Work as a Doctor in the UK from Kuwait
As of July 2026, doctors licensed in Kuwait who want to practise in the UK must hold GMC registration with a licence to practise. The General Medical Council assesses the primary medical qualification and current good standing.
How Kuwait-based doctors register with the GMC — routes, Certificates of Good Standing, English evidence, and the UK visa overview.
Which GMC route applies to you?
Answer two questions for a plain-English summary of the likely registration route and English-evidence options. This is general educational guidance only — the General Medical Council makes the final decision on every application.
The GMC route for Kuwait-based doctors
Kuwait-based doctors register with the GMC via PLAB or a recognised postgraduate qualification, based on the GMC’s assessment of their primary qualification.
Doctors in Kuwait are licensed through the Ministry of Health. Because much of the workforce qualified elsewhere, the GMC bases your registration route on your primary medical qualification rather than your Kuwaiti licence.
A recognised postgraduate qualification such as a UK Royal College membership can support GMC registration without PLAB. Otherwise the PLAB examination is the usual route — confirm with the GMC.
You will need Certificates of Good Standing from your Kuwaiti regulator and from the regulator in your country of primary qualification, each covering the last five years.
English-language evidence
Most Kuwait-based applicants evidence English via IELTS Academic or OET unless the GMC accepts an English-taught primary qualification or recent English-language practice. Confirm the thresholds on gmc-uk.org.
Your registration steps, in order
Confirm your GMC route
Contact the General Medical Council (gmc-uk.org) to confirm which registration route your primary medical qualification and any postgraduate qualifications support — the PLAB examination, a recognised postgraduate qualification, or specialist registration.
Meet the knowledge and skills requirement
Complete the route the GMC confirms — for example, passing both parts of the PLAB examination, or holding a postgraduate qualification the GMC accepts.
Evidence your English
Provide the English-language evidence the GMC accepts for your circumstances — usually IELTS Academic or OET, or evidence that your qualification was taught and examined in English. Confirm current thresholds on gmc-uk.org.
Gather Certificates of Good Standing
Obtain a Certificate of Good Standing (Certificate of Current Professional Status) from every medical regulator you have been registered with in the last five years.
Apply to the GMC and arrange the right to work
Submit your GMC application with your evidence. If you are not a UK or Irish citizen, secure the right to work — typically a Skilled Worker (Health and Care Worker) visa with a Certificate of Sponsorship from a UK employer (gov.uk).
What Kuwait-based doctors need
These are the obligations the GMC and, where relevant, UK Visas and Immigration place on applicants. Confirm the current detail on the official websites.
Hold a recognised primary medical qualification (assessed by the GMC, not your Kuwaiti licence)
Provide a Certificate of Good Standing from your Kuwaiti regulator covering the last five years
Provide a Certificate of Good Standing from the regulator in your country of primary qualification
Where held, present a recognised postgraduate qualification for a non-PLAB route
Evidence English proficiency and obtain a UK Skilled Worker (Health and Care Worker) visa with a Certificate of Sponsorship
Certificate of Good Standing
You will need a Certificate of Good Standing (Certificate of Current Professional Status) from the Kuwait Ministry of Health, plus one from any other medical regulator you have been registered with in the last five years.
Right to work / visa
Kuwait-based doctors who are not UK/Irish citizens generally need a Skilled Worker (Health and Care Worker) visa with a Certificate of Sponsorship from a licensed UK employer — see gov.uk.
Practical notes for Kuwait-based doctors
- Your country of primary qualification, not the Kuwaiti licence, determines your GMC route.
- Multi-regulator good-standing letters are the usual bottleneck — request them early.
Important: this is information, not recruitment
GeraClinic is a telemedicine platform operated by Gera Services Ltd. This page is free educational information for doctors who independently want to understand the UK registration pathway. GeraClinic does not place doctors into NHS jobs, is not a recruitment agency, and charges no fee to read this guidance. Registration, employment, and visa decisions rest with the General Medical Council, individual employers, and UK Visas and Immigration. Individuals may always apply directly, of their own accord. Requirements, fees, and timelines change — always confirm the current position on the official GMC website (gmc-uk.org) and gov.uk.
Frequently asked questions
Does a Kuwaiti medical licence let me work in the UK?
No. Kuwaiti licences are not recognised for UK practice. The GMC assesses your primary medical qualification and requires Certificates of Good Standing from each regulator, including your Kuwaiti one.
What route do Kuwait-based doctors use?
Either the PLAB examination or a recognised postgraduate qualification, depending on the GMC’s assessment. Confirm with the GMC before booking exams.
Do Kuwait-based doctors need a UK visa?
Unless you are a UK or Irish citizen, yes — usually a Skilled Worker (Health and Care Worker) visa with a Certificate of Sponsorship.
UK registration guides for other Gulf doctors
Prefer to work remotely from Kuwait?
While you work through UK registration, you can keep practising as a remote telemedicine doctor with GeraClinic — see patients online, set your own hours and fee, and get paid within 3–5 business days.
Remote telemedicine jobs for doctors in KuwaitKeep earning while you plan your move to the UK
GeraClinic is free to join for licensed doctors. Work from home, set your own hours and fees, and see online patients — from wherever you are registered today.