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Writing a GMC Personal Statement: What to Include and What to Avoid

What a GMC personal statement is, the key elements case examiners and the tribunal want to see, how to demonstrate insight, address specific concerns, and the most common mistakes

Updated: April 2026|14 min read
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A GMC personal statement is one of the most important documents a doctor submits in fitness to practise proceedings. Submitted to the case examiners or read at the MPTS tribunal, it is the doctor's opportunity to address the allegations directly, demonstrate genuine insight, and present the remediation undertaken. A strong personal statement can materially affect the outcome of a case. A weak one can undo otherwise good remediation work. This guide explains exactly what to include and what to avoid.

What Is a GMC Personal Statement?

A GMC personal statement is a formal written document in which a doctor addresses the fitness to practise concerns raised against them, demonstrates insight and remorse, presents the remediation undertaken, and makes the case for why they are fit to remain on the medical register.

It is submitted to the GMC as part of the doctor's response to the investigation and, where the case proceeds to tribunal, is typically read by or presented to the MPTS panel.

The personal statement is distinct from — but closely related to — the reflective statement and the insight statement. Where the reflective statement is exploratory and narrative, and

the insight statement is analytical, the personal statement is an advocacy document: it presents the doctor's case in a structured, persuasive way, speaking directly to the case examiners or tribunal members about why the concerns have been genuinely addressed and why continued registration is in the public interest.

Legal advice on the content of a personal statement — and on how it should be positioned alongside other documents in the remediation file — is strongly advisable. The personal statement and the insight statement work together and must be consistent.

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Key Elements the GMC and MPTS Want to See

Case examiners and MPTS tribunal panels assess personal statements against the same framework as other insight evidence. The personal statement must demonstrate:

  • Full acknowledgment of the concerns. The personal statement must address the specific allegations — not a generalised version of them. Where the doctor accepts the factual basis of the allegations, that acceptance should be clear and unambiguous.
  • Genuine insight. The statement must demonstrate specific understanding of why the conduct fell below the required standard, what harm it caused or risked, and what the doctor has genuinely learned from the experience.
  • Empathy for those affected. The doctor must demonstrate specific awareness of the impact of the conduct on patients, colleagues, and public confidence in the medical profession — not just on themselves.
  • The remediation undertaken. The personal statement should summarise the CPD, supervised practice, reflective activity, and other professional development completed in response to the concerns.
  • The case for fitness to practise. The personal statement is, ultimately, an argument that the doctor is now fit to practise — setting out why the concerns have been genuinely addressed and why the risk of repetition is low.

Demonstrating Insight in Your Personal Statement

Insight is the quality the GMC weights most heavily — and the quality most commonly found to be lacking. In the personal statement, insight must be demonstrated through specificity and honesty, not through the use of the word "insight" itself.

Demonstrating insight means explaining, in specific terms, the exact professional standards that were not met, the precise ways in which the conduct fell short of those standards, and the specific changes in practice, attitude, and professional development that have resulted.

The full framework for demonstrating insight to the GMC is set out in a separate guide — the personal statement should be constructed in light of that framework.

A personal statement that says "I fully appreciate the seriousness of my actions and I am deeply sorry" demonstrates nothing. A personal statement that says "I now understand that by proceeding without a valid consent discussion, I removed from Mrs X the ability to make an informed decision about her own body —

a fundamental right protected by both law and Good Medical Practice" demonstrates something real. The difference is specificity.

Addressing the Specific Concerns Raised

Every concern raised in the GMC investigation must be addressed in the personal statement. Leaving any allegation unaddressed — even a minor one — creates a gap that the case examiners or tribunal will notice and may treat as a failure to engage fully with the investigation.

For each concern: acknowledge it specifically, explain what you now understand about why it was wrong, describe the impact it had, and state what has changed in your practice as a result.

This structure — acknowledge, understand, impact, change — provides a reliable framework for addressing each allegation in a way that satisfies the insight requirements.

Where a concern is not accepted — where the doctor disputes the factual basis of an allegation — this should be handled carefully and with legal advice.

A personal statement that disputes some allegations and accepts others requires particular skill to structure without appearing to minimise the concerns that are accepted. Legal representation at this stage is not optional.

Common Personal Statement Mistakes That Harm Your Case

The following errors appear consistently in ineffective personal statements and are specifically identified as weaknesses by case examiners and tribunal panels:

  • Generic expressions of regret without specific understanding. "I am sorry for what happened and I have learned from this experience" tells the reader nothing about what was learned or why it was wrong.
  • Excessive focus on mitigating circumstances. Mitigating circumstances are relevant — but a personal statement that spends more space on mitigation than on genuine acknowledgment and insight suggests the doctor has not fully accepted responsibility.
  • Inconsistency with other documents. A personal statement that says something different from the reflective statement, the insight statement, or the account given to the GMC during the investigation is a serious credibility problem. All documents must be consistent.
  • Promising future change without evidence of current change. "I will ensure this never happens again" is far weaker than "I have already implemented the following changes, as evidenced by [specific examples]." The personal statement should demonstrate change that has already occurred, not merely promise change to come.
  • Addressing the wrong audience. The personal statement is addressed to the case examiners or tribunal — not to the patient, not to the GMC generally. It should be written in a professional, measured tone appropriate to a formal regulatory submission.

Structure and Length: Practical Tips

A GMC personal statement should be between three and eight pages for most cases. Longer statements are sometimes appropriate for complex multi-allegation cases; shorter statements risk appearing superficial. Quality and specificity matter more than length.

A reliable structure: brief introduction (who you are, what this statement addresses) → acknowledgment of the specific concerns → insight and understanding → impact on those affected → remediation undertaken (cross-referencing the CPD certificates from your

href="https://www.probityandethics.com/gmc-remediation-plan-requirements/">remediation plan) → forward-looking commitment → conclusion (why you are fit to practise).

The statement should be written in the first person, in plain English, without excessive use of regulatory jargon or medical terminology. It should be proofread carefully — errors of grammar or expression in a document presented to a tribunal undermine credibility in ways that are disproportionate to the error itself.

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.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is a GMC personal statement?

A formal written document submitted to the GMC case examiners or presented to the MPTS tribunal, in which a doctor addresses the specific fitness to practise concerns, demonstrates insight, presents the remediation undertaken, and argues why continued registration is in the public interest.

How is a personal statement different from a reflective statement?

A reflective statement is exploratory and narrative — it traces the doctor's thinking and professional learning. A personal statement is an advocacy document — it presents the doctor's case, demonstrating insight and remediation, and arguing for fitness to practise. Both may be required; they serve different purposes.

How long should a GMC personal statement be?

Between three and eight pages for most cases. Quality and specificity matter more than length. A focused, specific statement of four pages is more credible than a lengthy but unfocused one. Complex multi-allegation cases may require longer statements.

What are the most important elements of a GMC personal statement?

Full acknowledgment of the specific concerns, genuine insight demonstrated through specific understanding (not generic regret), empathy for those affected, a clear account of the remediation undertaken with cross-references to evidence, and a credible case for fitness to practise.

What is the most common mistake in GMC personal statements?

Generic expressions of regret without specific understanding of what went wrong and why. 'I am deeply sorry and have learned from this' demonstrates nothing. Specific understanding — what professional standard was breached, what the impact was, what has specifically changed — demonstrates genuine insight.

Should I mention my CPD courses in my personal statement?

Yes — specifically, with reference to each course, what it covered, how it related to the concern under investigation, and the certificate attached. The personal statement and CPD certificates should tell a consistent story of professional learning.

Can I dispute allegations in my personal statement?

Yes, where the factual basis of an allegation is genuinely disputed. However, handling disputed allegations in a personal statement that also accepts other allegations requires particular skill to structure without appearing to minimise the accepted concerns. Legal advice is essential before taking this approach.

What tone is appropriate for a GMC personal statement?

Professional, measured, honest, and first person. The statement is addressed to regulatory decision-makers — it should be written in a formal but accessible tone, in plain English, without excessive jargon. It should be emotionally honest without being emotionally excessive.

Does a personal statement need to be witnessed or signed?

Specific requirements vary. The GMC may require a signed declaration alongside the personal statement. Legal advice on the formal requirements for submission should be obtained before finalising the document.

When should I submit my GMC personal statement?

At the appropriate stage of the investigation as directed by the GMC or as advised by your legal team. For the case examiner stage, the personal statement accompanies the Rule 7 or Rule 12 response. For tribunal proceedings, the timing of submission is governed by the tribunal directions.

Can I update my GMC personal statement?

Yes. A personal statement submitted at the case examiner stage may need to be updated before a tribunal hearing — particularly if further remediation has been completed or if the case has developed. Updates should be consistent with the original statement and with all other documents in the file.

What happens if my personal statement is weak?

A weak personal statement can undermine otherwise good remediation work. Case examiners and tribunal panels assess the quality of insight demonstrated in the personal statement as a key factor in their decision. Legal advice and, where appropriate, professional support in drafting the statement, significantly reduces this risk.

Should I get legal help writing my GMC personal statement?

Yes. A regulatory solicitor with GMC experience can advise on content, structure, and consistency with the broader legal strategy. The personal statement is a formal regulatory submission — professional drafting support is not a sign of weakness; it is standard practice in serious regulatory cases.

Disclaimer

This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. If you are facing GMC fitness to practise proceedings, seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in GMC regulatory proceedings.