Working as a GP in Sydney as a UK Doctor
Sydney is the most common first destination for UK GPs moving to Australia — and for specific structural reasons, not just lifestyle preference. The combination of the Competent Authority pathway, the 19AB after-hours exemption, and Sydney's geography creates an income model that is difficult to replicate in any other Australian city at the same speed. This article covers how that works in practice and what your first year in Sydney typically looks like.
Why Sydney specifically
The core economics come from two rules working together:
1. The CA pathway gets you earning in 2–3 months. UK GPs with MRCGP+CCT skip the AMC exams entirely and move straight to provisional registration and supervised practice. From the day you submit a complete AHPRA application to your first paid shift is typically 8–14 weeks. No other Australian city changes this timeline — the CA pathway applies nationally.
2. Sydney's MM1 classification enables the after-hours exemption from day one. Greater Sydney (inner suburbs, CBD, and most metropolitan areas) is classified as MM1 under the Modified Monash Model — a non-Distribution Priority Area where new IMGs cannot bill Medicare for standard daytime consultations under Section 19AB. However, after-hours services are exempt from 19AB everywhere. This means a Sydney CBD or inner-suburban practice can employ a newly arrived UK GP for evening and weekend shifts immediately, billing Medicare under the GP's own provider number.
The result: a newly registered UK GP in Sydney can be earning $3,000–5,000 per week from after-hours work within 10–14 weeks of arriving, before ever completing a daytime supervised session.
No other major Australian city has this combination as cleanly. Melbourne and Brisbane have the same MM1 classification in their CBDs, but Sydney's market for dedicated after-hours GP services is larger and more established.
The split arrangement
Most UK GPs in Sydney operate a split arrangement: after-hours at a metropolitan practice plus daytime at a DPA-classified location outside the MM1 zone.
The split serves two purposes:
- Income: metro after-hours billing at the higher MBS item number loadings
- Training: daytime sessions at the DPA site count toward your 12-month supervised practice requirement and, if you're pursuing FRACGP, toward your FSP or PEP training hours
The DPA areas within commuting distance of Sydney include:
- Western Sydney (Penrith, Blacktown, Mount Druitt — DPA-classified pockets within 45–60 minutes of the CBD)
- Blue Mountains (Katoomba, Lithgow — DPA, ~90 minutes from Sydney)
- Central Coast (Gosford/Wyong area — partially DPA, ~75 minutes)
- Southern Highlands / Wollongong periphery — various DPA-classified practices
Many practices structure this for new IMGs explicitly — an accredited supervisor at the regional site, complemented by an after-hours arrangement in the inner city. Both locations must be listed on your AHPRA provisional registration; notify AHPRA of any additional practice location.
What a typical first year looks like
Months 1–3 — Registration and setup
- Submit AHPRA application (can be done before you leave the UK)
- Arrange supervisor and practice locations (metro after-hours + DPA daytime)
- AHPRA grants provisional registration: typically 4–8 weeks after complete application
- Apply for Medicare provider number immediately on receiving AHPRA registration number (processing takes 1–2 weeks)
- First clinical shift: typically week 10–14 from arrival
Months 3–12 — Supervised practice
- Evenings and weekends: after-hours shifts at metro MM1 practice under 19AB after-hours exemption
- Weekdays: daytime sessions at DPA practice under supervisor
- Both count toward supervised practice hours
- Supervisor submits progress reports at 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months to the MBA
- Medicare billing under your own provider number from day one
Month 12–14 — General registration
- Supervisor recommends general registration
- AHPRA application for general registration (~2–4 weeks processing)
- After general registration: supervision requirement ends; full location flexibility; same Medicare provider number continues
Income in year one
After-hours billing at an MM1 Sydney practice attracts the higher MBS item number loadings. A GP working three evening sessions (6pm–11pm) plus one full weekend day per week can gross $3,000–5,000 per week from after-hours alone — approximately $150,000–250,000 annualised from after-hours shifts only.
Add 4–5 daytime sessions per week at a DPA practice, and first-year gross income commonly reaches $250,000–400,000 AUD. Use the income estimator to model your specific scenario based on billing mix.
After Australian tax, superannuation (11.5%), professional indemnity insurance, and Sydney cost of living, the net position typically represents a 30–60% improvement on a UK NHS GP salary. The main cost variable is childcare — Sydney rates run $100–180/day per child, which is a material consideration for doctors with young families.
Supervision at Level 3
Most UK GPs with MRCGP+CCT and recent clinical experience are assigned Level 3 supervision by the MBA — the most independent tier. At Level 3 you practise independently: your supervisor is contactable but does not need to be on-site. This is what enables the after-hours model — your supervisor does not need to be present at the metro practice during your evening shifts.
The MBA sets the supervision level when it assesses your provisional registration application. Level 3 is standard for CA-pathway UK GPs with full GMC registration, MRCGP, and recent uninterrupted clinical practice. Level 2 (supervisor in the building) applies occasionally when there are gaps in recent practice or conditions on GMC registration. See the supervision level guide for full detail.
What practices look for
Sydney practices employing newly arrived UK GPs typically require:
- Provisional AHPRA registration (confirmed or imminent)
- Medicare provider number (or application submitted)
- Current Certificate of Good Standing from GMC
- Professional indemnity insurance (MDA National, Avant, or MIPS are the main providers; confirm the policy covers after-hours GP work)
- 482 visa or other work rights (the practice typically sponsors the 482)
Most practices will not confirm a start date until AHPRA registration is confirmed. The practical sequence: get AHPRA provisional registration, immediately apply for Medicare, then confirm start date with the practice.
The 10-year clock
General registration does not end the 19AB restriction. The 10-year Medicare billing clock runs from the date your overseas qualification was first recognised in Australia — not from the date you achieve general registration or Fellowship. A UK GP who achieves general registration after 12 months of supervision is still subject to 19AB for the remaining 8–9 years.
In practice, this means the after-hours income model is not temporary. Most UK GPs in Sydney continue to include after-hours sessions in their working week throughout their restriction period, supplemented by DPA work or another exemption. See the 19AB full guide for detail on all five exemption types and how the clock ends.
Getting started
The steps in order:
- Confirm your MRCGP+CCT qualifies — see Is MRCGP recognised in Australia?
- Request your GMC Certificate of Good Standing — needed for the AHPRA application
- Submit your AHPRA application — can be done before you leave the UK
- Identify a supervisor and practice locations (metro + DPA)
- Apply for Medicare provider number on AHPRA confirmation
- Arrange professional indemnity insurance and 482 visa sponsorship
- Start work
The full CA pathway timeline covers each stage in detail.
Source: MBA — Competent Authority Pathway · Services Australia — Section 19AB