What HCPC agreed outcomes are, when they are offered, what accepting an agreed outcome involves, how they differ from panel hearing outcomes, and how to decide whether to accept.
An HCPC agreed outcome is a formal resolution at the case examiner stage — avoiding a panel hearing but imposing a formal sanction. Deciding whether to accept requires careful advice.
An HCPC agreed outcome is a formal resolution proposed by the case examiners at case examiner stage — avoiding the need for a full Conduct and Competence Committee panel hearing. It typically takes the form of a caution order or conditions of practice order agreed between the case examiners and the registrant,
without a formal panel finding. The registrant must consent to the agreed outcome — it cannot be imposed without acceptance. The broader case examiner framework is in the guide to HCPC case examiners.
Case examiners offer agreed outcomes where: the concern is remediable; the registrant has demonstrated genuine insight and remediation; the case does not require a public panel hearing in the public interest; and the registrant is willing to accept a formal outcome at case examiner level.
The quality and strength of the remediation evidence submitted — particularly CPD with reflective notes and the reflective statement — directly influences whether an agreed outcome is offered and what its terms are.
The guide to what HCPC CPD evidence counts explains how CPD influences this assessment.
The most common agreed outcomes are: a formal caution order — recorded on the HCPC register for a defined period, not restricting practice; and conditions of practice order — restricting practice in specified ways and requiring ongoing monitoring.
Both are formal outcomes. Both are publicly recorded. Both appear on register checks. The full implications of each are in the HCPC sanctions guide.
CPD Certified — Online — Immediate Access

Whether to accept depends on: whether the proposed terms are appropriate and proportionate to the concern; what the realistic outcome would be at a panel hearing if the case were referred; the strength of the evidence available; the impact of the proposed outcome on employment and professional life; and the cost, stress, and
public exposure of a panel hearing versus accepting the agreed outcome. Never decide without trade union, professional body, or specialist legal advice. An MDO, RCN, or specialist regulatory solicitor can assess the proposed terms against the likely panel outcome and advise whether acceptance is in your best interests.
The guide to HCPC conditions of practice explains what conditions involve if accepted as an agreed outcome. The guide to HCPC caution orders explains what a caution involves as an agreed outcome.
UK-registered healthcare professionals can access professional ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Professionals with connections to Australia can consult et.
Those with connections to New Zealand can review pd.
10 CPD-certified courses for £500. Strong CPD evidence with reflective notes at case examiner stage is one of the most influential factors in whether an agreed outcome is offered and on what terms.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →A formal resolution proposed by case examiners — avoiding a panel hearing — typically a caution order or conditions of practice. Requires the registrant's consent.
Where the concern is remediable, genuine insight and remediation has been demonstrated, and a public panel hearing is not required in the public interest.
Most commonly a formal caution order or conditions of practice order — both publicly recorded on the HCPC register.
Yes — both caution orders and conditions agreed as outcomes are recorded on the HCPC register and visible in register checks.
Only with professional advice — from your trade union, professional body, or specialist legal representative — who can assess the terms against the likely panel outcome.
Yes — rejection means the case proceeds to a panel hearing. The panel then considers the same evidence and can impose any available sanction.
It depends on the specific terms. Professional advice before acceptance is essential.
Strong, specific CPD with reflective notes demonstrates genuine remediation at case examiner stage — one of the most influential factors in whether an agreed outcome is offered and on what terms.
Breach of conditions is a serious additional fitness to practise concern — the case can be referred to a panel hearing.
Yes — to the appropriate court within the appeal timeframe.
Caution orders last for a defined period. Conditions orders are reviewed at intervals and can be varied or removed.
Yes — employers, agencies, and NHS organisations conducting register checks will see the outcome. Conditions may require employer notification.
Avoiding public exposure; avoiding the cost and stress of a hearing; and — where the evidence is strong — potentially achieving a less serious outcome than a panel might impose.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in HCPC regulatory proceedings.