TGS


His Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS) Annual Report on the IPP Sentence 2025/26 (Lord Timpson)

Today, I am laying before Parliament the HMPPS 2025/26 Annual Report on the IPP Sentence, pursuant to Section 67 of the Victims and Prisoners Act 2024.

This Report sets out the activity across HMPPS for the financial year of 2025/26 to support those serving the IPP sentence in prison to work towards a safe release, and those in the community, towards the termination of their licence.

The latest published statistics show that as at 31 March 2026, there were 896 unreleased and 1,433 recalled IPP prisoners, compared to 1,012 unreleased and 1,532 recalled IPP prisoners on the corresponding date in 2025. As at 31 December 2025, there were 891 offenders serving IPP sentences in the community and 207 prisoners in hospital for treatment under the Mental Health Act 1983, compared to 1,376 offenders in the community and 233 prisoners in hospital on the corresponding date in 2024.

The Sentencing Act 2026, which received Royal Assent on 22 January 2026, introduced further reforms to IPP licence termination on 1 June 2026. These reforms:

reduced the qualifying period for licence termination from three years to two years following first release; andenable individuals whose licence is not terminated at the end of this period to apply for a further Parole Board review one year later, prior to automatic termination.

The IPP Action Plan 2026/27 is included as part of this Annual Report, which sets out planned HMPPS activity for the year, including six measurable targets. Through the IPP Action Plan HMPPS has committed funding to sustain vital services such as the IPP approved premises pilot, and to trial a new IPP advocate role, designed to provide more personalised support to those serving IPP sentences. Further successes include:

additional funding for Psychology Services, enabling greater access to specialist assessments for individuals facing the most significant barriers to progression.the Phoenix Unit at HMP Aylesbury is due to open later this summer as a purpose-designed residential unit to support IPP prisoners who have become disengaged from progression.a Release on Temporary Licence (ROTL) model has been agreed for all four progression regime prisons (Humber, Warren Hill, Erlestoke and Buckley Hall) to enable IPP ROTL.strengthened recall processes by:

o streamlining the documentation required for a recall request, to ensure that the reasons for recall are robustly and clearly stated;

o enhancing quality assurance for decision-making;

o delivering additional training for Public Protection Casework Section (PPCS) staff who formally revoke an offender’s licence; and

o ensuring that only senior managers in PPCS can revoke the licence.

In addition, HMPPS used the Risk Assessed Recall Review (RARR) power to re-release 61 recalled IPP prisoners between 1 November 2024 and 31 December 2025, in some cases months ahead of a scheduled parole hearing.

The Government is determined to make further progress towards a safe and sustainable release for all those serving the IPP sentence and an eventual end to their sentence, but only in such a way that does not put the public and victims at risk.

https://www.theyworkforyou.com/wms/?id=2026-07-09.hlws208.0

seen at 10:08, 10 July in Written Ministerial Statements.