HM Inspector of Prisons Report on HMP Manchester: Drugs, Violence Remain Serious Threats Despite Progress
Summary
HM Chief Inspector of Prisons Charlie Taylor released findings from an inspection of HMP Manchester conducted between 12 and 22 January 2026. The inspection, 15 months after an urgent notification was invoked, found the prison remained in a precarious state despite some improvements. Key findings included approximately 38% of prisoners testing positive for drugs in random tests, very high levels of violence including serious assaults on staff, and 40% of prisoners unemployed. Four self-inflicted deaths occurred since the previous inspection. The report noted slow progress on physical security improvements to prevent drone deliveries of drugs.
What changed
HM Chief Inspector of Prisons Charlie Taylor released findings from an inspection of HMP Manchester in January 2026, conducted 15 months after invoking an urgent notification notice. The inspection found approximately 38% of prisoners tested positive for drugs in random tests, with drones delivering illicit substances on an almost daily basis. Very high levels of violence, including some of the most serious assaults on staff, were documented alongside 40% of prisoners being unemployed and locked in cells for extended periods. Four self-inflicted deaths occurred since the previous inspection.
The report carries implications for HM Prison and Probation Service leadership, which must take determined action to improve physical security and address the drone threat. Prison management will need to accelerate window replacement programmes, expand rehabilitative activities, and tackle staff recruitment and education provision challenges. As a training prison, Manchester must improve its curriculum and reduce delays in allocating prisoners to education to fulfil its rehabilitative purpose.
What to do next
- Monitor for HMPPS response and action plan
- Review physical security measures at category A/B prisons
- Address education and employment provision for prisoners
Archived snapshot
Apr 15, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
PA Media
HMP Manchester was described by prison inspectors as the "most violent" jail in England and Wales in October 2024
Angela Ferguson and Carol Lowe North West
14 April 2026
Large quantities of drugs flown in by drones and violence against prisoners and staff are among issues highlighted in a damning report into a city jail.
HM Chief Inspector of Prisons Charlie Taylor said that while some progress had been made to improve the situation at HMP Manchester, drugs, violence and a "poor regime" remained serious threats to stability.
Inspectors returned to the prison 15 months after Taylor invoked an urgent notification notice and found it remained in "a precarious state".
A Ministry of Justice (MoJ) spokesperson said they were taking urgent action to improve security and tackle violence and welcomed recognition of the strong leadership now in place.
'Fragility about the place'
Taylor said this was another inspection that had been completed in a "troubled" prison dogged with problems for many years.
He said there had been some improvements in the jail, with the governor and his team restoring "an element of stability" but there was "a fragility about the place that makes us nervous".
Far too many drugs were getting into the jail, which houses category A and B prisoners, he said, with about 38% of inmates testing positive in random tests - one of the highest rates in prisons in England and Wales.
It was taking "far too long" to change the windows to guard against drones flying in carrying illicit substances "on an almost daily basis," he added.
The presence of drugs led to debt and violence, with "very high" levels of violence at Manchester, including "some of the most serious violence", and an increasing number of serious assaults on staff.
The report also found 40% of prisoners were unemployed and were locked up in their cells for long periods of time when it was supposed to be a training prison.
'Daytime TV and drugs'
"What we saw at Manchester was far too many prisoners sitting in their cells watching daytime TV and in many cases taking drugs," he said.
Taylor said it cost a lot of money to send someone to prison and he did not think it unreasonable to expect that prisoners should be out of their cells working and learning skills that would help them "resettle" when they come out.
Taylor said leaders at Manchester had made a determined effort to start grappling with some of the issues identified in 2024 and they had seen some early evidence of improvement.
"However, without more determined action from HMPPS [HM Prison and Probation Service] to improve physical security, drugs will continue to undermine those efforts," he warned.
Half of the prisoners surveyed during the inspection, which took place between 12 and 22 January 2026, said it was easy to get hold of illicit substances.
Taylor said issues around staff recruitment and education provision also needed to be tackled, "if Manchester is to deliver the rehabilitative activity that prisoners need to successfully re-establish themselves in society when they are released".
The situation was exacerbated by recent cuts to education provision and, along with isolation, loneliness and poor mental health, inactivity was contributing to high rates of self-harm, and there had been four self-inflicted deaths since the previous inspection.
The offender management unit was found to be well led and prisoners received some good support with their sentence plan objectives, but Manchester was still not fulfilling its purpose as a training prison.
The curriculum did not meet prisoners' needs and it took too long to allocate them to education, and classes were often cancelled, the report said.
'Taking urgent action'
Taylor said they would be back "in the not too distant future" and they wanted to see some of these issues fixed.
An MoJ spokesperson said: "This is a prison operating under immense pressure after this government inherited a prison system at the peak of its crisis.
"We took immediate action to bring the system back from the point of collapse and while we welcome inspectors recognising the strong leadership now in place at HMP Manchester, we are taking urgent action to stop drones, upgrade security and tackle the flow of drugs which fuels violence behind bars."
The BBC understands that, since the report, the prison has developed a new education, skills and work programme and all staff receive suicide and self-harm prevention and mental health awareness training, to increase their skills in supporting prisoners in distress.
Enver Solomon, chief executive of social justice charity Nacro, said the report was "a damning indictment of a prison system in crisis.
"How can rehabilitation happen when drug use and violence are rife, and chronic staff shortages leave people in prison with little meaningful activity?"
Solomon said when nearly half of prisoners were using drugs and many were locked in cells for up to 22 hours a day, "rehabilitation doesn't stand a chance", despite it being "essential for helping people turn their lives around and ultimately for keeping our communities safe".
"Developing services that address the root causes of offending are vital for real change," he added.
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