How to become a Surgical Care Practitioner

A registered practitioner (often from ODP or nursing) trained to assist and perform defined surgical interventions under supervision — a senior theatre role.

Entry routes

  • From Operating Department Practitioner: PgDip Surgical Care Practice (RCS-accredited) (~3 yrs)

What you'll need

Experience

  • Speciality clinical experience
  • 2+ years post-registration experience

Employer support

  • Employer support / sponsorship

Admin

  • UCAS / university application (degree route)

Registration

  • HCPC registration (allied health professional)

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A typical path

£25,272 now → £49,387 in ~8 yrs

  1. Healthcare Assistant

    Year 0 · Band 2 · entry

    £25,272
  2. Assistant Practitioner

    Year 2 · Band 4 · entry

    £28,392
  3. Operating Department Practitioner

    Year 4.5 · Band 5 · entry

    £32,073
  4. Operating Department Practitioner

    Year 6.5 · Band 5 · intermediate

    £34,592
  5. Surgical Care Practitioner

    Year 7.5 · Band 7 · entry

    £49,387
  6. Surgical Care Practitioner

    Year 9.5 · Band 7 · intermediate

    £51,932

Common questions

How long does it take to become a Surgical Care Practitioner?

3+ years post-registration — see the step-by-step timeline above for a typical path.

See what you'd earn as a Surgical Care Practitioner

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Related

Indicative — England 2026/27 Agenda for Change basic pay, excludes High Cost Area Supplements, unsocial-hours and overtime. Typical timings are national averages, not guarantees. Not financial advice. See data sources.

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