Is the GP Partnership Model Changing for Good?

Two General Practitioners in a UK Primary Care practice discussing GP partnership, succession planning and workforce leadership at a practice meeting

The GP partnership model is not disappearing. But it is shifting.

Fewer newly qualified GPs are actively pursuing partnership early in their careers. Portfolio roles, salaried positions and flexible working are often more attractive than immediate equity and operational responsibility.

That shift has consequences for practices.

The quiet risk

Across the country, many established GP Partners are approaching retirement over the next decade.

The pressure does not happen overnight. It builds gradually:

• Reduced appetite for equity
• Delayed succession conversations
• Increased reliance on salaried GPs
• Greater operational burden on remaining Partners

Without a clear pipeline, stability becomes fragile.

What forward thinking practices are doing

Stronger practices are:

• Introducing phased partnership routes
• Being transparent about drawings and liabilities
• Supporting leadership development earlier
• Protecting non clinical time

Partnership cannot rely on tradition. It must feel viable and well structured.

Recruitment reality

When speaking to GPs today, the priorities are consistent:

• Flexibility
• Workload clarity
• Portfolio opportunity
• Financial transparency

Practices that adapt their offer are securing long term commitment. Those that do not often remain in a cycle of short term cover.

The bigger picture

Primary Care workforce planning is not just about sessional gaps. It is about leadership continuity.

If succession feels harder than it did five years ago, that is not coincidence. It reflects a broader shift in how GPs view responsibility, risk and work life balance.

At Vela Medical Group, we support GP practices with both salaried recruitment and long term succession planning conversations.

The partnership model can work.

But it now requires intention.