What a GMC agreed outcome is, the types available, the benefits and risks of accepting, and how to make the right decision for your case
A GMC agreed outcome is one of the most important decisions a doctor under investigation will face. Accept and the case closes without a tribunal. Reject and anything can happen. This guide explains what agreed outcomes involve, the types available, the real benefits and risks on both sides, and the questions every doctor must answer before deciding.
A GMC agreed outcome is a consensual disposal — an agreement between the doctor and the GMC that resolves the case without a full Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service hearing.
Proposed by the GMC case examiners after reviewing the investigation file, it requires the doctor's acceptance before it takes effect.
Agreed outcomes provide a proportionate route for cases not requiring full tribunal scrutiny. They are now a significant part of how GMC fitness to practise cases are resolved.
Understanding what accepting one means is one of the most important decisions a doctor under investigation will face. — and what accepting one means — is one of the most important decisions a doctor under investigation will face.
The GMC agreed outcome process is governed by the fitness to practise rules and can only be used where specific criteria are met. The doctor must accept the factual basis of the concerns and agree to the proposed disposal terms. Once accepted, the outcome is recorded and takes effect without a tribunal hearing.
There are several forms an agreed outcome can take. The nature of the case and the concerns raised determine which type the case examiners propose:
A full overview of how these outcomes compare to tribunal sanctions is set out in the guide to GMC warnings, undertakings and conditions explained.
For many doctors, an agreed outcome is the right decision. The advantages are real and substantial:
Rejecting an agreed outcome is a significant decision. If the case proceeds to the full range of GMC sanctions at tribunal, the outcome is entirely in the tribunal's hands. The risks of proceeding to tribunal include:
Rejecting an agreed outcome is not always wrong. There are circumstances where proceeding to tribunal is the appropriate decision:
This decision should never be made without specialist legal advice.
A regulatory solicitor with experience in fitness to practise proceedings can assess the evidence, the proportionality of the proposed terms, and the realistic range of outcomes at tribunal.
Before accepting or rejecting a GMC agreed outcome proposal, consider the following:
There is no universally correct answer. The right decision depends on the specific facts, the evidence, the proposed terms, and the realistic range of outcomes. What is always wrong is deciding without specialist legal advice.
A GMC agreed outcome is recorded on the public medical register and shared with overseas regulatory bodies.
For overseas-qualified doctors, an agreed outcome can trigger parallel scrutiny in home jurisdictions. UK-registered doctors can access professional ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Doctors with connections to Australia can consult ethics training for Australian doctors.
Those with connections to the USA can review professional development for US doctors.
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Bulk Buy 10 Courses →A consensual disposal of a fitness to practise case — an agreement between the doctor and the GMC that resolves the case without a full MPTS tribunal hearing. Proposed by the case examiners and requires the doctor's acceptance. Can take the form of undertakings, conditions of practice, a warning, or a combination.
Only after obtaining specialist legal advice. The decision depends on whether you accept the factual basis, whether the proposed terms are proportionate, and what a tribunal is realistically likely to impose if the case proceeds. There is no universal answer — it depends on the specific facts of your case.
The case proceeds to a full MPTS tribunal hearing. The tribunal can impose any sanction from the full range available — including conditions, suspension, and erasure. The tribunal is not bound by the agreed outcome terms that were proposed and rejected.
Yes. An agreed outcome requires the doctor to accept the factual basis of the concerns. Accepting an agreed outcome is a formal regulatory outcome — the conduct is treated as established. A doctor who genuinely disputes the facts should not accept.
Yes. Agreed outcomes involving undertakings, conditions, and warnings are recorded on the public medical register and are visible to employers and the public. The hearing itself is not public — unlike a tribunal hearing.
Undertakings are commitments given voluntarily by the doctor. Conditions are restrictions imposed on registration. Both are recorded publicly and are binding. Breach of either is a serious regulatory matter. Both can be proposed as part of an agreed outcome.
Once accepted, an agreed outcome takes effect and the normal appeals process does not apply in the same way as a tribunal decision. It is essential to obtain legal advice before accepting — the decision cannot easily be reversed after the fact.
Warnings are recorded for five years. Undertakings and conditions remain on the register for their duration and may be reviewed. The specific terms and duration will be set out in the agreed outcome proposal.
Another term sometimes used for a GMC agreed outcome — a consensual disposal agreed between the doctor and the GMC without a tribunal hearing. The terms are fixed in advance and require the doctor's acceptance before taking effect.
Yes. Undertakings and conditions are publicly recorded and may need to be disclosed to employers. Some conditions directly restrict the scope of practice. Legal and employment advice should be obtained alongside regulatory advice when considering an agreed outcome.
Where the facts are genuinely disputed, where the proposed terms are disproportionate, where the evidence is weak, or where the proposed conditions would make practice impossible. Always seek specialist legal advice before making this decision.
No. Agreed outcomes are only available where the case examiners consider a consensual disposal is appropriate. The most serious cases — including those involving allegations of serious dishonesty, sexual misconduct, or wilful patient harm — are more likely to be referred directly to tribunal.
Completing relevant CPD before and during the agreed outcome period demonstrates genuine engagement with professional standards. Our GMC remediation courses provide CPD evidence relevant to the specific concerns raised and are suitable for inclusion in any agreed outcome compliance file.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. If you have received a GMC agreed outcome proposal, seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in GMC regulatory proceedings before making any decision.