-time data for March 2026 in the North East And Yorkshire NHS region β€” plus this trust's Gera A&E Pressure Index.

What is the A&E 4-hour waiting time at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust?

As of March 2026, 50.7% of major (Type 1) A&E attendances at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust were admitted, transferred or discharged within 4 hours β€” so an estimated 49.3% waited longer β€” from 10,114 Type 1 attendances, against the 76% NHS standard, per NHS England A&E statistics. Gera re-dates this monthly.

Source:NHS England β€” A&E Attendances and Emergency Admissions, Monthly StatisticsΒ·as of March 2026updated monthly (last: )
Gera A&E Pressure Index36 / 100Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust ranks 37 of 118 English Type 1 A&E providers by A&E pressure (1 = highest pressure). Higher score = more patients facing long waits at a busy department.How this index is calculated
Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust A&E figures β€” March 2026 (NHS England, OGL v3.0)
MeasureValueWhat it means
Type 1 (major A&E) 4-hour performance50.7%Standard is 76%
Estimated chance of a 4+ hour wait49.3%Monthly average, not a per-visit prediction
Type 1 attendances10,114Major A&E department only
Attendances over 4 hours (Type 1)4,985Waited longer than 4 hours
All-types 4-hour performance64.0%Type 1 + Type 2 + other A&E units
12-hour DTA waits375Waited 12h+ from decision to admit
vs England Type 1 average-13.2ppEngland Type 1 average 63.9%

Compare your local A&E

Check another provider, or this one again, against the England average.

At Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, in the latest month, 50.7% of major (TypeΒ 1) A&E patients were seen within 4Β hours β€” so an estimated 49.3% waited longer than 4Β hours, from 10,114 TypeΒ 1 attendances.

Seen within 4 hours
50.7%
vs England average
-13.2pp
England 63.9%
Gera A&E Pressure Index
36 / 100

375 patients at this trust waited 12+ hours from decision-to-admit to admission in the latest month. The 4-hour figure is a monthly average for the whole department, not a prediction for any single visit.

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust is performing at 50.7% β€” below the NHS 76% standard. For a non-emergency, see a GeraClinic doctor today and avoid a 4+ hour wait.

See a GeraClinic doctor today

Other A&E providers in North East And Yorkshire

Related NHS data on GeraClinic

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust A&E waiting times: FAQs

What is the A&E 4-hour performance at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust?
In March 2026, Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust saw 50.7% of Type 1 (major) A&E attendances admitted, transferred or discharged within 4 hours, from 10,114 Type 1 attendances. Across all A&E types at the trust the figure was 64.0%. The England all-types average was 76.6% and the operational standard is 76%. Source: NHS England A&E monthly statistics, March 2026.
Am I likely to be seen within 4 hours at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust's A&E?
On the latest data (March 2026), 50.7% of major (Type 1) A&E patients at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust were seen within 4 hours, so roughly 49.3% waited longer than 4 hours. This is an area-wide monthly average, not a prediction for any individual visit, and varies by time of day and acuity. For a 999 emergency always call 999; for non-emergencies a GeraClinic online consultation can often be arranged the same day.
How many people waited over 12 hours to be admitted at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust?
375 patients at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust waited 12 hours or more from the decision to admit to actually being admitted in March 2026. These "12-hour DTA waits" are a key NHS pressure indicator the figure is published monthly by NHS England.
What is the Gera A&E Pressure Index for Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust?
The Gera A&E Pressure Index for Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust is 36 out of 100. It is computed transparently as (1 βˆ’ Type 1 4-hour performance) Γ— Type 1 monthly attendances, then min-max normalised across all 118 English Type 1 A&E providers (the busiest, lowest-performing trust scores 100). A higher score means more patients facing long waits at a high-volume department. It is derived only from the real NHS England March 2026 data.
What can I do instead of waiting at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust's A&E?
A&E is for serious or life-threatening emergencies. For non-emergency issues β€” minor illness, prescriptions, advice, sick notes or a second opinion β€” a GeraClinic online consultation with a UK-registered doctor can usually happen the same day, avoiding a long A&E wait. Always call 999 or attend A&E for chest pain, breathing difficulty, severe bleeding, stroke signs or other emergencies.

Avoid a 4+ hour wait at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust is performing at 50.7% on the 4-hour standard β€” below the 76% target. For a non-emergency, see a UK-registered GeraClinic doctor online, often the same day. For a 999 emergency always call 999.

Contains public sector information published by NHS England and licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Source: NHS England β€” A&E Attendances and Emergency Admissions, Monthly Statistics (March 2026, published 14 May 2026).