Largest funding increase in more than a decade for justice system
Victims, courts and prisons will benefit from the Ministry of Justice’s largest funding increase in more than a decade, awarded in yesterday’s Spending Review.

- Extra £2.2 billion in Spending Review to drive recovery in courts, prisons and probation
- £550 million to cut reoffending and protect the public
- £185 million a year to boost victim support services
A 12 percent boost to the department’s budget will see £11.5 billion invested by the end of this parliament, delivering commitments to cut crime and build back confidence in justice � with an extra £2.2 billion to aid recovery in the courts, prisons and probation services.
An extra £550 million will be invested over the next 3 years to rehabilitate offenders and protect the public � getting ex-prisoners into work and keeping them off the streets to tackle the root causes of crime.
»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp money will help accelerate the extensive work already underway to recover from the unprecedented impact of the pandemic, while delivering a more efficient and modern justice system.
More than £1 billion has been allocated to boost capacity and accelerate post-pandemic recovery. This includes £477 million that has been secured to help deliver the swift access to justice that victims deserve � improving waiting times and reducing court backlogs.
Crucially, victim support services will see £185 million in annual funding by 2024-25. This will fund more than 1,000 Independent Sexual and Domestic Violence Advisors and 24/7 crisis helplines and is an 85% increase on funding in 2019/20.
In addition, £3.5 billion will fund the MOJ’s commitment to create 18,000 additional prison places - the biggest prison-building programme in more than a century. A further £250 million will fund an extra 2,000 temporary prison places.
Justice Secretary and Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab MP said:
»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp pandemic created unprecedented challenges but this settlement is the largest increase in more than a decade for the justice system. That means we can focus on building a better, more efficient, justice system for all.
»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp extra investment will help us protect the public by bringing criminals to justice quicker, reducing stubborn reoffending rates and supporting victims better than ever before.
»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp settlement includes a further £324 million over the next 3 years to improve timeliness in civil and family courts and tribunals. £200 million will complete the flagship £1.3 billion court-reform programme, fulfilling our commitment to a justice system that takes advantage of technology and moves more court processes to quicker and safer online platforms.
»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp Spending Review will also boost access to justice for millions by expanding the eligibility thresholds for legal aid in civil cases - such as deciding child maintenance arrangements. »Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp MOJ will set out plans for criminal legal aid following the ongoing independent review which is due to report back soon.