26 Jun 2025
by Department for Science, Innovation & Technology

How the UK is backing quantum

Guest blog by DSIT’s Office for Quantum as part of #UnleashInnovation week 2025

Quantum in the UK

On Monday, the UK Government launched its modern Industrial Strategy, naming quantum as a priority frontier technology in its Digital and Technologies Sector Plan - the first dedicated plan to support the UK sector.

Why is quantum a priority?

Quantum technology, which harnesses the universe’s tiniest particles to build ultrapowerful computers and ultra-sensitive sensors, has the potential to revolutionise our economy and national security.

Quantum computers could significantly enhance our ability to optimise global supply chains, accelerate the discovery of new drugs for our NHS, or develop new fuels for Net Zero. Quantum sensors are already outperforming current technologies, boosting efficiency in medical imaging, gas sensing and satellite-free navigation.

The UK is a global leader in quantum, ranking second worldwide for the number of companies and levels of private investment. Early investment since 2014, through the National Quantum Technologies Programme, has yielded a globally leading ecosystem. We have an opportunity to be one of the first nations globally to benefit from these technologies at scale as home to many leading start-ups and larger companies that are pioneering both their development and rollout.

The next phase of the National Programme will focus on accelerating commercialisation and adoption to improve lives across the country and drive future growth in our economy. By progressing the five National Quantum Missions, which outline the UK’s ambitions in quantum, we will deploy quantum navigation systems, ensure NHS trusts benefit from quantum sensing, and have UK-based quantum computers that significantly outperform supercomputers by 2035. The Missions represent a step change in how government supports the sector and works with industry and academia to deliver ambitious outcomes in the UK.

£670 million for the UK’s national quantum computing mission

The launch of the government’s Digital and Technologies Sector Plan marked the first step in this new phase of the programme, setting out £670 million to accelerate the development and adoption of quantum computing. Of this, over £500 million is set to back the innovators who are advancing the government’s quantum computing mission for the next four years (from 26-27 to 29-30), driving forward developments across the entire quantum computing stack.

This investment means the National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC) is the first R&D institution to being placed on a 10-year footing. Based at Harwell Campus, the NQCC supports the expanding use of quantum computers and the growth of the UK’s quantum computing ecosystem across various sectors, from healthcare to communications. It houses a wide range of quantum computing platforms open to anyone with a valid use case, fostering collaboration that pushes the boundaries of what’s possible with quantum technology.

Long-term backing will keep the NQCC at the heart of a new wave of quantum computing innovation, playing a key role in delivering the next phase of the National Quantum Technologies Programme, aiming to get quantum technologies out of the lab and onto the marketplace.

As one of the largest and longest-term national commitments to quantum computing anywhere globally, this total £670 million pledge represents a substantial step-up in the support available for quantum computing companies in the UK.

What next?

Confirming the UK’s long-term and ambitious support for quantum technologies and recognising the vital role they will play in future economic growth is a key part of the government’s Industrial Strategy. The missions reflect that in the near future; we will all realise the benefits of this tech in our everyday lives. The UK plans to be at the forefront of driving that innovation.

Later in the year more details will follow on other aspects of the quantum programme – watch this space!

For more information please see; 

 


techUK – Unleashing UK Tech and Innovation 

The UK is home to emerging technologies that have the power to revolutionise entire industries. From quantum to semiconductors; from gaming to the New Space Economy, they all have the unique opportunity to help prepare for what comes next.

techUK members lead the development of these technologies. Together we are working with Government and other stakeholders to address tech innovation priorities and build an innovation ecosystem that will benefit people, society, economy and the planet - and unleash the UK as a global leader in tech and innovation.

For more information, or to get in touch, please visit our Innovation Hub and click ‘contact us’. 


Upcoming events

16 – 17 July 2025

UK Space Conference 2025

Manchester Partner event
5 November 2025

Tech and Innovation Summit 2025

Central London Conference

Latest news and insights

Other forms of content

Sprint Campaigns

techUK's sprint campaigns explore how emerging and transformative technologies are developed, applied and commercialised across the UK's innovation ecosystem.

Activity includes workshops, roundtables, panel discussions, networking sessions, Summits, and flagship reports (setting out recommendations for Government and industry).

Each campaign runs for 4-6 months and features regular collaborations with programmes across techUK. 

techUK's latest sprint campaign is on Robotics & Automation technologies. Find out how to get involved by clicking here.

New Space

Running from September to December 2023, this sprint campaign explored how the UK can lead on the development, application and commercialisation of space technologies, bring more non-space companies into the sector, and ultimately realise the benefits of the New Space Economy.

These technologies include AI, quantum, lasers, robotics & automation, advanced propulsion and materials, and semiconductors.

Activity has taken the form of roundtables, panel discussions, networking sessions, Summits, thought leadership pieces, policy recommendations, and a report. The report, containing member case studies and policy recommendations, was launched in March 2024 at Satellite Applications Catapult's Harwell campus.

Get in touch below to find out more about techUK's ongoing work in this area.


Event round-ups


Report


Insights


Get in touch

Rory Daniels

Rory Daniels

Senior Programme Manager, Emerging Technologies

Gaming & Esports

Running from January to May 2024, this sprint campaign explored how the UK can lead on the development, application and commercialisation of the technologies set to underpin the Gaming & Esports sector of the future.

These include AI, augmented / virtual / mixed / extended reality, haptics, cloud & edge computing, semiconductors, and advanced connectivity (5/6G).

Activity took the form of roundtables, panel discussions, networking sessions, Summits, and thought leadership pieces. A report featuring member case studies and policy recommendations was launched at The National Videogame Museum in November 2024.

Get in touch below to find out more about techUK's future plans in this space.


Report


Event round-ups


Insights


Get in touch

Rory Daniels

Rory Daniels

Senior Programme Manager, Emerging Technologies

Web3 & Immersive

Running from July to December 2024, this sprint campaign explored how the UK can lead on the development, application and commercialisation of web3 and immersive technologies.

These include blockchain, smart contracts, digital assets, augmented / virtual / mixed / extended reality, spatial computing, haptics and holograms.

Activity took the form of roundtables, workshops, panel discussions, networking sessions, tech demos, Summits, thought leadership pieces, policy recommendations, and a report (to be launched in 2025).

Get in touch below to find out more about techUK's future plans in this space.


Event round-ups


Insights


Get in touch

Rory Daniels

Rory Daniels

Senior Programme Manager, Emerging Technologies

Robotics & Automation

Running from February to June 2025, this sprint campaign is exploring how the UK can lead on the development, application and commercialisation of robotic & automation technologies.

These include autonomous vehicles, drones, humanoids, and applications across industry & manufacturing, defence, transport & mobility, logistics, and more.

Activity is taking the form of roundtables, workshops, panel discussions, networking sessions, tech demos, Summits, thought leadership pieces, policy recommendations, and a report (to be launched in Q4 2025).

Get in touch below to get involved or find out more about techUK's future plans in this space.


Upcoming events


Insights

Guest blog _ Rainbird.png

The Evolution of AI Reasoning


Event round-ups


Get in touch

Rory Daniels

Rory Daniels

Senior Programme Manager, Emerging Technologies

Campaign Weeks

Our annual Campaign Weeks enable techUK members to explore how the UK can lead on the development and application of emerging and transformative technologies.

Members do this by contributing blogs or vlogs, speaking at events, and highlighting examples of best practice within the UK's tech sector.


Summits

Tech and Innovation Summit 2025

View the agenda & sign up now

Tech and Innovation Summit 2023

View the recordings

Tech and Innovation Summit 2024

View the recordings

Receive our Tech and Innovation insights

Tech and Innovation updates

Sign-up to get the latest updates and opportunities across Technology and Innovation.

Unleashing the Potential of UK Tech and Innovation.jpg

 

Related topics

Authors