By someone who’s helped dozens of Nigerian students navigate the UK healthcare system and made a few mistakes along the way.
Introduction
Let me be honest with you. When I first arrived in the UK as a Nigerian student, nobody sat me down and explained how the NHS actually works. I assumed “I paid the surcharge, so I’m covered” and technically that’s true. But I didn’t register with a GP for three months. Then I got a chest infection. At 11pm on a Wednesday. With no doctor on record. I must confess that was a bad night.
If you’re a Nigerian student who’s just landed or about to land in the UK, this guide will save you that headache. I’m going to walk you through NHS registration step by step, tell you what nobody puts in the official leaflets, and flag the mistakes I see Nigerian students make all the time.
Follow me in this is well researched guide couple with firsthand experience, here is what to learn:
- What Is the NHS
- What Services Can You Access Once Registered?
- Common Mistakes Nigerian Students Make
First Things First: What Is the NHS and Why Does Registration Matter?
The National Health Service (NHS) is the UK’s publicly funded healthcare system. As a Nigerian student on a valid student visa, you are entitled to use it but you must register with a GP (General Practitioner, i.e., your local doctor) before you can access most services.
Here’s what catches people off guard: paying the Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS) during your visa application does not automatically put you in the system. You must pay the IHS of £776 per year as part of your visa application, which entitles you to use NHS services from the day your visa starts but you still need to register with a GP surgery once you arrive. Think of the IHS as your insurance premium. GP registration is actually opening a policy.
It is strongly advisable to register with a GP as soon as you arrive United Kingdom don’t wait until you fall ill. I cannot stress this enough. I’ve watched students wait until they’re ill, then spend a panicked afternoon trying to find a GP that’s accepting new patients. Don’t be that person.
Step 1: Confirm You’re Eligible
This should be quick. Most international students are eligible for NHS services if they are studying in the UK for more than six months and have paid the Immigration Health Surcharge as part of their visa application.
For Nigerian students specifically, here’s what to check:
- You applied for a UK Student Visa (Tier 4 or the current Student Route)
- Your course is six months or longer
- You paid the IHS during your visa application (check your visa application receipts it’s listed there separately)
If you ticked all three boxes, you’re in. The IHS costs £776 per year of study for students and their dependents.
One thing I see confuse Nigerian students: if your IHS was paid, you’ll have an IHS reference number or payment confirmation in your email. Keep it. Some GP receptionists in certain areas will ask for it, even though technically they don’t have to.
Step 2: Gather Your Documents Before You Go
Now, here’s where I need to be real with you. Officially, you do not need ID, proof of address, or proof of immigration status to register with a GP rather you’ll only be asked for your name, date of birth and address.
That’s the rule. The reality? Research has consistently shown that people attempting to register with a GP who do not have the requested documentation are often refused registration in practice. So while you have rights, bringing documents makes the whole thing smoother and avoids confrontation.
Documents to bring (practically speaking):
- Your passport — Nigerian passport, current and valid
- Your BRP (Biometric Residence Permit) — if you’ve collected it
- Your university enrollment letter — ask your student services office; most have these ready within the first week
- Proof of address — your accommodation contract, university halls confirmation email, or a letter from the university confirming your address
- Your IHS payment reference number — not technically required, but helpful
Don’t have your BRP yet? That’s okay. Many students arrive and collect the BRP within days of landing. Take your BRP, proof of address and passport when registering with a GP. If you don’t have the BRP yet, go anyway with what you have don’t let it delay you.
Step 3: Find a GP Surgery Near You
This is where a lot of Nigerian students waste time unnecessarily. You don’t need to find the best GP in the city. You need to find one within a reasonable distance of where you live that is accepting new patients.
Go to nhs.uk/service-search/find-a-gp and enter your postcode. It will show you every GP surgery nearby and whether they’re accepting new patients.
Practical tips for Nigerian students:
- If you live in university halls, ask the accommodation office which GP they recommend. Many universities have a campus health centre that is basically your easiest option they’re used to registering international students and know exactly what documents to expect.
- GP surgeries have catchment areas. If you try to register at one that doesn’t cover your postcode, they can decline. Always check the surgery serves your area.
- If a surgery shows “not accepting new patients,” call anyway. Lists change, and sometimes their website is out of date.
Step 4: Register Online or In Person
Since October 2024, all GP surgeries in England must offer online registration through the national “Register with a GP surgery” service. You can also visit in person and fill out a paper form.
Online registration: Go to nhs.uk/nhs-services/gps/how-to-register-with-a-gp-surgery/ and click “Register with a GP surgery.” You’ll enter your postcode, choose your surgery, and fill in the form. It takes about ten minutes.
In-person registration: Walk into the surgery during opening hours (usually Monday to Friday, 8:30am–6:30pm), tell the receptionist you want to register as a new patient, and they’ll give you a form. The old GMS1 form has now been replaced with the PRF1 form. Fill it in, hand over your documents, and you’re done.
What if the receptionist says they need more documents than you have?
This happens. A GP surgery cannot legally refuse you just because you do not have ID or proof of address. If a receptionist tells you otherwise, politely ask to speak with the practice manager or refer to the NHS England registration guidance.
I’d also add: stay calm. Being a Black African student asking about your rights in a GP surgery can feel loaded I know. Be polite but firm. Ask for the practice manager. Know that you have the NHS England guidance on your side.
Step 5: Wait for Confirmation and Your NHS Number
After submitting your form, the GP surgery processes your registration. This typically takes 3–5 working days. Some surgeries confirm by text message, others by letter. You will receive your NHS number a unique 10-digit number that you keep for life.
That NHS number is everything. Guard it. Write it somewhere you won’t lose it. It follows you for every hospital visit, prescription, and specialist referral for as long as you are in the UK.
Step 6: Download the NHS App
Once registered, download the NHS App available on iPhone and Android. This lets you:
- Book GP appointments
- Order repeat prescriptions
- See your medical records
- Get referrals tracked
The NHS App allows you to book appointments, order prescriptions, and access your medical records with ease. For Nigerian students used to having to physically show up for everything, the app is genuinely brilliant. Use it.
What Services Can You Access Once Registered?
As a Nigerian student with valid IHS, once you’re registered you get:
Free consultations for illnesses, injuries, or health concerns; prescriptions and repeat prescriptions; referrals to specialists or hospitals if needed; mental health support through your GP or local services; and sexual health services, including contraception advice and testing.
A note on dental care: This trips up almost every Nigerian student I’ve ever spoken to. It is possible to access some dental services through the NHS, but waiting lists can be extremely long and many dental practices will not accept NHS patients. Register with an NHS dentist separately, don’t assume your GP covers your teeth. And start looking early, because NHS dental lists in many UK cities are extremely backlogged.
Common Mistakes Nigerian Students Make And How to Avoid Them
After years of supporting Nigerian students navigating UK life, these are the patterns I keep seeing:
1. Waiting too long to register. You’ll be busy with freshers’ week, settling in, making friends. Everyone deprioritises their GP. Then month three comes and someone needs a prescription or a sick note, and there’s suddenly a rush. Register in week one.
2. Assuming the IHS means they’re automatically in the system. It doesn’t. The surcharge gives you the right to use the NHS GP registration is what actually plugs you into it.
3. Not knowing their rights when a surgery pushes back. NHS guidelines state that you don’t need proof of address, immigration status, ID or an NHS number to register with a GP. If a surgery refuses you without a written reason, they must explain why in writing within 14 days, and you can escalate to the NHS England Customer Contact Centre on 0300 311 22 33.
4. Trying to register at a GP too far from their address. GP surgeries are territory-based. Don’t fall in love with a particular surgery because a friend goes there check if your postcode is in their catchment first.
5. Forgetting about mental health services. UK university life can be genuinely lonely, especially in the first year. Your GP can refer you to counselling and mental health support free of charge. Many Nigerian students I’ve spoken to didn’t know this existed, or felt stigma around using it. It’s there. Use it if you need it.
Quick Reference: What to Bring to GP Registration
| Document | Required by law? | Recommended? |
|---|---|---|
| Passport | No | Yes |
| BRP | No | Yes |
| University enrollment letter | No | Yes |
| Proof of address | No | Yes |
| IHS reference number | No | Helpful |
In Conclusion
The NHS isn’t perfect, waiting times can be long, and GP appointments are sometimes harder to get than they should be. But as a Nigerian student who has paid thousands of pounds in IHS fees, you are absolutely entitled to use it. Register early, know your rights, download the app, and don’t wait until you’re sick to figure this out.
However, completing your NHS registration as a Nigerian student in the UK is one of the first and most important steps to take after arriving for your studies. Registering with a local GP ensures you can access healthcare services when needed, receive medical advice, obtain prescriptions, and benefit from the UK’s healthcare system without unnecessary delays.
Therefore, by following this step-by-step guide to NHS registration for Nigerian students in the UK, you can avoid common mistakes, prepare the required documents in advance, and secure access to essential health services from the beginning of your academic journey. Whether you are studying in London, Manchester, Birmingham, Glasgow, or any other UK city, early NHS registration provides peace of mind and helps you focus on your education rather than unexpected healthcare challenges.
Remember that having paid the Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS) as part of your visa application generally gives you access to NHS services during your stay. However, you must still register with a GP practice near your accommodation to make full use of these benefits.
As you settle into life in the UK, prioritize your health just as much as your studies. A successful NHS registration for Nigerian students can make a significant difference in your overall student experience, ensuring you receive timely medical support whenever you need it.
You’ve worked hard to get to the UK. Don’t let something as fixable as GP registration be the thing that trips you up when you need help most.
For more practical guides on studying abroad, healthcare requirements, student visas, scholarships, and international student success tips, keep exploring The Scholar Compass your trusted resource for navigating life as a Nigerian student in the UK and beyond.

