MPs tell NHS to start packing Palantir's bags ahead of 2027 contract break
Jump to main content
Search
REG AD
Public sector
MPs tell NHS to start packing Palantir's bags ahead of 2027 contract break
Health committee calls out public mistrust, shaky evidence, and highlights alternatives
Carly Page
Carly<br>Page
Published<br>thu 9 Jul 2026 // 12:26 UTC
A cross-party group of MPs has told the government to start planning for life after Palantir, arguing the NHS should use a 2027 break clause in its Federated Data Platform (FDP) contract to find a replacement rather than doubling down on one of Whitehall's most contentious tech deals.<br>In a letter to Health Innovation Minister Preet Kaur Gill, the House of Commons Health and Social Care Committee said the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) should begin preparing to replace the FDP when the contract reaches its break clause in February 2027. Rather than waiting until the deadline looms, MPs want ministers to begin assessing alternatives now so a replacement could be in place by March 2027 if they decide not to continue with Palantir.<br>MPs reached that conclusion after grilling ministers and NHS England officials last month over the platform's supposed benefits. Since then, NHS England has quietly rewritten its website, dropping claims that the FDP was responsible for cutting waiting lists and boosting the number of procedures. It now says it "cannot therefore draw conclusions about cause and effect as other variables have not been controlled for."
REG AD
The committee said there remains "serious mistrust" of Palantir among the public, warning that the company's involvement with NHS data could discourage patients from allowing their information to be used. MPs argued that loss of confidence could undermine the NHS's wider push to make better use of patient data across the health service.
REG AD
The committee also seized on the government's admission that some NHS trusts already have capabilities beyond those offered by the FDP. If that's the case, MPs argue, there's no reason Palantir should be treated as the only option for the rest of the health service.<br>MPs are now asking the DHSC to set out what assessment it will carry out before deciding whether to exercise the break clause, as well as what advice it has received on replacing the platform by March 2027.<br>Health and Social Care Committee chair Layla Moran said: "Little by little, the government's arguments for sticking with the FDP has [sic] unravelled. So in the interest of public confidence in the NHS and the security of their medical information, we believe it is time to crack on with preparations to find an alternative in time for spring 2027."
MORE CONTEXT
NHS patients can't opt out of Palantir's data platform – but their hospital can
Listen up, England. The Health Secretary is going to be data controller for everyone's Single Patient Record
London cops post £300M tech shopping list after Palantir contract blocked
Doctors told to give Palantir's NHS data platform the cold shoulder
"The FDP may have had some advantages, but there are also downsides and it is evidently not the only show in town," she added.<br>The recommendation adds to the pressure on ministers over the future of Palantir's NHS deal. Another Commons committee has already urged the government to use the 2027 break clause, while campaigners and privacy advocates have spent months questioning everything from procurement and transparency to whether the platform's claimed benefits can be backed by evidence.<br>The DHSC did not respond to The Register’s questions, and whether it’s ready to start shopping for a Palantir successor remains unclear. ®
nhs<br>database<br>public sector<br>palantir
REG AD
applications
Outlook for Mac bug makes font choice a purely decorative feature
Monospaced code snippets among the reported casualties
Security
EU 'Chat Control' snoopfest returns after vote to kill it falls short
Opponents won the count but missed the 360-seat threshold needed to stop the interim CSAM-scanning rule
nubia Neo 5 GT Special Edition debuts with the first and only Liquid and Air Dual Active Cooling System in its class
PARTNER CONTENT: nubia aims to democratize premium gaming with a revolutionary AquaCore thermal architecture, launching first in Southeast Asia
Canonical Managed Kubeflow lands on Azure
PARTNER CONTENT: Why platform teams are swapping DIY Kubeflow for Canonical's managed service
networks
Media Over QUIC can scale real-time streaming and carry the world's vids
With the low latency of WebRTC and the scalability of DASH
AI and ML
Brown says AI make student brain no work good, teacher should help use it better
Take-home midterm row sharpens fears that the tools are dulling minds and easing cheating
MOST POPULAR
ai and ml
Even banks and hyperscalers are now sounding the alarm about the AI bubble
Security
Hackers shoveled snow for company, were rewarded with network admin access
OFFBEAT
C...