Areas under Tier 2 and 3 restrictions are seeing cases rise after the lockdown was lifted last week.
The tiers are to be reviewed next week on December 16 with regions across the country expecting to more up and down the system.
But unfortunately, some areas have not managed to get their coronavirus cases under control and could see tougher restrictions placed on them in the coming weeks.
The Mirror Online has compiled a list of areas where cases are rising under Tier 2 and 3 restrictions using the ZOE Covid Symptom Study app.
Data is presented daily on the app from experts at health science company ZOE and King's College London, in a handy new dashboard.
It shows the "prevalence rate" - cases per 100,000 of the population - of coronavirus for every area in England as well as the rate among people aged 60 and above.
In a glimmer of hope, it shows only five "subregions" which are in Tier 2 and where the case rate is rising.
* Do you hope Liverpool goes into Tier One when the areas are reviewed? Tell us in the comments
Those at risk include the county of Suffolk in the East of England, and in the South East, the combined "subregion" of Reading, Wokingham, Bracknell Forest, Windsor and Maidenhead and West Berkshire has seen cases rise.
Areas in Tier 2 which have seen cases increase
- Suffolk
- Reading
- Wokingham
- Bracknell Forest
- Windsor
- Maidenhead
- West Berkshire
- Wiltshire
- Swindon
- Warrington
- Cheshire
Areas in Tier 3 which have seen cases increase
- Warwickshire
- Coventry
- Solihull
- The Humber
Areas which are seeing cases go down
- Greater Manchester
- Cumbria
- Liverpool city region
- Tees Valley (LA5)
- North East 7 (LA7)
- West Yorkshire
- York and North Yorkshire
- Derby and Derbyshire
- Nottingham and Nottinghamshire
- Lincolnshire
- Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent
- Shropshire and Telford and Wreakin
- Worcestershire
- Herefordshire
- London
- Hertfordshire
- Norfolk
- Kent and Medway
- East and West Sussex, and Brighton and Hove
- Oxfordshire
- Devon
- Dorset, Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole
Vaccine details emerging
It comes as Downing Street today confirmed more details of who will be first in line to get the vaccine when the first doses are delivered tomorrow.
Alongside the those already revealed to be in line for doses, No 10 has confirmed that people being discharged from hospital after treatment will also be eligible for the vaccine - so long as they meet one of the other criteria.
The first priority groups for hospitals will be people over 80, those who work in care homes or on the front lines of the NHS.
Care home residents are also in the first batch of the priority list but roll-out to them has been delayed because the approval to break up doses of the vaccine for delivery to individual homes was not confirmed until today.
See how coronavirus has affected your area by entering your postcode below
A Downing Street spokesperson said: "The NHS set out over the weekend that we have 800,000 doses available.
"The first of the vaccine will go to people over 80 alongside care home workers and frontline NHS workers.
"They have also set out that a small number of NHS primary care networks will begin delivering the vaccine from next week, the week beginning the 14th."
They also confirmed that hospitals will be "inviting people who already have out patients appointments if they meet the criteria - as will people who are leaving the hospital after treatment".
They added: "The others will join throughout December and the coming months."