PLAB 2 is an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE): a circuit of 16 stations taken at the GMC's clinical assessment centre in Manchester. Each station puts you in a realistic clinical scenario with a simulated patient (a trained role-player) and an examiner who scores you against a structured mark scheme. Where PLAB 1 tests whether you know the right thing to do, PLAB 2 tests whether you can do it โ safely, and with a real person in the room.
The single best way to calm exam-day nerves is to make the room familiar in advance. This guide walks through what actually happens on the day.
The format at a glance
- 16 stations in a timed circuit, each around 8 minutes, with a short period to read the scenario before you go in.
- A simulated patient in most stations, sometimes with a manikin for examination or a procedure.
- An examiner in each station marking against a standardised scheme โ they will not coach you, so do not wait to be led.
- A bell or buzzer signals the start and end of every station; when it sounds, you move on whether or not you have finished.
What each station is really testing
Stations are built from everyday clinical encounters across settings โ emergency department, GP surgery, ward and telephone. Although the scenarios vary, the skills being assessed are consistent:
- Data gathering โ focused history taking and the right examination for the problem.
- Clinical management โ a safe, sensible plan and the single most appropriate next step.
- Communication and interpersonal skills โ explaining clearly, checking understanding, and responding to emotion.
- Professionalism and ethics โ consent, capacity, confidentiality, safety and honesty.
- Practical procedures โ performing a skill correctly and safely on a manikin where required.
Common station types
- History-taking stations: take a focused history, form a sensible differential, and explain the next steps to the patient.
- Examination stations: perform a relevant, well-structured examination and interpret what you find.
- Counselling and explanation stations: explain a diagnosis, a medication, or a result in plain language, and check the patient has understood.
- Breaking bad news and ethics stations: handle a difficult conversation with empathy while staying clinically and ethically safe.
- Practical and acute stations: manage an acutely unwell patient using an A-E approach, or perform a procedure on a manikin.
How marks are won and lost
Most candidates who struggle are not short of knowledge โ they run out of time or forget to treat the role-player as a person. The recurring lessons from those who pass comfortably:
- Structure every station. A clear opening, a focused middle and a safe summary buys you marks even when the clinical content is hard.
- Talk to the patient, not the examiner. Communication marks are real marks; warmth, signposting and checking understanding all count.
- Always think safety. Red flags, safety-netting and escalation are scored across many stations.
- Keep moving. When the bell goes, leave. A strong finish on the next station beats a perfect one you never reached.
How to prepare
PLAB 2 rewards rehearsal more than reading. Practise full eight-minute stations out loud, ideally with a partner playing the patient, and time yourself strictly. Build a small number of reliable frameworks โ for history taking, for explaining, and for the acutely unwell patient โ so that under pressure you are running a routine, not inventing one. Refine your spoken clinical English: clear, kind, plain language scores well.
Frequently asked questions
How many stations are in PLAB 2?
PLAB 2 is a 16-station OSCE, with each station running for around eight minutes plus a short reading period beforehand.
Where is PLAB 2 held?
At the GMC's clinical assessment centre in Manchester, United Kingdom. You will need to plan travel, accommodation and, for many IMGs, a visa around your test date.
What does PLAB 2 actually test?
Practical clinical skills with a real (simulated) patient: history taking, examination, clinical management, communication, professionalism and ethics, and practical procedures.
Is PLAB 2 a reproduction of a real shift?
It is a standardised assessment built from realistic scenarios, not a literal copy of any one hospital's system. Practising the format is what makes it feel familiar on the day.
How long should I prepare for PLAB 2?
Most IMGs spend several weeks of focused, spoken practice after passing PLAB 1, and book PLAB 2 with their visa and travel timelines in mind. Always confirm current dates and fees on the official GMC website.
Ant PLAB helps you move from PLAB 1 knowledge to PLAB 2 performance with scenario practice and structured frameworks for every common station type. Start with a free sample and build your exam-day routine early.