Medical Practice | NHS GP Appointments & Hours

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NHS GP guide • appointments • hours • registration

Medical Practice Appointments, Opening Hours, Registration & NHS App Routes

This guide explains how to use a UK NHS medical practice safely: finding your registered GP surgery, requesting appointments, checking opening hours, registering with a GP, ordering repeat prescriptions, viewing test results, requesting fit notes, using NHS 111 and knowing when to call 999.

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Quick answer

Medical practice appointments and hours: the useful answer first

For an NHS medical practice in England, first find your registered GP surgery or local GP through the official NHS service search. Appointment routes usually depend on that individual surgery, but NHS guidance says GP surgeries may offer booking through the NHS App or website, the surgery’s online form, phone, or in-person reception.

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Find your GP first

Use the official NHS “Find a GP” search with your postcode. Do not rely only on Google results because many GP names are similar.

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Appointments are local

Each surgery controls its own appointment system. Some use NHS App booking, some use online triage forms, and some ask patients to phone or speak to reception.

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Hours can change

Opening hours can change for bank holidays, staff training, protected learning time, branch closures and urgent notices. Always check your own surgery’s contact page.

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Registering is free

NHS guidance says everyone in England can register with a GP surgery or change GP surgery for free. Many surgeries offer online registration.

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Repeat prescriptions

Many patients can request repeat prescriptions using the NHS App. The request still needs GP surgery approval before the pharmacy prepares it.

999

Emergency warning

Do not use a routine GP form for life-threatening symptoms. Call 999 for emergencies and use NHS 111 for urgent non-emergency help.

Simple route: if you already have a GP surgery, use that surgery’s website or NHS App route. If you are not registered, use NHS Find a GP, check whether the surgery covers your postcode, then register online where available.

Decision helper

What do you need from a medical practice today?

Use this practical picker to choose the safest route before you call, submit an online form or travel to a GP surgery.

Choose the closest situation

This tool is general NHS signposting only. It is not diagnosis, medical advice or emergency assessment.

Appointments

How to request an NHS GP appointment at a medical practice

NHS guidance says GP surgeries can offer appointments with different health professionals, including GPs, nurses, clinical pharmacists and physiotherapists. Appointments may be face to face, by phone or online, depending on what you need and how your local surgery works.

Route Best for What to prepare When not to use
NHS App / NHS website Booking or managing appointments where your surgery has enabled this feature. NHS login details, registered GP surgery, current phone number and appointment reason. Do not assume booking is available; NHS says your surgery may have switched it off.
Online form on GP website Symptoms, admin queries, follow-ups and non-emergency GP contact. Symptoms, duration, medication, allergies, urgency, photos if requested and callback availability. Do not use for emergencies or severe symptoms that need immediate help.
Phone Patients who cannot use online forms, need urgent practice help, or need access support. Name, date of birth, NHS number if known, one main issue, contact number and access needs. Do not phone routine reception instead of 999 for life-threatening symptoms.
Reception visit People who cannot use phone or online routes and need in-person help. ID if requested, reason for visit, registration details and enough time before closing. Do not travel without checking live opening times and branch location.
NHS 111 Urgent non-emergency help when the GP is closed, you are unsure, or you cannot contact your GP. Symptoms, age, medication, allergies, postcode and contact number. Use 999 for life-threatening emergencies.

Better appointment request: write one clear problem, when it started, what has changed, what medicines you take, why you are worried, what you have already tried, and when you can answer a call. This helps the surgery route you to the right person faster.

Good appointment request wording

“I am registered with this GP surgery. I need help with ______. It started ______. It is getting better/worse. I take ______. I am worried because ______. I can take a call at ______. Please advise whether this should be GP, nurse, pharmacist, physiotherapist, NHS 111 or emergency care.”

Why reception asks questions

NHS guidance says your GP surgery may ask what you need help with before booking. This helps decide how soon you need care and which doctor, nurse or health professional is most suitable.

Opening hours

Medical practice opening hours: what to check before travelling

There is no single safe opening-hours answer for the keyword “medical practice” because every GP surgery sets its own opening, phone, online-form and branch rules. Always check the exact surgery’s official contact page before you travel.

Check this Why it matters Patient tip
Reception opening hours Reception may close earlier than clinical services or phone lines. Check before travelling for forms, letters, samples or paper prescriptions.
Phone-line hours Some practices have different morning, lunch and afternoon phone windows. Call at the time your own surgery recommends for urgent or routine requests.
Online-form hours Some forms close when capacity is reached or when the practice is closed. If the form is closed and the issue is urgent, use phone, NHS 111 or 999 as appropriate.
Branch location Some medical practices have more than one site. Read your appointment text carefully before travelling.
Bank holidays and training days Normal opening rules may not apply. Use the official contact page or phone recording for current instructions.

Do not rely on old search snippets. Google, directories and old pages can show outdated opening hours. For GP appointments and travel decisions, use the official practice website, NHS profile or the surgery’s phone message.

New patients

How to register with a medical practice or change GP surgery

NHS guidance says everyone in England can register with a GP surgery or change GP surgery for free. Most people should register near where they live, but some surgeries may accept patients from further away. Many surgeries now offer online registration through the NHS website or the NHS App.

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Search by postcode

Use NHS Find a GP and enter your postcode. This reduces the risk of choosing a surgery outside your area.

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Register online

NHS says online registration usually takes about 15 minutes for each person you want to register.

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Check catchment

Some surgeries use practice boundaries. If you move outside the area, tell the surgery and check whether you must change GP.

Prepare this Why it matters Helpful tip
Current address Catchment and registration eligibility may depend on postcode. Use your current home address, not an old address.
NHS number if known It helps match your medical record correctly. You can often find it on NHS letters, prescriptions or in the NHS App.
Previous GP details It helps transfer your health record. Practice name and town are useful if you cannot remember every detail.
Medication and allergies Important for safe care while records transfer. Register before your regular medicine runs low.
Contact details The GP surgery needs to send messages, appointment updates and prescription information. Keep your mobile number and email up to date.

Changing GP surgery: NHS guidance says you do not need to tell your current GP surgery when changing. They will be told automatically once you are registered with the new surgery.

Medication

Repeat prescriptions, NHS App and pharmacy help

NHS App guidance says patients can request repeat prescriptions by selecting Prescriptions and then Request a repeat prescription. The request is sent to the GP surgery for sign-off and then issued to the chosen pharmacy where appropriate.

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NHS App route

Use the NHS App or NHS website where your GP surgery supports repeat-prescription requests.

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Missing medicines

A medicine may be unavailable to request if it is too soon, needs review, is a one-off item, is controlled, or is not allowed through the app.

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Urgent medicine

If you need medicine urgently, contact your GP surgery. If it is out of hours, use NHS 111 online or call 111.

Do not leave repeat medicine until the last day. GP approval, pharmacy processing, stock issues, bank holidays and medicine reviews can delay supply. Order early using your own surgery’s official prescription route.

Choose a pharmacy

Many patients can manage their nominated pharmacy through NHS online services. Check that the pharmacy is correct before submitting a request.

Medicine reviews

If the NHS App says a medicine needs review, contact the GP surgery. Do not keep resubmitting the same request without resolving the review issue.

Records and admin

Test results, GP health record and fit notes

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Test results

NHS App guidance says you may be able to view GP-ordered test results, such as blood tests, urine tests and tissue biopsies, after they have been reviewed and made available.

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GP health record

You can use the NHS App to view information from your GP health record. What appears depends on your GP surgery and access settings.

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Fit notes

NHS guidance says you might need a fit note if you are unwell and cannot work for more than 7 days, including weekends and bank holidays.

Results warning: you may see information before a clinician has discussed it with you, or some results may not appear in the NHS App. Contact your GP surgery if you have concerns, need a copy, or believe information is incorrect.

Urgent care

NHS 111, urgent help and 999: when not to wait for a GP

A medical practice is not the right route for every urgent problem. NHS 111 can direct you to the right place for urgent non-emergency help. For life-threatening emergencies, use 999.

999

Call 999 now

Use 999 for life-threatening symptoms such as chest pain, stroke signs, severe breathing difficulty, collapse, heavy bleeding, major trauma, seizure not stopping or severe allergic reaction.

111

Use NHS 111

Use NHS 111 online or call 111 if you think you need medical help right now but it is not a 999 emergency.

GP

Use your GP surgery

Use your medical practice for routine GP care, planned reviews, ongoing conditions, repeat prescriptions, fit notes, admin and non-emergency follow-up.

Do not wait for a GP reply if someone may be seriously ill, injured or at risk. Call 999 or seek emergency help immediately.

Find a GP

Medical practice near me: how to find the correct NHS GP surgery

Because this article is for the broad keyword “medical practice,” there is no single map pin. Use the official NHS Find a GP tool to search by postcode, then open the surgery’s official profile and website before registering, booking or travelling.

1

Search NHS first

Use NHS Find a GP, enter your postcode, and review surgeries near your home address.

2

Open the practice website

Check appointment forms, phone hours, registration, prescriptions and branch locations on the official practice website.

3

Check exact address

Some practices have multiple branches. Do not travel until you know which site your appointment is at.

Map rule for this page: no Google Maps iframe is embedded because no exact surgery address was provided. For a specific GP surgery article, use the verified address and embed the map for that exact location.

Helpful video

NHS App video: repeat prescriptions

Repeat prescription requests are one of the most common medical practice tasks. This official NHS video explains how to request a repeat prescription in the NHS App.

This is general NHS App guidance. Always follow your own GP surgery’s prescription rules, review timings and urgent-medicine instructions.

Avoid delays

Common medical practice mistakes to avoid

1

Using the wrong surgery

Many GP names are similar. Check the exact address, postcode and NHS profile before booking or travelling.

2

Ignoring branch location

If your practice has multiple sites, your appointment may not be at the branch you usually attend.

3

Submitting vague forms

“Need doctor” gives little triage detail. Explain symptoms, duration, urgency, medication and callback times.

4

Using GP forms for emergencies

Use 999 for life-threatening symptoms. Use NHS 111 for urgent non-emergency help.

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Not checking hours

Phone, reception and online-form times can differ. Check the official contact page before acting.

6

Registering outside catchment

Some surgeries only accept patients in their practice area. Use NHS Find a GP and check the surgery’s registration page.

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Leaving medicine too late

Repeat prescriptions need surgery approval and pharmacy processing. Order before you run out.

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Assuming NHS App shows everything

Available appointments, records and results depend on your GP surgery and system settings.

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Not cancelling appointments

Cancel as early as possible through the surgery’s approved route so another patient can use the slot.

Official links

Official NHS links for medical practice appointments and hours

Use these official sources for live GP search, registration, appointment, online form, prescription, test-result, fit-note and urgent-care guidance.

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Find a GP

Search for GP surgeries by postcode and find official NHS profile pages.

Open NHS Find a GP
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Register with a GP

Official NHS guidance on registering with or changing GP surgery in England.

Open Registration Guidance
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GP appointments

Official NHS guidance on booking, changing or cancelling GP surgery appointments.

Open Appointment Guidance
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Online GP forms

Official NHS guidance on using secure online forms to contact a GP surgery.

Open Online Form Guidance
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NHS App prescriptions

How to request and view repeat prescriptions through the NHS App.

Open Prescription Guidance
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NHS App test results

How to view GP-ordered test results and understand limits in the NHS App.

Open Test Result Guidance
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GP health record

Official NHS App guidance on viewing GP health record information.

Open Record Guidance
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Fit notes

Official NHS guidance on when you may need a fit note and how to request one.

Open Fit Note Guidance
111

NHS 111

Urgent non-emergency medical help when you are unsure what to do.

Open NHS 111
Related intent

People also search: medical practice appointments, hours, registration and prescriptions

Deep dive into appointment access

Medical practice appointment access is now often split between NHS App, surgery website forms, phone and reception. The right route depends on your registered GP surgery.

Deep dive into opening hours

Opening hours can differ between reception, phone lines, online forms and branch sites. Use the official practice contact page, not old directory snippets.

Deep dive into GP registration

Registering with a GP in England is free. Start with NHS Find a GP, check postcode coverage, then use online registration where offered.

Deep dive into NHS App prescriptions

The NHS App can request repeat prescriptions, but GP surgery approval is still needed and not every medicine can be requested through the app.

Deep dive into test results and records

GP-ordered test results may be visible in the NHS App after review. Some hospital or older results may not appear automatically.

Deep dive into urgent vs routine care

Use GP routes for routine care, NHS 111 for urgent non-emergency problems, and 999 for life-threatening emergencies.

FAQ

Medical Practice FAQ

Use the official NHS Find a GP search and enter your postcode. Open the NHS profile and official practice website before registering, booking or travelling.

NHS guidance says appointment routes may include the NHS App or NHS website, an online form on the GP surgery website, phone, or speaking to reception. Your own surgery decides which routes are available.

Sometimes. NHS App guidance says GP appointment booking may be available, but your GP surgery may switch it off or use a different online request system.

Opening hours vary by surgery and branch. Check your own GP surgery’s official contact page before travelling or calling.

Use NHS Find a GP, choose a surgery that covers your area and offers registration, then complete the online registration form where available. NHS says registration is free in England.

NHS guidance says online registration usually takes about 15 minutes to complete per person. You should be told when you are registered, usually within 5 days of the surgery getting your details, but it can take longer.

You may be able to request repeat prescriptions through the NHS App, NHS website or your surgery’s own online service. The GP surgery must approve the request before it is prepared by the pharmacy.

You may be able to view GP-ordered test results in the NHS App or NHS website after they have been reviewed and made available. Availability depends on your GP surgery and the type of test.

NHS guidance says you might need a fit note if you are unwell and cannot work for more than 7 days, including weekends and bank holidays. You usually do not need a fit note for 7 days or less.

Use NHS 111 online or call 111 for urgent non-emergency help. Call 999 for life-threatening symptoms or serious injury.

Final patient summary

For a medical practice appointment, start with your registered GP surgery’s official website or NHS App route. For a new GP, use NHS Find a GP and register with a surgery that covers your area.

Safe route reminder

For routine GP help, use official practice routes. For urgent non-emergency help, use NHS 111. For life-threatening symptoms, call 999.

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