Who case examiners are, what they review, what decisions they can make, and how to present your case effectively at this critical stage
Most doctors entering a GMC fitness to practise investigation have little idea what GMC case examiners actually do — or how much weight their decision carries. This guide explains their role, their powers, how they assess cases, and what you can do to influence the outcome at this stage.
GMC case examiners are the professionals who review fitness to practise investigations and decide what action, if any, should be taken. Every GMC fitness to practise investigation passes through a case examiner review before any formal outcome is reached.
Case examiners always work as two case examiners GMC — one medical case examiner GMC (a registered doctor) and one lay case examiner GMC (a non-clinician). This pairing is deliberate: it brings both clinical perspective and public-interest judgment to every decision.
They sit within the GMC investigation stage, after the GMC triage stage and evidence-gathering are complete. They are not a tribunal and do not hold hearings.
Their role is to review the written file — the complaint, the evidence, and any response from the doctor — and determine the appropriate next step for the doctor fitness to practise UK matter before them.
Most doctors entering the GMC investigation process have little idea what case examiners actually do. Understanding their role, what they are looking for, and what decisions they can make is essential for anyone navigating this stage.
The GMC case examiner powers are substantial. Under the fitness to practise rules, two case examiners acting together can:
They cannot impose conditions or sanctions directly — that power belongs to the tribunal. But their decision determines whether the case ever reaches a tribunal at all. In the majority of GMC fitness to practise investigations, the case examiner stage is where the case is resolved.
The case examiner review GMC process is paper-based. They do not meet the doctor. They do not hear oral evidence. They review the written file only.
What they read includes:
They assess the GMC investigation evidence against the GMC Good Medical Practice standards. The central question is whether the evidence, if proved, could amount to impairment of fitness to practise. This is the GMC investigation threshold that every case must cross before any sanction can follow.
Crucially, case examiners are also assessing the doctor as a professional. A GMC registered doctor who has provided a thoughtful, honest response demonstrating genuine insight and GMC remediation evidence is presenting a materially different picture from one who has not responded, or who has responded defensively.
The GMC case examiner decision produces one of four GMC investigation outcomes:
The distinction between a case examiner agreed outcome and GMC referral to tribunal is one of the most important decisions in the entire GMC investigation process.
A GMC consent order or agreed disposal — reached at the case examiner stage — offers several significant advantages:
However, accepting a case examiner agreed outcome means accepting that the conduct occurred — it is a formal regulatory outcome.
Before accepting or rejecting any proposal, a GMC investigation solicitor with MPTS tribunal experience must be consulted. The decision has long-term implications for registration, employment, and professional standing.
The case examiners only see what is in the written file. Your GMC written representations — submitted in response to the Rule 7 and, if applicable, the Rule 12 letter — are the entirety of your voice in this process. Making them count is the single most important thing you can do at this stage.
What case examiners respond to positively:
What they respond to negatively:
Maintaining your GMC revalidation and GMC appraisal record throughout the investigation also matters. The case examiners can see your full registration history under the GMC fitness to practise rules.
A doctor with a consistent professional record is in a better position than one who has disengaged. Completing a relevant CPD course before your response is submitted — and attaching the certificate — is one of the most practical steps available.
The GMC investigation timeline at the case examiner stage varies — from a few months for straightforward cases to considerably longer for complex matters.
For overseas-qualified doctors, the case examiner stage carries the same weight as for UK-trained practitioners. UK-registered doctors can access professional ethics training through Healthcare Ethics Courses.
Doctors with connections to Ireland can consult ethics training for doctors in Ireland.
Those with connections to New Zealand can review professional development for New Zealand doctors.
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Bulk Buy 10 Courses →GMC case examiners review the written evidence file in a fitness to practise investigation and decide the appropriate next step. They work in pairs — one medical, one lay — and can close the case, issue a warning, propose an agreed outcome, or refer the case to an MPTS tribunal.
Always two — one medical case examiner GMC (a registered doctor) and one lay case examiner GMC (a non-clinician). Both must agree on the outcome. The pairing brings clinical and public-interest perspectives to every decision.
They sit at the conclusion of the GMC investigation stage. After triage and evidence-gathering are complete, case examiners review the full written file and decide whether to close the case, issue a warning, propose a GMC agreed outcome, or refer to an MPTS tribunal.
No. GMC case examiner powers do not include imposing conditions, suspension, or erasure directly. Those sanctions require an MPTS tribunal hearing. Case examiners can issue warnings and propose agreed outcomes, but formal regulatory sanctions beyond a warning require a tribunal.
A consensual disposal proposed by the case examiners — such as GMC undertakings or GMC conditions of practice — that the doctor can accept without the case proceeding to a tribunal hearing. Also known as a GMC consent order. Accepting means the matter is resolved without a public hearing.
The case examiners have concluded that the evidence, even if fully proved, would not establish impairment of fitness to practise. The case closes with GMC no further action — nothing is recorded publicly and there is no restriction on practice.
The case goes to the MPTS tribunal for a full GMC fitness to practise hearing. The tribunal hears evidence, determines whether fitness to practise is impaired, and if so imposes a sanction from the full range of GMC sanctions — from a formal warning through to GMC erasure.
Variable. The GMC investigation timeline at this stage can be months. Complex cases with extensive evidence files or multiple allegations take longer. Straightforward cases can resolve more quickly, particularly if an agreed outcome is proposed and accepted.
Only after obtaining specialist legal advice. A GMC investigation solicitor with MPTS tribunal experience should review the proposed terms before any decision is made. Accepting means accepting the conduct occurred. Rejecting means the case proceeds to tribunal. Both carry implications that require careful analysis.
A letter issued by the GMC earlier in the process — before the Rule 7 letter — in some cases, notifying the doctor that a concern has been received and is being assessed. Not all cases involve a Rule 4 letter. The Rule 7 letter is the formal notice that investigation has been opened.
Yes. If new GMC remediation evidence — such as a CPD certificate or a supervisor report — becomes available after your initial response, you can request to submit it. Proactively providing updated evidence before the case examiners reach their decision is strongly advisable.
Yes. A formal GMC warning is recorded publicly on the medical register UK for five years. It is visible to employers and the public. It does not restrict practice, but it must be disclosed in applications and is a matter of public record.
Ensure your written representations are thorough, accurate, and address the specific concerns raised. Include all available GMC remediation evidence. Complete any relevant CPD and attach certificates. Maintain your GMC revalidation and appraisal record. Obtain specialist legal advice before submitting any response.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. If your case is under case examiner review, seek independent legal advice from a solicitor experienced in GMC regulatory proceedings.