It comes after NHS England announced a further 327 deaths on Sunday, of which more than 200 took place in the last few days, while 95 happened earlier in April. The other eight fatalities were from March.
Northern Ireland announced five more deaths, meaning 381 people have died in the region after contracting Covid-19.
A further 14 people have died after testing positive for coronavirus in Wales, taking the total number of deaths to 983, Public Health Wales has said.
A total of 1,571 patients have died in Scotland after testing positive for coronavirus, an increase of 12 since Saturday.
The vast majority of people who have died with coronavirus in English hospitals have been over 60, NHS England said.
More than half (52 per cent) of deaths were of people aged 80 and over, while 39 per cent of patients who died were between 60 and 79 years old.
Around eight per cent were aged between 40 and 59, one per cent were between 20 and 39, while 0.05 percent were aged 0-19.
The daily tolls provided by regional NHS boards differ from the figures given by the Department of Health later in the day, as they only include hospital fatalities.
The Government last week began including care home and community Covid-19 deaths in the daily tolls they provide.
The number of coronavirus-related deaths in the UK - including care home and community fatalities - rose by 621 on Saturday, bringing the overall death toll to 28,131.
It came after regional NHS boards announced a further 369 deaths in hospitals that day.