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Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust: A&E Waiting Times Index

Real NHS England A&E waiting-time data for March 2026 — how long patients wait in this trust’s major (Type 1) A&E, scored on the Gera A&E Waiting Times Index (higher = longer waits).

How long are A&E waits at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust?

As of March 2026, the Gera A&E Waiting Times Index for Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust is 33.6 / 100 (higher = longer waits), ranked 102 of 118 major (Type 1) A&E providers in England. 72.1% of its 12,638 major-A&E patients were seen within 4 hours, and 5 waited 12+ hours to be admitted (0.4 per 1,000 attendances). Gera re-dates this monthly.

Source:Gera A&E Waiting Times Index — derived from NHS England A&E open data·as of March 2026updated monthly (last: )
Gera A&E Waiting Times Index33.6 / 100Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, March 2026 — lower waiting; ranked 102 of 118 providers (higher = longer waits). 72.1% of patients seen within 4 hours.How this index is calculated
Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust A&E figures — March 2026 (NHS England, OGL v3.0)
MeasureValueWhat it means
Gera A&E Waiting Times Index33.6 / 100Rank 102 of 118; lower waiting
Type 1 4-hour performance72.1%Standard: 76% of all attendances within 4h
Type 1 4-hour breach rate27.9%Share of major-A&E patients waiting over 4h
12-hour DTA waits50.4 per 1,000 attendances
Type 1 attendances12,638Major A&E department only
Breach component (B)55.8 / 100Weighted 60% in the index
Trolley component (T)0.4 / 100Weighted 40% in the index
vs England index-22.6England 56.2 / 100

The Gera A&E Waiting Times Index combines the 4-hour breach rate (weighted 60%) and 12-hour decision-to-admit trolley waits per 1,000 attendances (weighted 40%) into one 0–100 score. It is volume-independent, so Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust’s score reflects the wait a patient experiences here rather than how busy the department is. See the full methodology.

Other A&E departments in South East

South East scores 53 / 100 on the Gera A&E Waiting Times Index overall. See the full South East region page →

Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust A&E waiting times: FAQs

What is the A&E waiting time at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust?
In March 2026, 72.1% of major (Type 1) A&E patients at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust were seen, admitted or discharged within 4 hours (so 27.9% waited longer), and 5 patients waited 12+ hours from a decision to admit. Its Gera A&E Waiting Times Index is 33.6 / 100 (higher = longer waits), ranked 102 of 118 providers. Figures are from NHS England A&E statistics.
Is Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust one of the worst A&E departments for waiting?
Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust ranks 102 of 118 named Type-1 A&E providers on the Gera A&E Waiting Times Index (1 = longest waits). Its score of 33.6 / 100 reflects lower waiting. This measures the wait an individual patient experiences and is independent of how busy the department is.
How does Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust compare with England overall?
England's national Gera A&E Waiting Times Index is 56.2 / 100 in March 2026, with 36.1% of major-A&E patients waiting over 4 hours. Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust is at 33.6 / 100 (27.9% over 4 hours) — shorter waits than the national average.
Should I still go to Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust A&E?
For a serious or life-threatening emergency, always go to A&E or call 999 — average waits do not change that, and clinically urgent patients are prioritised. For a non-emergency in South East, NHS 111, a pharmacy, your GP or a private online consultation may be faster. GeraClinic connects patients with UK-registered doctors by video; it is a private service and is not affiliated with the NHS.

Facing a long A&E wait for a non-emergency?

Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust scores 33.6 / 100 on the Gera A&E Waiting Times Index, with 72.1% of major-A&E patients seen within 4 hours. For a non-emergency, see a UK-registered GeraClinic doctor online, often the same day — a private service, not affiliated with the NHS. For a life-threatening emergency always call 999.

Contains public sector information published by Gera Systems and licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0 (source data). Source: Gera A&E Waiting Times Index — derived from NHS England A&E open data (March 2026, published 3 July 2026).