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Finding Your First NHS Job
Overview
Your first NHS job is often the hardest role to secure — but also the most important step in your journey.
This stage is not about prestige.
It is about getting UK experience, understanding the system, and becoming employable long-term.
What Types of Jobs Should You Apply For?
Most IMGs start with:
Trust Grade SHO
Clinical Fellow
Junior Clinical Fellow
FY2 LAT (Locum Appointment for Training)
SHO-level Service Posts
These roles give you:
UK references
NHS experience
Portfolio evidence
Confidence in practice
Your first job is a foundation, not a final destination.
Where to Find NHS Jobs
The main platforms are:
NHS Jobs website
Trac.jobs (used by many trusts)
LinkedIn (some clinical fellow posts)
Hospital trust websites
Recruiter agencies (use carefully)
Most hospitals advertise continuously.
What Recruiters Actually Look For
For junior posts, trusts care most about:
GMC registration
Safe communication
Basic clinical competence
Willingness to learn
Reliability
Good references
They are not expecting perfection.
They are looking for someone safe and teachable.
Shortlisting Tips That Actually Work
Small improvements make a big difference:
Tailor your CV to the job description
Use NHS-style language (handover, escalation, MDT, SBAR)
Highlight audits, teaching, and teamwork
Show commitment to the UK system
Keep your CV to 2–3 pages, clean and professional
Generic CVs usually fail.
Interviews: What They Commonly Test
Expect questions around:
Managing an unwell patient
Prioritisation on call
Communication with seniors
Consent and capacity
Handling conflict
Reflection on mistakes
They are assessing safety and insight, not memorised guidelines.
Reality Check
You will likely face:
Rejections
Silence after applications
Long waits
Jobs that aren’t ideal at first
This is normal.
Many successful consultants started with difficult first posts.
Persistence beats perfection here.
Common Mistakes
Applying only to London
Waiting for the “perfect” job
Sending the same CV everywhere
Not preparing for interviews
Taking rejections personally
Your strategy matters more than luck.
Reassurance
Once you secure your first NHS job, everything becomes easier:
You understand the system
You get UK referees
Your applications become stronger
Your confidence grows quickly
The first step is the steepest — but it is absolutely achievable.