IPSA publishes data on MPs’ business funding for December 2025 and January 2026
Date published: 14 May 2026
IPSA has published details of spending by MPs against their parliamentary budgets, processed between 01 December 2025 and 31 January 2026.
The data is searchable by MP name, and in full under the Individual Business Costs tab on our dedicated webpage.
IPSA supports MPs and their staff in fulfilling their duty to their constituents and to Westminster, by providing the necessary funding to run an office, pay staff, and cover work-related travel.
Lee Bridges, Director of Standards and Information at IPSA, says:
“It’s important we are transparent about how public money is being spent.
“IPSA exists to ensure MPs receive the right level of funding to carry out their parliamentary duties, and that this funding is regulated appropriately. “
By regularly publishing MPs’ business costs IPSA can help to build public confidence, and ensure voters know parliamentary funds are being used.”
ENDS
For more details contact IPSA's Press Office.
Notes to Editors
IPSA publishes details of MPs’ staffing and business costs every two months, including claims processed across a two-month period – usually four to five months in arrears from the publication date. The next scheduled publication is in July.
IPSA was created in 2009 by the Parliamentary Standards Act. The Act was amended in 2010 by the Constitutional Reform and Governance Act. Together they gave IPSA three main responsibilities:
to regulate MPs’ business costs
to determine MPs’ pay and pension arrangements
to provide financial support to MPs in carrying out their parliamentary functions
3. IPSA is independent of Parliament and the Government. This allows us to make decisions about the rules on business costs and on MPs’ pay ourselves, without interference. You can find out more about IPSA's role and responsibilities on our website.
4. The Funding Scheme for MPs (‘the Scheme’) governs what MPs can and cannot claim. We review our rules regularly and consult the public when we do so.
5. Repayments are made to IPSA by MPs and third parties for a variety of reasons. These include:
refunding items for which an MP no longer wishes to claim
refunding payment card transactions for which an MP does not wish to claim, and
where an MP has received a rebate or refund from a third party, for example on their business rates or utility bills