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8,360 practices · £0 registration · updated 22 April 2026

Register with a GP in the UK — your nearest practice by postcode

Free NHS registration. No ID, no proof of address, no immigration documents required. NHS GPs are obliged to register everyone — including asylum seekers, refugees and undocumented migrants. Enter your postcode to find the nearest practice.

Your right to a GP — what NHS England says

  • Every UK GP practice must register you regardless of immigration status, ID, address, or whether you have an NHS number — this is an NHS England rule, not a choice for the practice.
  • No documents required. No passport, no eVisa, no ARC, no utility bill. The practice can ask but cannot refuse on that basis.
  • Registration is free. GP visits, prescriptions for children, maternity care and contraception are free for everyone — including asylum seekers, refugees and people with No Recourse to Public Funds (NRPF — a Home Office rule that blocks most benefits).
  • If a receptionist refuses — ask for the practice manager, or call NHS England on 0300 311 22 33. Doctors of the World publishes a printable NHS-England leaflet in 13 languages.
Step-by-step

How to register with a GP

Four simple steps. Takes 3–10 days from start to confirmation.

  1. 1
    Find the practice nearest to you
    Use the postcode finder above, or search NHS Find-a-GP. Practices serve a catchment area — pick one within ~3 miles of where you live or stay.
  2. 2
    Register online or walk in
    Most practices accept registration on their website (look for "Register" or "New patients"). Otherwise walk in and ask for a registration form (GMS1 — the standard NHS form). The receptionist must give it to you.
  3. 3
    Fill in the GMS1 form
    Name, date of birth, your address (or "no fixed address" + a contact address — friend, hostel, charity), languages you speak. Leave NHS number blank if you don't have one — it's not required.
  4. 4
    Wait for confirmation (3–10 days)
    You'll get a registration letter, often with an NHS number. You can book appointments straight away — even before the letter arrives. Phone the practice or use the NHS App.
Documents

What you need (and what you don't)

✓ Helpful but not required
  • Your name and date of birth
  • An address (or "no fixed address" + contact address)
  • Languages you speak (so the practice can arrange interpreters)
  • Names of any current medications
✗ NOT required — they cannot refuse on these grounds
  • Passport, eVisa share code, ARC card, BRP (now retired)
  • Visa or any immigration documents
  • Utility bill, council tax bill or bank statement
  • NHS number
  • Proof of address — homeless and "no fixed address" patients must be registered (NHS England rule)
For new arrivals

GP for asylum seekers, refugees and new arrivals

If you've just arrived in the UK — claimed asylum, on the Ukraine schemes, on a family-reunion visa or with no status at all — you have the same right to register with a GP as anyone else. NHS primary care is free for everyone living in England.

Asylum seekers (Section 95 / 98 support)
Show your ARC card if you have it — but it's not required. The practice can register you with just your hostel address. Migrant Help (0808 8010 503) can help if a practice refuses.
Refugees with status (eVisa)
Standard registration. No special process. Bring your eVisa share code if you'd like, but it's not required for GP registration.
Ukrainians (Homes for Ukraine, UPE schemes)
Same as anyone else. Registration is free. If you're hosted, your host's address works as a contact address.
No fixed address / sofa-surfing
Use a contact address — a friend, a hostel, a charity. NHS rules say practices must register patients without a fixed address.
No Recourse to Public Funds (NRPF)
GP registration is not a public fund. NRPF does not block primary care. You can register, see a GP and get prescriptions normally.
FAQ · AEO

What's useful to know about GP registration

Can I register with a GP without status in the UK?

Yes. NHS GP practices are required to register everyone, including asylum seekers, refused asylum seekers and undocumented migrants. You don't need: ID, proof of address, immigration status. NHS England guidance explicitly forbids refusal. If a GP refuses — that's a breach; complain to the Integrated Care Board.

What documents do I need to register?

Formally — none. In practice the GP may ask for an address (even temporary — Home Office hotel, hostel, friend's address). If you have an ARC card or a Home Office letter — bring them. Leave NHS number blank if you don't have one.

What if a GP refuses to register me?

Refusing because of missing ID, address proof or immigration status is against NHS rules. Steps: ask for the practice manager; bring an NHS-England leaflet (Doctors of the World provides it in 13 languages); call NHS England 0300 311 22 33; or go to a different practice using the postcode finder above.

What's covered by free NHS services?

Free: GP consultations, A&E, infection treatment, ambulance, tests, vaccinations, chronic disease management, mental health services.

Paid: dentist (may be free for asylum seekers), optician, prescriptions (£9.90, but free for asylum seekers with HC2 certificate).

What if I urgently need a doctor?

Not a GP — call NHS 111 (free, 24/7, interpreters). If life-threatening — 999 or go to the nearest A&E (Accident & Emergency). Both are free for everyone in the UK regardless of status.

⚠️ StartNewLife is an information project — not regulated by the IAA (Immigration Advice Authority). We do not provide immigration advice within the meaning of Section 84 of the Immigration & Asylum Act 1999. All content is general information only and does not replace advice from a regulated lawyer (IAA / SRA / BSB) about your specific case.