Updated:
Marie Curie Cancer Care
Matthew Reed leads Marie Curie Cancer Care, the UK's largest end-of-life charity, operating nine hospices and a national community nursing service.
Marie Curie Cancer Care
Marie Curie is here for anyone with an illness they’re likely to die from, and those close to them. We are with you to the end.
General information
Firm type
Trust / Investment Trust
Year founded
1948
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
Europe
Country
United Kingdom
City
London
Corporate office
89 Albert Embankment, London SE1 7TP, United Kingdom
Additional offices
Edinburgh, United Kingdom · Glasgow, United Kingdom · Belfast, United Kingdom · Cardiff, United Kingdom · Liverpool, United Kingdom · Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom · Bradford, United Kingdom · Solihull, United Kingdom
Principals
Matthew Reed
Chief Executive Officer
Tim Breedon
Trustee
King Charles III
Patron
John Varley
Former Chairman of the Trustee Council
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Is Marie Curie Cancer Care a single-family office or a charitable trust?
It is a registered charitable trust, not a single-family office. It manages £200M+ in annual income derived from NHS contracts, public fundraising, and a network of charity shops, and deploys it into operating nine hospices and a national community-based palliative nursing service across the UK.
How does the charity fund its operations?
Funding is tripartite: roughly half comes from NHS clinical commissioning contracts, with the remainder split between voluntary fundraising events and income generated from its UK-wide chain of charity shops. Major corporate partners include Morrisons, which aimed to raise £15M, and the National Garden Scheme, which has donated over £9M.
What assets does Marie Curie hold beyond its hospices?
The charity's asset base includes nine freehold or long-leasehold hospice sites from Hampstead to Belfast, its headquarters at 89 Albert Embankment in London, and a portfolio of shops trading on high streets across the UK. It also holds an investment portfolio, though this is ancillary to its operational model.
Who governs Marie Curie Cancer Care?
A Trustee Council governs the charity. Past and present trustees include prominent UK financial leaders such as Tim Breedon, former CEO of Legal & General, and John Varley, former CEO of Barclays and ex-Chairman of the Council. King Charles III serves as the charity's Royal Patron.
Does the charity make direct investments or fund commitments?
No. Marie Curie is not structured as a grant-maker or investment vehicle. Its capital is employed entirely in operating its nine hospices, employing over 2,000 nurses and healthcare assistants, and maintaining its nationwide community palliative care service. It does not function as a family office deploying into third-party funds.
What is the relationship between Marie Curie Cancer Care and the NHS?
Marie Curie is an independent charity that operates as a contracted partner to the NHS. Local NHS clinical commissioning groups pay for the majority of its nursing hours. The charity retains full operational and governance control, setting its own clinical standards under Care Quality Commission regulation.
Are Marie Curie's services free for patients?
Yes. All Marie Curie services — whether in one of its nine hospices or delivered by a nurse in the patient's home — are provided free of charge at the point of use. The charity's fundraising and retail income cross-subsidizes the care it delivers under NHS contract.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
Need institutional-grade insight on investors?
Altss delivers:
Prefer a guided tour?
We’ll walk you through: