What GOC suspension actually means for optometrists and dispensing opticians — when it is imposed, what you can and cannot do during suspension, how to use the period productively, and what the review hearing requires
A GOC suspension order is one of the most serious formal outcomes in optical fitness to practise proceedings. It prevents practice entirely for its duration. But suspension is not the end — it is a period in which the right actions can lead to restoration of practice at the review hearing. This guide explains what suspension means, what to do during it, and what the review requires.
A GOC suspension order prevents an optometrist or dispensing optician from practising in any capacity requiring GOC registration for the duration of the order.
It is publicly recorded on the optical register and visible to anyone who searches it. Suspension is imposed where the concern is serious, conditions of practice would not adequately protect the public, but erasure is not required — because there is a realistic prospect of remediation within a defined period.
Suspension is not the most serious GOC outcome — erasure is — but it is a formal public restriction that prevents practice and has immediate professional and financial consequences. The full range of GOC outcomes is covered in the GOC sanctions guide.
During GOC suspension, you cannot practise in any capacity requiring GOC registration. This includes working as an optometrist, dispensing optician, or contact lens optician. You cannot perform clinical examinations, dispense prescriptions, or fit contact lenses. Working in a GOC-registered capacity during suspension is a criminal offence.
CPD Certified — Online — Immediate Access

What you can do depends on the specific terms of the suspension order. Some adjacent non-clinical roles may be possible — optical retail management, administrative roles, teaching. Any uncertainty about what the suspension permits must be resolved with legal advice before taking up any work.
The suspension period is not dead time — it is the period in which the evidence for the review hearing is built. The review panel assesses whether the suspension should be lifted, varied to conditions, or continued. That decision is determined by the evidence produced during the suspension period. The most effective approach:
The review panel assesses: whether the suspended registrant has complied with all suspension order requirements; whether the underlying concerns have been genuinely addressed; whether the risk of repetition has reduced; and whether the public can be adequately protected if the registrant returns to practice.
The evidence produced during the suspension period determines the outcome.
The evidence that most consistently supports a positive review outcome: CPD completed progressively from the beginning of the suspension period with specific reflective notes; a personal statement demonstrating genuine insight and specific professional change; peer or colleague evidence confirming maintained clinical
knowledge or current practice standards; and a credible personal development plan for return to practice.
The complete framework for this evidence is in the guide to GOC remediation evidence.
The GOC review hearing is not just a compliance check — it is an opportunity to demonstrate that the concerns that led to suspension have been genuinely addressed and that it is safe and appropriate to return to practice.
The registrant who arrives at the review hearing with a compelling evidence file — built systematically from the first day of suspension — is in a fundamentally stronger position than one who arrives with a thin file compiled at the last minute. The suspension period is valuable time. Use it.
UK-registered healthcare professionals can access professional ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Professionals with connections to Ireland can consult ethics training in Ireland.
Those with connections to New Zealand can review professional development in New Zealand.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. CPD completed from the first week of GOC suspension — with specific reflective notes — is the most persuasive evidence you can present at your review hearing.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →A formal outcome removing an optometrist or dispensing optician from practice for the duration of the order. Publicly recorded. Imposed where conditions would not adequately protect the public but erasure is not required.
Practise in any GOC-regulated capacity — clinical examinations, dispensing, contact lens fitting. Working as a GOC-registered professional during suspension is a criminal offence.
Adjacent non-clinical roles may be possible depending on the suspension terms. Any uncertainty must be resolved with legal advice before taking up any work.
The duration is determined by the committee. Suspension orders are reviewed at intervals and can be lifted, varied to conditions, or continued at each review.
Yes — on the optical register, visible to employers, agencies, and the public.
Compliance with all suspension requirements; whether underlying concerns have been genuinely addressed; whether the risk of repetition has reduced; and whether the public can be adequately protected if practice is restored.
CPD specifically addressing the GOC Standard relevant to the concern — completed progressively from the first week of suspension, not crammed into the final weeks before the review hearing.
Potentially — without yourself practising. This depends on the specific terms of the suspension. Take legal advice before making any arrangements.
CPD completed progressively from the start of suspension with specific reflective notes; a genuine personal statement; peer or colleague evidence; and a credible personal development plan for return to practice.
Yes — where the registrant has demonstrated genuine remediation, the panel may decide that conditions of practice are sufficient to protect the public and allow a return to practice.
Yes — to the appropriate court. Specialist legal advice on appeal grounds and prospects is essential.
Interim suspension is imposed urgently before the investigation concludes — a temporary measure pending the full fitness to practise process. Substantive suspension follows a full committee hearing where impairment has been found.
Build your evidence file systematically from the first day of suspension. Get specialist legal representation. Review the evidence with your legal representative before the hearing. Present a clear, specific narrative of what has changed.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in GOC regulatory proceedings.