International demand for UK training surges: nonUK CT1/ST1 applicants more than triple since 2018/19

| Share with

news

The GMC’s Workforce report 2025 shows a dramatic rise in international doctors applying for the first year of UK specialty or core training (CT1/ST1), intensifying pressure on an already competitive training pipeline.  

According to the report, 5,326 nonUK PMQ doctors applied for CT1/ST1 posts in 2018/19. By 2023/24, that figure had more than tripled to 18,857. The report stresses these are numbers of doctors applying, not total applications, a key distinction because doctors can apply to multiple training posts in the same recruitment year.  

While applications have surged, offers have not risen at the same pace. In 2023/24, 4,406 nonUK graduates received an offer equating to under a quarter (23%) of nonUK applicants being offered a CT1/ST1 place. The report notes that the peak nonUK offer proportion was in 2019/20, when 53% (3,507) of nonUK applicants received an offer, highlighting how sharply the success rate has since fallen.  

The report also places these figures into the wider offer pool. It states that of 12,716 doctors who received an offer in 2023/24, 7,770 were UK graduates and 4,406 were nonUK graduates, meaning nonUK doctors made up roughly a third of those receiving training offers that year.  

The GMC argues this growth in international applications is linked to workforce pathways in the UK. Many international doctors, the report says, apply for specialty training after spending several years in locally employed (LE) roles. In other words, training applications are not separate from service staffing: they are often the next step for doctors who have already been contributing to daytoday NHS provision outside formal training.  

Why it matters: The report’s foreword highlights that postgraduate training is a key part of the UK’s workforce engine. Even as the number of doctors offered training places has “nearly doubled” over the last decade, the number of applicants has also grown, driven in part by increasing international interest. The report frames this as both an opportunity and a challenge: international doctors help fill service gaps and sustain training numbers in some programmes, but the widening gap between applicants and offers increases frustration, delays progression, and could change how attractive the UK remains as a destination for global talent.  

Related News

Locally employed doctors face high insecurity: only 9% on permanent contracts in England and Wales

22 Apr 2026

Most locally employed (LE) doctors in England and Wales are working on fixedterm or bank contracts, highlighting…

Read More

ProMedical Achieves Platinum Audit Badge for Compliance Excellence

17 Apr 2026

ProMedical Personnel Ltd is proud to announce that we have been awarded the prestigious Platinum…

Read More

“Neither register” workforce reaches 87,151 doctors, fastest-growing group despite slower expansion in 2024

17 Apr 2026

Doctors who are licensed but are on neither the GP nor specialist register and not…

Read More

UK licensed workforce grows to 328,149 in 2024, but annual growth slows as leavers rise

08 Apr 2026

The number of doctors holding a licence to practise in the UK continued to increase…

Read More

NonUK doctors now 28% of UK trainees; experience thresholds could reshape training pipeline

01 Apr 2026

International doctors now make up more than a quarter of the UK’s postgraduate training cohort,…

Read More

12 Mar 2026 | Leave a comment

Share with socials

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.