A GMC matter can move quickly. Whether you have received a letter about a complaint, been notified of an investigation, or need advice on your registration, the decisions you take early in the process matter. Our GMC lawyers advise doctors at every stage of a GMC matter, from the first letter through to Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service proceedings.

GMC investigations and advisory support for doctors in the UK

What happens when the GMC gets involved

The GMC investigates concerns about a doctor’s fitness to practice, including misconduct, performance issues, health concerns, and criminal convictions. Once a referral is received, the process can include provisional enquiries, a formal investigation, case examiner review, and in some cases a hearing before the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service. Doctors based in Manchester and across the UK face the same regulatory framework, and GMC lawyers who understand the process can make a material difference to how a case develops. Our GMC lawyers advise on what the process involves, what is required at each stage, and how to respond effectively.

How Our GMC Lawyers Help Doctors

Our solicitors advise doctors on a range of GMC matters, from initial notification through to tribunal proceedings.

GMC Fitness to Practice Support

Where a GMC concern progresses to a fitness to practice investigation, we advise on the process, the evidence involved, and the options available. Our work covers preparation for Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service hearings and advice on the range of possible outcomes including undertakings, conditions, suspension and erasure.

What this means for you

  • Clear advice on what the GMC process involves at each stage
  • Support with written responses before anything is submitted
  • Guidance on registration, revalidation and licence to practise
  • Advice on interim orders and how to prepare for a tribunal
  • Access to solicitors who understand the GMC regulatory framework

When to seek GMC regulatory advice

  • You receive a letter from the GMC about a complaint or concern
  • You are notified that a formal investigation has been opened
  • You receive a Rule 7 letter and need to provide a written response
  • The GMC applies for an interim order restricting your practice
  • You have questions about your GMC registration or revalidation obligations

Meet the Founder

Marium brings 22 years of experience advising professionals on regulatory, dispute resolution and compliance matters across the UK and internationally. A solicitor regulated by the SRA (ID: 277854), MCIArb. She founded MAR Legal to give doctors and professionals direct access to senior legal advice without the overhead of a traditional firm.

Marium Razzaq - Solicitors in Manchester
Marium Razzaq
Solicitor & Director Mar Legal

MCIArb

Why Doctors Choose MAR Legal for GMC Matters

Solicitor Led Advice

GMC advice delivered by solicitors who understand how the regulatory process works.

Clear Timescales

Our GMC lawyers are based in Manchester and advise doctors across the UK on GMC matters.

Fixed Fee

Clear fees on investigation advice and registration matters before work begins.

Commercial Focus

An initial conversation about your position costs nothing before any work is agreed.

Trusted by doctors across the UK for clear, practical advice on GMC regulatory matters.

How Our GMC Process Works

01

Initial assessment

We review the correspondence you have received, identify the relevant stage of the GMC process, and confirm what is required and by when.


02

Advice and Strategy

We provide clear advice on your position, the regulatory process, and the most appropriate course of action given your specific circumstances.


03

Documentation Support

Where a written response or representations are required, we assist with drafting and review before anything is submitted to the GMC.


04

Ongoing Guidance

Our GMC lawyers remain available throughout the regulatory process, advising at each stage as the matter develops and adjusting the approach where needed.

What Our Clients Say

GMC FAQs:

A GMC investigation can be triggered by a patient complaint, a referral from an employer or NHS body, a police notification, or a concern raised by another regulatory body. The GMC applies a triage process before opening a formal investigation. Concerns that do not meet the threshold are closed without a formal investigation being opened, but a doctor is not always informed that a referral was made at the triage stage.

A Rule 7 letter is the GMC’s formal notification of the allegations made against you, inviting your written response within 28 days. Extensions are generally granted where legal advice is being sought. The response is part of the evidence the GMC considers, so the content and tone matter. Taking advice before drafting a response rather than after is the more effective approach.

Yes. The GMC can refer a doctor to the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service for an interim order hearing at any stage of an investigation, where it considers there is a risk to public safety, or the public interest requires it. An interim order can impose conditions on practice or suspend registration entirely while the investigation is ongoing. Doctors are entitled to attend the hearing and make representations before any order is made.

Once a formal investigation is opened, the GMC gathers evidence, and two case examiners review it to decide whether the case should proceed. Cases that meet the referral threshold are sent to the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service for a hearing. The MPTS panel can issue a warning, impose conditions, suspend registration, or direct erasure from the medical register. It depends on the nature of the concern and what the evidence shows.

The MPTS hearing examines the facts of the case, determines whether a doctor’s fitness to practice is impaired, and decides what sanction if any should be imposed. The GMC presents its case, and the doctor is entitled to present evidence and make submissions in response. The panel includes a legally qualified chair, a lay member, and a medically qualified member. Both parties can appeal the outcome.

Doctors on the NHS performers list are required to notify the relevant NHS body within 7 days of a GMC investigation commencing. Employed doctors may also have contractual obligations to report regulatory proceedings to their employer. The position varies depending on the nature of the employment and the terms of any applicable contract. Taking advice on reporting obligations early avoids the risk of a separate breach being added to an existing concern.

GMC undertakings are voluntary restrictions agreed between a doctor and the GMC to address concerns without referring the case to the MPTS for a hearing. Conditions imposed by the MPTS are formal sanctions made following a tribunal hearing. Both restrict a doctor’s practice, but undertakings are reached by agreement and can be varied by agreement, whereas MPTS conditions are imposed and subject to a formal review process. Whether undertakings are appropriate depends on the stage and nature of the case.