What conditions of practice mean day to day, how to notify your employer, how to build a compliance record, and what to expect at the review hearing
GMC conditions of practice allow you to keep working — but they change the shape of your clinical life significantly. Understanding exactly what they require, how to comply fully, how to tell your employer, and how to prepare for the review hearing is essential. This guide covers all of it.
GMC conditions of practice are restrictions placed on a doctor's registration by the MPTS, or by consent through a GMC consent order.
They allow the doctor to continue practising — but within defined limits set by the tribunal or agreed outcome.
Conditions sit in the middle of the range of GMC sanctions — more restrictive than a warning or undertakings, less restrictive than suspension.
They are used when concerns are serious enough to require restriction, but not so serious as to warrant suspension or erasure.
Unlike a GMC suspension, conditions do not prevent the doctor from working. But they shape every aspect of clinical work for their duration — and non-compliance carries consequences as serious as the original concern that led to them.
The specific conditions imposed vary case by case, but certain types appear regularly in GMC proceedings:
A complete breakdown of how conditions compare to other outcomes is in the guide to GMC warnings, undertakings and conditions explained.
The practical impact of GMC conditions of practice on daily clinical work depends entirely on their specific terms. Read the conditions order precisely — every word matters.
For supervised practice conditions, the most immediate impact is that the doctor cannot practise until a named supervisor is in place. This means arranging supervision before returning to work — not after. Attempting to practise without the required supervision in place is a breach, regardless of whether any harm results.
Scope restrictions require careful thought about what clinical activities are covered. Every referral, ward round, and clinic decision must be filtered against the condition terms.
Keep a contemporaneous record of how clinical decisions are being made in compliance with the conditions.
CPD conditions must be completed promptly — do not treat the review date as the deadline. Completing required courses early demonstrates genuine engagement.
Our GMC remediation courses are specifically designed for doctors subject to conditions and are accepted as CPD evidence for compliance purposes.
Telling your employer about GMC conditions of practice is one of the most practically difficult aspects for many doctors. But the notification obligation is not optional — it is a condition of registration and, in most cases, an explicit term of the conditions order itself.
How to approach the notification:
The responsible officer will also be informed through GMC processes. For a full explanation of how conditions interact with revalidation, see the guide to GMC revalidation explained.
Compliance with GMC conditions is not merely a matter of following the rules. The review tribunal will assess the quality of compliance — not just whether the conditions were technically met.
What demonstrates genuine compliance:
The conditions review is conducted by an MPTS tribunal — a fresh panel that has not heard the original case. They are not bound by the original outcome and can take a range of decisions:
Prepare for the review hearing as seriously as you would for the original. Bring your complete compliance file, supervisor evidence, and specialist legal representation.
Doctors with comprehensive, well-organised evidence of genuine sustained engagement consistently achieve better outcomes.
GMC conditions of practice are recorded on the public medical register and shared with overseas regulatory bodies.
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 Canada can review professional development for Canadian doctors.
CPD Certified — Online — Immediate Access

10 CPD-certified courses for £500. Document genuine remediation throughout the conditions period and give your review tribunal the evidence it needs.
Bulk Buy 10 Courses →Restrictions placed on a doctor's registration that allow continued practice within defined limits. Imposed by the MPTS tribunal or agreed by consent. Sit between a warning and suspension in the range of GMC sanctions. Recorded publicly on the medical register for their duration.
Supervised practice — requiring the doctor to work under a named clinical supervisor — is among the most common. Scope restrictions, mandatory CPD, employer notification requirements, and compliance reporting are also frequently imposed.
Yes — conditions allow continued practice within the defined limits. Unlike suspension, they do not prevent the doctor from working. However, practising in breach of the conditions is a serious matter and can result in the conditions being replaced with suspension.
Yes. Most conditions orders explicitly require notification of the employer and responsible officer. This is both a condition of the order and a professional obligation. Notify in writing, before returning to practice, and keep a record of the notification.
A serious matter. The GMC can apply for an urgent interim order. At the review hearing, breach is a significant aggravating factor. Deliberate breach can result in the conditions being replaced with suspension or referral for a fresh hearing.
Up to three years per order. Subject to review — the review tribunal can lift, vary, or continue the conditions, or replace them with a more restrictive sanction. Conditions do not automatically expire at the end of the stated period.
An MPTS tribunal that reviews the conditions order at its scheduled review date or earlier if required. Not the same panel as the original case. Reviews compliance evidence and determines whether to lift, vary, continue, or replace the conditions.
A detailed compliance log, supervisor reports, CPD certificates, an updated reflective statement demonstrating continued insight, and evidence of ongoing appraisal and professional engagement. Prepare comprehensively — treat the review hearing as seriously as the original.
Yes. The review tribunal can continue conditions for a further period where it is not yet satisfied that fitness to practise is no longer impaired. The maximum period per order is three years — further orders can follow if compliance remains inadequate.
A senior doctor designated under the Medical Profession (Responsible Officers) Regulations 2010, responsible for revalidation recommendations and fitness to practise matters at each organisation. Must be notified of conditions orders and plays a role in monitoring compliance.
Yes. Conditions are recorded on the register and the responsible officer is aware of them. Revalidation continues during the conditions period — failure to engage with revalidation while subject to conditions is itself a concern. Maintaining full appraisal engagement is essential.
Demonstrate full compliance throughout the order period, genuine and sustained insight, completed CPD, positive supervisor reports, and a credible personal development plan. The review tribunal must be satisfied that fitness to practise is no longer impaired.
Courses directly relevant to the concerns that led to the conditions carry the most weight — professional ethics, probity, clinical governance, or specific clinical competence areas. Completing them early in the order period, not just before review, demonstrates genuine engagement.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. If you are subject to GMC conditions of practice, seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in GMC regulatory proceedings.