Anaesthetics in the UK for Internationally-Qualified Doctors
A guide to a UK anaesthetics career for internationally-qualified doctors — the workforce gap, the GMC specialist-registration route, and how NHS pay and on-call work.
As of July 2026, a doctor who wants to work as an anaesthetist in the UK must hold registration with a licence to practise from the General Medical Council (GMC), and — for a substantive consultant post — be on the GMC Specialist Register in anaesthetics. Anaesthetics is one of the largest hospital specialties, and the Royal College of Anaesthetists’ workforce census reported a shortfall equivalent to around 1,400 anaesthetists, a gap it projected to grow as surgical demand rises.
Why UK anaesthetics has an ongoing workforce gap
Anaesthetists are central to almost every surgical and critical-care service, so demand tracks the volume of surgery and intensive care. The Royal College of Anaesthetists’ workforce census reported a shortfall equivalent to around 1,400 anaesthetists, and warned the gap would widen as elective-surgery backlogs and an ageing population increase demand.
That sustained gap means the specialty continues to recruit internationally-qualified doctors into training, SAS and consultant-track roles across the UK.
This page is information for doctors independently exploring the move — not a vacancy advert. Confirm current workforce figures with the Royal College of Anaesthetists (rcoa.ac.uk).
How NHS pay works for this specialty
NHS basic pay is set by grade, not by specialty. The figures below are for England, 2024/25 — indicative, and different in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
| Grade | Typical role | Basic pay (England) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Foundation Year 1 (FY1) | Newly-qualified resident (formerly "junior") doctor, first year | £36,616 | The starting basic salary for a first-year foundation doctor in England. Additional pay applies for out-of-hours and on-call work. |
| Specialty registrar (StR) | Doctor in higher specialty training | £55,329 – £70,425 | Basic pay across the specialty-training nodal points (2016 contract, England). On-call and out-of-hours supplements are added on top. |
| Specialty doctor (SAS) | Non-training career-grade doctor | £59,175 – £95,400 | The 2021 specialty-doctor contract range. A common substantive route for internationally-qualified doctors before or instead of the specialist register. |
| Consultant | Senior doctor on the GMC Specialist Register | £105,504 – £139,882 | The England consultant pay scale — the same range for every hospital specialty, because basic pay is grade-based, not specialty-based. Requires specialist registration. |
A consultant anaesthetist is paid on the standard England consultant pay scale. Anaesthetics carries substantial on-call and out-of-hours commitments, which can attract additional contractual pay on top of basic — but the basic scale itself is the same across every consultant specialty.
Source: NHS Employers / BMA medical pay scales (England). Indicative snapshot for the 2024/25 pay year — confirm current figures with NHS Employers (nhsemployers.org) and the BMA (bma.org.uk).
As of 2024/25, the NHS consultant pay scale in England ran from £105,504 to £139,882 — the same for a consultant anaesthetics as for any other specialty, because basic pay is set by grade, not by specialty.
- Foundation Year 1 (FY1)
- £36,616
- Specialty registrar (StR)
- £55,329 – £70,425
- Specialty doctor (SAS)
- £59,175 – £95,400
- Consultant
- £105,504 – £139,882
+ 4 more not shown here. As of 2024/25 pay year (England). Source: NHS Employers / BMA medical pay scales (England).
Get the Anaesthetics specialist-registration checklist
Enter your email and we send a step-by-step checklist for joining the GMC Specialist Register in anaesthetics — GMC registration, the Portfolio Pathway evidence mapped to the the Royal College of Anaesthetists (RCoA) curriculum, English evidence, and visa pointers. Free, no spam, unsubscribe anytime.
The GMC specialist-registration route in Anaesthetics
- 1
Hold GMC registration with a licence to practise
Before anything specialty-specific, an internationally-qualified doctor must first be registered with the General Medical Council (GMC) with a licence to practise — usually via the PLAB examination or a GMC-recognised postgraduate qualification. The source-country routes are set out on our UK doctor pathway pages.
- 2
Choose your specialist-registration route
To take a substantive NHS consultant post you must join the GMC Specialist Register. There are two main routes: the CCT (Certificate of Completion of Training) for doctors who complete a UK training programme, and the Portfolio Pathway — the route the GMC introduced in late 2023 to replace CESR — for doctors whose training and experience were gained outside a UK programme.
- 3
Map your evidence to the specialty curriculum
The Portfolio Pathway is assessed against the UK curriculum for your specialty, which is set by the relevant Royal College or Faculty. You gather structured evidence — qualifications, logbooks, appraisals, assessments, reflective practice and testimonials — that demonstrates equivalence to a UK-trained specialist.
- 4
Apply, be assessed, and join the Specialist (or GP) Register
You submit your application to the GMC, which takes advice from the relevant Royal College or Faculty. If your evidence demonstrates the required standard, you are entered on the Specialist Register (or, for general practice, the GP Register) and become eligible for a substantive consultant or GP post. Confirm the current requirements and fees on gmc-uk.org.
Specialty-specific notes
Overseas anaesthetics experience is evidenced against the RCoA curriculum through the Portfolio Pathway (formerly CESR). Recognised RCoA examinations (FRCA) can support GMC registration and specialist-register applications.
Internationally-qualified anaesthetists commonly enter via specialty-doctor (SAS) or trust-grade posts and then build structured evidence toward the Specialist Register through the Portfolio Pathway.
What you need, in summary
- Hold GMC registration with a licence to practise (PLAB or a recognised postgraduate route)
- For a consultant post, be on the GMC Specialist Register in anaesthetics (CCT or Portfolio Pathway)
- Evidence English-language proficiency by a route the GMC accepts
- Hold the right to work in the UK (usually the Skilled Worker / Health and Care Worker visa, unless exempt)
- Maintain appropriate professional indemnity and an up-to-date appraisal record
For your country-of-training route (PLAB, English evidence, visa), see the UK Doctor Pathway guide, which covers permitted source corridors only.
Frequently asked questions
Does the FRCA help with UK registration?+
Recognised Royal College of Anaesthetists examinations (FRCA) can support GMC registration and a specialist-register application. The GMC confirms which qualifications support which route — check gmc-uk.org.
Can I work in anaesthetics without being on the Specialist Register?+
Yes — many internationally-qualified anaesthetists work in specialty-doctor (SAS) or trust-grade roles that do not require the Specialist Register. A substantive consultant post does require specialist registration in anaesthetics.
Is anaesthetics pay higher because of on-call?+
Basic pay follows the standard grade-based scale, the same across specialties. Anaesthetics’ heavy on-call and out-of-hours commitment can add contractual pay on top of basic, but the basic scale itself is not specialty-specific.
Does GeraClinic recruit anaesthetists?+
No. GeraClinic is a telemedicine platform, not a recruitment agency. This is free educational information for doctors exploring the pathway independently; you apply directly to the GMC and to employers of your own accord.
Explore other high-demand UK specialties
Related guides
UK Doctor Pathway — by where you qualified
Choose your GMC registration route by the country where you trained — PLAB, English evidence, and the visa overview, corridor by corridor.
NHS Pay Scales
See the full NHS medical and Agenda for Change pay scales, with sources, across grades and nations.
GeraClinic — For Doctors
Keep practising while you plan your move: see verified remote telemedicine work for licensed doctors.
Important — please read
This is general information to help internationally-qualified doctors understand how UK specialist registration works for this specialty. It is not recruitment, immigration or legal advice. Gera is not a recruitment agency: we do not place doctors into NHS jobs, do not match candidates to specific vacancies, and do not actively recruit from countries on the WHO Health Workforce Support and Safeguards List (2023). You apply on your own account, directly to the GMC and to any employer. Registration routes, workforce figures, fees and pay scales change — always confirm the current position with the General Medical Council (gmc-uk.org), the relevant Royal College or Faculty, UK Visas and Immigration (gov.uk) and NHS Employers (nhsemployers.org).
Keep practising while you plan your move
GeraClinic is a remote telemedicine platform for licensed doctors. Wherever you are registered today, you can see patients online, set your own hours and fees, and keep earning while you work through your UK specialist registration. It is free to apply.