Book Appointment Now
MRCP & Postgraduate Exams
Overview
Postgraduate exams are a major part of career progression in the UK.
They are not just academic hurdles — they directly affect:
- Your training applications
- Your confidence clinically
- Your credibility with seniors
- Your long-term career options
This page explains the reality behind the exams, not the myth.
What is MRCP?
MRCP (UK) = Membership of the Royal Colleges of Physicians.
It is required for:
- Progression through IMT
- Applying for medical specialties (ST4+)
- Long-term career progression in medicine
It has three parts:
- MRCP Part 1 – Written exam (basic clinical sciences + medicine)
- MRCP Part 2 – Written exam (applied clinical knowledge)
- PACES – Clinical exam (communication, examination, judgement)
You must pass all three to obtain MRCP.
When Should You Start Thinking About MRCP?
There is no perfect time, but realistic guidance:
- Early NHS experience → better clinical context
- Some doctors start Part 1 before first job
- Many start Part 1 during trust-grade or IMT1
- PACES is best attempted after real ward exposure
Rushing too early often leads to repeated failure and burnout.
Exams Are Not Just About Intelligence
MRCP success depends on:
- Pattern recognition
- Exam technique
- Consistent practice
- Time management
- Mental stamina
- Clinical experience
Plenty of excellent clinicians fail multiple attempts.
Plenty of average students pass through smart strategy.
This is normal.
Other Common Exams (Depending on Career Path)
Surgical route
- MRCS (Part A + Part B)
GP route
- MSRA
- AKT
- RCA
Other specialties
- Specialty-specific exams later in training
Each pathway has its own exam burden — planning matters.
How Exams Affect Applications
Exams can:
- Strengthen your CV
- Increase shortlisting scores
- Demonstrate commitment
- Improve interview performance
But they do not replace:
- Portfolio evidence
- Teaching
- Audit
- References
- Communication skills
Balanced progress beats exam obsession.
Common Mistakes
- Sitting exams without understanding the format
- Memorising question banks without learning concepts
- Attempting PACES too early
- Comparing your timeline to others
- Letting exam failure destroy confidence
Failure is part of the process for many strong doctors.
Reality Check
MRCP is hard.
It is meant to be.
But thousands pass every year — including IMGs, busy SHOs, parents, and doctors working full-time.
What they share is not brilliance.
It is consistency.
Reassurance
You do not need to pass everything quickly to succeed.
A slower, sustainable approach often produces better doctors and better outcomes long-term.