Seeing a doctor online in the UK: what to expect and how to spot a safe service

What online GP consultations can and can't do, what the 2025 rule changes mean, and the red flags that separate safe providers from risky ones.

Quick answer: UK online doctors can assess, advise and prescribe when remote care is clinically safe — using registered GMC clinicians and GPhC pharmacies. Since 2025, high-risk medicines need extra verification. Safe services may decline you; unsafe ones guarantee prescriptions.

Online consultations have become a normal part of UK healthcare — but the quality gap between providers is wide, and since 2025 the rules have tightened considerably. Here’s how to use online care well, and how to spot the services worth trusting.

What do online doctors do well?

Advice and assessment for everyday conditions, skin problems (often helped by photos), travel health, contraception, medication reviews, private fit notes, and referrals. For many issues, a video or structured online assessment is clinically equivalent to sitting in a consulting room — and considerably faster.

Sanara focuses on programme-based care (weight, men’s and women’s health) with pharmacy supply where appropriate — see programmes.

What shouldn’t online doctors do?

Anything needing hands-on examination, emergencies, and conditions where a remote assessment can’t be made safely. A trustworthy clinician will say “you need to be seen in person for this” — and that honesty is itself a quality signal.

What changed in 2025?

UK pharmacy regulation now requires that, for higher-risk prescription medicines supplied online, the prescriber independently verifies your information rather than relying on a questionnaire alone — through two-way conversation, records, or your GP.

So a proper service may ask to speak with you, request confirmation of details, or ask consent to contact your GP. That friction is the system working.

What are the red flags?

Be wary of any site that:

  • Lets you choose a prescription medicine and check out like buying socks
  • Advertises prescription-only medicines by name with prices
  • Has no named, register-checkable clinicians
  • Has no UK pharmacy registration displayed
  • Guarantees approval

Legitimate UK providers display their GPhC pharmacy number and their clinicians’ GMC/GPhC numbers — and you can verify both on the public registers in under a minute.

Read our full online pharmacy checklist.

What are the green flags?

Named clinicians with register numbers, a clear “you may not be approved” message, refund-if-declined policies, GP-sharing options, and visible safety screening. The best services are slightly slower than the worst ones — by design.

Next steps

Explore how Sanara works or start an assessment for programme-based care with discreet UK delivery.

Frequently asked questions

Can online doctors prescribe medicine in the UK?

Yes — registered GMC doctors and independent prescribers can prescribe after a proper assessment when remote care is safe. They must not prescribe when an examination is required or when verification standards for high-risk medicines aren't met.

What changed for online prescribing in the UK in 2025?

Regulators tightened rules for higher-risk online medicines — especially weight-loss injections — requiring prescribers to independently verify patient information rather than relying on questionnaires alone.

Are online doctor consultations safe?

Safe when provided by registered clinicians through GPhC-regulated pharmacies with clear limits on what can be managed remotely. Unsafe when prescriptions are guaranteed without assessment or sold like retail products.

What can online GPs not treat?

Emergencies, conditions needing physical examination, suspected serious pathology, and some mental health crises require in-person or urgent care. Good online clinicians say no when remote care isn't safe.

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