Advanced Nurse Practitioner. Advanced Clinical Practitioner. Two titles used daily across NHS primary care — sometimes by the same person — yet they represent different professional frameworks, different registration bodies, and different career pathways. Whether you are a clinician deciding which title best describes your practice, a GP practice trying to recruit at the right level, or a PCN Clinical Director building an ARRS team, understanding the distinction matters. This guide gives you a clear, practical account of what each title means and what it should mean when you hire or apply.
The Short Answer: What Is the Difference?
The fundamental distinction is this: ANP is a nursing title — it describes a registered nurse who has advanced their practice to an autonomous, extended level. ACP is a multi-professional title — it describes any clinician (nurse, paramedic, pharmacist, physiotherapist, or other AHP) who has completed an NHS England-defined Advanced Clinical Practice programme and demonstrates competence across all four pillars of advanced practice.
All ANPs working at a genuinely advanced level are, by definition, also advanced clinical practitioners. But not all ACPs are nurses — an ACP might be a paramedic, a pharmacist, or a physiotherapist who has completed a master's-level advanced practice qualification.
ANP = nursing background + advanced practice level. ACP = any clinical background + completed advanced practice programme (typically master's level). Both can work autonomously at similar clinical levels in primary care. The difference lies in professional background, regulatory framework, and training pathway — not necessarily clinical capability.
ANP and ACP Side by Side
- Registered nurse (NMC) who has advanced their scope of practice through postgraduate education
- Works autonomously across a wide range of clinical presentations
- Often holds the independent prescribing qualification (V300)
- Typically works across acute illness, chronic disease management, and minor illness
- No separate NMC register for advanced nurse practice yet — though this is expected to change
- Title is widely recognised but not formally protected by regulation in 2025
- Clinician from any regulated profession (nursing, paramedic, pharmacy, physiotherapy, etc.) who has completed an NHS England Advanced Clinical Practice programme
- Typically holds a master's-level qualification in advanced practice
- Must demonstrate competence across all four pillars of advanced practice
- Registered with their base professional body (NMC, HCPC, GPhC)
- Title increasingly recognised as the standard advanced practice benchmark by NHS England
- May or may not hold independent prescribing depending on background
The Four Pillars of Advanced Practice
NHS England's advanced practice framework — developed by Health Education England (now integrated into NHS England) — defines four pillars that all ACPs should demonstrate, and which ANPs working at a genuine advanced level should also be able to evidence:
In reality, many clinicians using the ANP or ACP title in primary care primarily work in the clinical pillar, with varying levels of engagement in the other three. The degree to which a clinician operates across all four pillars is often a better indicator of their practice level than the title alone.
Prescribing: The Practical Differentiator in Primary Care
In a GP surgery or PCN setting, the single most important practical question is often not ANP vs ACP — it is does this clinician hold an independent prescribing qualification?
An advanced practitioner without independent prescribing can assess, diagnose, and formulate a management plan — but must rely on a GP to issue prescriptions. This creates a bottleneck in clinical workflow, limits the autonomous value of the role, and increases GP workload rather than reducing it.
Key prescribing qualifications by profession:
- Nurses (ANPs) — Independent Prescribing (V300) qualification, enabling prescribing across the full formulary with appropriate training
- Paramedic ACPs — Independent Prescribing qualification available and increasingly common; check at appointment whether the candidate holds this
- Pharmacist ACPs — Independent prescribing typically integral to clinical pharmacist training; most clinical pharmacists are independent prescribers
- Physiotherapist / Podiatrist ACPs — Independent prescribing possible but less universal; typically limited to a more specific formulary relevant to their specialty
ARRS Eligibility: ANP and ACP
Both ANPs and ACPs are eligible for ARRS reimbursement within PCNs. The ARRS framework does not mandate a specific title — it requires that the clinician is working at an advanced practice level, typically evidenced by a master's-level qualification or equivalent demonstrable competence, and that the role meets the ARRS service specification for the relevant role type.
For PCN Directors, the practical question when assessing ARRS eligibility is: does this clinician meet the competency framework for the ARRS role? The title on their job description matters far less than the evidence behind it.
Full Comparison Table
| Factor | ANP | ACP |
|---|---|---|
| Professional background | Registered nurse (NMC) | Any regulated clinician (NMC, HCPC, GPhC, etc.) |
| Qualification level | Typically postgraduate diploma or master's | Master's level or equivalent portfolio (NHS England framework) |
| Regulatory register | NMC nursing register (no separate advanced register yet) | Base professional register (NMC, HCPC, GPhC) |
| Title protection | Not formally protected in 2025 — NMC regulation expected | Not formally protected — but NHS England framework provides standard |
| Prescribing | Often hold V300 independent prescribing | Depends on background — check at point of hiring |
| ARRS eligible | Yes | Yes |
| Four pillars evidence | Should demonstrate all four; in practice varies | Required by ACP framework definition |
| Scope in primary care | Acute illness, chronic disease, prescribing, minor illness | Depends on clinical background — nursing ACP broadly similar to ANP; paramedic ACP home visiting, urgent care; pharmacist ACP medicines optimisation |
For PCN Directors and Practice Managers: What to Ask When Hiring
✓ Advanced Practitioner Hiring Checklist
- What is their base professional registration and is it current? (Check NMC, HCPC, or GPhC online)
- Do they hold an independent prescribing qualification? If so, what is the scope of their prescribing?
- What is their highest qualification level — diploma, degree, or master's? At what institution?
- Can they provide a portfolio demonstrating competence across the four pillars of advanced practice?
- What clinical background do they have — nursing, paramedic, pharmacy? How does this align with your patient population and service need?
- What supervision arrangement will they need in the first 3–6 months, and who will provide it?
- Have they worked in primary care before, or will this be a transition from an acute or emergency care background?
- Are they ARRS-eligible for the specific role type you are recruiting for? Confirm with your ICB if unsure.
For Clinicians: Which Title Should You Use?
If you are a registered nurse who has completed postgraduate advanced practice training, both titles may apply — and both are used interchangeably in many job advertisements. In practice, using ANP signals your nursing background clearly, while using ACP signals alignment with the NHS England framework and a broad advanced practice portfolio. Neither is wrong, but clarity about your background, qualifications, and prescribing status in applications and CVs is more important than which acronym you lead with.
If you are a paramedic, pharmacist, or AHP who has completed an ACP programme, you should use ACP — the ANP title implies a nursing background you do not have. Using the correct title avoids confusion at hiring and ensures your unique clinical perspective is clearly communicated.
Looking for ANP or ACP Roles? Or Need to Hire?
SHR Group maintains an active network of ANPs, ACPs, and independent prescribers across the UK. We match candidates based on clinical background, prescribing status, and location — for both locum and permanent primary care roles.