The Arch Medical Practice | NHS GP Surgery Arch

Emergency first: This is an independent patient guide, not the NHS. If someone has chest pain, stroke signs, severe breathing trouble, heavy bleeding, collapse, or is not responding, call 999 now. If it is urgent but not life-threatening, use NHS 111 online or call 111.
Hulme GP patient guide

The Arch Medical Practice: appointments, hours, registration and patient help

Trying to reach The Arch Medical Practice in Hulme? This guide helps you choose the right route for appointments, registration, repeat prescriptions, test results, sick notes, accessibility, travel and out-of-hours NHS help without repeating the same contact details on every section.

What do you need today?
1
Need care today?Use GP, NHS 111 or 999 depending on urgency.
2
New to Hulme?Check whether your address is covered before registering.
3
Need medicine?Use NHS App, online services, pharmacy or reception.
4
Visiting in person?Check travel route, access needs and appointment time first.
Main surgery phone

Use this number for: appointment questions, registration help, repeat prescription issues, test result questions, sick note queries, access needs, or if online services are difficult.

Address for maps, taxis and letters

Hulme Medical Centre
175 Royce Road
Hulme, Manchester
M15 5TJ

Use the full address when planning travel. This avoids confusion with other services that use “Arch” in their name.

Get directions
Practice
The Arch Medical Practice
Local area
Hulme, Manchester
NHS code
P84630
CQC rating
Good
Fast answer: The Arch Medical Practice is an NHS GP surgery at Hulme Medical Centre, 175 Royce Road, Hulme, Manchester, M15 5TJ. The reception phone number is 0161 226 0606. NHS.uk lists Monday opening as 8am to 8pm, Tuesday to Friday as 8am to 6:30pm, and Saturday/Sunday as closed. NHS.uk currently shows the practice as accepting new patients, but you should still check whether your home address is in the area the practice covers.

Serving patients in and around Hulme, The Arch Medical Practice is a local NHS GP surgery based inside Hulme Medical Centre. Many people arrive on this page because they need a practical answer quickly: how to book, whether the surgery is open, how to register, how to order medication, or what to do if the practice is closed.

This guide is written in plain British English for normal patients, students, carers, older people, new residents, people with anxiety about calling a surgery, and anyone who wants a clear next step. It avoids medical jargon and uses official source links so you can verify live details before calling or travelling.

The Arch Medical Practice opening times

NHS.uk lists the reception opening times below. Opening times can change for bank holidays, training days, public holidays or local NHS updates, so always check the official NHS profile or practice website before travelling.

DayNHS.uk listed opening timePatient note
Monday8am to 8pmLater Monday opening may help people who work or study during normal hours.
Tuesday8am to 6:30pmCall early if you need same-day help.
Wednesday8am to 6:30pmUse online services for non-urgent requests where suitable.
Thursday8am to 6:30pmOrder regular medicines early if you need them before the weekend.
Friday8am to 6:30pmDo not leave urgent admin, prescription or sick note questions until late afternoon.
SaturdayClosedUse NHS 111 for urgent non-emergency help.
SundayClosedUse 999 for emergencies, NHS 111 for urgent advice, or pharmacy for minor illness.
Important: NHS.uk says these opening times were last confirmed on 24 February 2020. That does not mean they are wrong, but it does mean you should confirm time-sensitive visits with the practice or NHS profile before travelling.

Which service should you use first?

Choosing the right service saves time and helps you avoid being sent somewhere else. Use this guide before calling.

999

Call 999 now

Use 999 for chest pain, stroke signs, severe breathing trouble, heavy bleeding, collapse, seizure, serious allergic reaction, or someone not responding.

111

Use NHS 111

Use NHS 111 when you need urgent help and the GP is closed, or when you are not sure which NHS service is right. Call 111 or use 111 online.

GP

Contact The Arch Medical Practice

Use the GP for ongoing symptoms, repeat medicine issues, sick notes, test result questions, referrals, long-term conditions and routine health problems.

Rx

Ask a pharmacy

Use a pharmacy for medicine advice, minor illness, coughs, colds, sore throat, some Pharmacy First conditions and prescription collection questions.

How to book an appointment at The Arch Medical Practice

The right booking route depends on your problem. If your symptoms are serious, getting worse quickly, or feel unsafe, do not wait for a routine online reply.

1

Call reception

Call 0161 226 0606. Say your name, date of birth, phone number and one short sentence about the problem.

Good for: urgent same-day concerns, children, older patients, medicine problems, access needs, or if online services are difficult.

2

Use the practice website

The official website offers online contact for non-urgent medical or admin requests. Use this for routine questions where you do not need emergency help.

Write clearly: what is wrong, when it started, what you have tried, and what worries you most.

3

Use online NHS services

NHS.uk links patients to online health and prescription services, including NHS App sign-in where available. This can help with prescriptions and some record access.

4

Visit reception if needed

If phones or online forms are difficult, reception can explain your options. Take your appointment letter, medicine list, phone, glasses, hearing aids and a trusted person if helpful.

Simple phone script
Hello, my name is [your name]. My date of birth is [your date of birth]. I am a patient at The Arch Medical Practice. I need help because [say the problem in one sentence]. Is there anything available today, this week, or as soon as possible?

You do not need to tell a long story at the start. Give one clear sentence first. Reception may ask questions to find the right doctor, nurse, pharmacist or service.

If no appointment is available: ask what you should do next. You can ask whether there is an online form, telephone advice, pharmacy support, NHS 111 route, or another local service. If symptoms become severe, use urgent care rather than waiting.

Helpful NHS App video for GP services

This video is useful if you want to understand how the NHS App can help with prescriptions, records and some GP services. Always follow The Arch Medical Practice’s own instructions for local appointment routes.

How to register with The Arch Medical Practice

NHS.uk currently shows The Arch Medical Practice as accepting new patients. You should still check whether your home address is in the area the practice covers before starting.

1
Check your home address.
Most GP surgeries register people who live in the area they cover. Use the NHS registration page or contact reception and ask: “I live at this postcode. Can I register with The Arch Medical Practice?”
2
Use online registration if suitable.
NHS.uk links to online GP registration for this practice. Online registration is usually faster if you have your details ready.
3
Have your basic details ready.
You may be asked for your name, address, previous GP if you had one, NHS number if known, emergency contact, carer details, allergies, medication and contact details.
4
Documents help, but should not block registration.
NHS.uk says you do not need proof of address, immigration status, ID or an NHS number to register online with a GP.
5
Ask early if you take regular medicine.
If you need repeat medication, tell the practice and your pharmacy as soon as you register. This helps reduce the risk of running out while records move from your old GP.
Registering a baby or child: ask reception what details they need. Bring the red book, birth certificate, vaccination information, parent or guardian details and any hospital letters if you have them. Do not delay urgent medical help while waiting for paperwork.
If you are new to the UK, homeless, staying with friends, or do not have fixed documents: still ask about GP registration. Lack of standard documents should not be the only reason you are refused registration. Ask reception to explain the next step in simple words.

What to bring to your GP appointment

Bringing the right things can save another phone call or second visit. This is especially helpful for new patients, carers, students, older patients and people taking several medicines.

Medicine packets or medicine list
Hospital letters or discharge notes
Recent test results, if you have them
Photo ID, if available
Your mobile phone
Glasses or hearing aids
A written symptom list
Questions you want answered
A trusted person, if helpful
Child red book, if relevant
Prescription exemption proof
Carer details, if needed
Write this before you go: what is wrong, when it started, what makes it worse, what you have tried, and what you are most worried about. This helps if you feel rushed or nervous.

The Arch Medical Practice repeat prescriptions

Do not wait until your last tablet. Order repeat medicine early, especially before weekends, bank holidays, travel, exams, work shifts or if your medicine needs review.

App

NHS App

Use the NHS App if repeat prescription ordering is available for your account. Choose your medicine, select your nominated pharmacy and submit the request.

Web

Online services

Use the online health and prescription services linked from NHS.uk or the practice website. This is useful for routine repeat requests.

Ph

Pharmacy help

Your local pharmacy can often help with medicine advice, side effects, prescription collection and repeat prescription process questions.

Tel

Phone if stuck

If you cannot use online tools, call reception and ask which prescription route is right for you. Say clearly if you are close to running out.

Nominated pharmacy: this means the pharmacy where your electronic prescription is sent. If you move house or change pharmacy, update it through the NHS App, your pharmacy, or the practice route.
Medication review: some repeat medicines need a regular check before more prescriptions are issued. If your request is delayed, ask whether you need a review appointment or blood test.

Test results and blood test questions

Many patients search for GP test results after a blood test, urine test, swab, X-ray, hospital letter or referral. The safest route is to follow the instruction given when your test was arranged.

1

Ask when results are expected

Before leaving your appointment, ask when the result should be back and how you will hear. Some results take longer than others.

2

Check online access if enabled

Some patients can see parts of their GP record or test information through NHS App or linked online services. Availability depends on your account and practice settings.

3

Call if you are worried

If symptoms are worse, or you have not heard when you expected to, call the surgery and ask what the next step is.

4

Do not ignore symptoms

Do not assume “no news” always means everything is fine. If you feel worse, use the right urgent service.

Sick notes, fit notes and work letters

A fit note is the note many employers ask for when you are off work because of illness. You may not need a GP fit note for the first few days of sickness, because self-certification may apply.

1
Check what your employer needs.
Ask whether they need a self-certification form or a GP fit note.
2
Use the practice route.
If you need a fit note, use the online form if available or call reception and explain the date your illness started.
3
Give clear dates.
Say when you became unwell, whether you are still off work, and whether you have already spoken to a doctor or nurse.
4
Hospital care may need hospital paperwork.
If you were treated in hospital, ask the hospital team whether they should provide a note or discharge letter.

Services patients often need

Exact services can change by staffing, appointment type, clinical need and local NHS pathways. CQC lists this practice for services including maternity and midwifery, family planning, treatment of disease or injury, diagnostic and screening procedures, and services for everyone.

GP appointments
Same-day advice
Telephone consultations
Face-to-face appointments
Nurse appointments
Repeat prescriptions
Medication reviews
Blood pressure checks
Diabetes reviews
Asthma reviews
COPD reviews
Cervical screening
Child immunisations
Family planning
Maternity care
Mental health support
Fit notes and sick notes
Test result queries

Parking, disabled access and visiting the surgery

NHS.uk lists several facilities for The Arch Medical Practice. If access is important for you, confirm before travelling because local arrangements can change.

A

Disabled access

NHS.uk lists wheelchair access, step-free access, disabled toilet, induction loop, text relay, signing service and Braille translation service.

P

Parking and arrival

NHS.uk lists car parking and disabled parking. Check local signs and allow time to park before your appointment.

C

Children and babies

NHS.uk lists baby changing facilities. Bring nappies, wipes, snacks and something quiet for your child if there may be a wait.

L

Language and hearing support

Ask for interpreter support when booking if English is difficult. Ask about text relay, signing support, induction loop or other reasonable adjustments if needed.

Simple interpreter request script
Hello, I need help in [language]. Can you arrange an interpreter for my appointment or phone call?

The Arch Medical Practice map and directions

Address: Hulme Medical Centre, 175 Royce Road, Hulme, Manchester, Greater Manchester, M15 5TJ. Use the map for planning only. Confirm your appointment time before leaving.

By car or taxi

Use postcode M15 5TJ. Ask for Hulme Medical Centre, 175 Royce Road, rather than just “The Arch”.

By train

Nearby city-centre stations include Deansgate and Manchester Oxford Road. Check live walking routes before travelling.

By bus or tram

Use Traveline, Bee Network, or Google Maps for live public transport routes to Hulme and Royce Road. Service times can change.

Before leaving home

Take your phone, appointment details, medicine list, glasses or hearing aids and any paperwork the surgery asked for.

What to do when The Arch Medical Practice is closed

ProblemUse this serviceExamples
Life-threatening emergencyCall 999Chest pain, stroke signs, severe breathing trouble, heavy bleeding, collapse, not responding.
Urgent but not life-threateningNHS 111 online or call 111You need advice today and cannot wait for the GP to reopen.
Mental health crisisSamaritans 116 123 or NHS 111You feel unsafe, overwhelmed, or need urgent mental health support.
Minor illnessLocal pharmacyCoughs, colds, sore throat, minor rash, medicine advice and Pharmacy First queries.
Serious injuryA&E or urgent treatment centreBroken bones, serious cuts, head injury, severe pain, or urgent injuries.
Urgent prescription when closedNHS 111 or pharmacyIf you are running out of important medicine, ask NHS 111 or a pharmacy what urgent route is available.

Patient checklist before you call or visit

Have your date of birth ready.
Reception usually needs it to find your record.
Know your phone number.
Make sure the practice can call you back.
Say one clear problem.
Start with the main issue. You can explain more later.
Say if it is urgent.
Use words like “getting worse”, “today”, “child”, “elderly”, or “medicine running out”.
Bring your medicine list.
This helps the GP or nurse avoid mistakes.
Check the address.
Use Hulme Medical Centre, 175 Royce Road, M15 5TJ.

CQC rating and inspection note

CQC currently lists The Arch Medical Practice as rated Good. The latest inspection was on 19 October 2016, with the report published on 8 November 2016. CQC also says it reviewed available information on 6 July 2023 and did not find evidence that it needed to reassess the rating at that stage.

This page does not add fake review scores or patient ratings. For the latest inspection position, always check the official CQC record.

Official source check and reference notes

Publish-ready as of 31 May 2026: address, phone, opening times, new-patient status, accessibility facilities, registration guidance and CQC rating were checked against official NHS.uk and CQC sources. The official practice website was linked for live local updates, but this independent guide may not update at the same time as NHS or practice systems.

Main reference sources used: NHS.uk was used for the official GP profile, contact details, opening times, registration page and facilities page. CQC was used for inspection rating, service category and latest review note. The practice website was linked as the official local surgery website for live requests and local notices.

Official links: NHS.uk The Arch Medical Practice profile · NHS contact and opening times · NHS facilities · NHS registration guidance · Official practice website · CQC record · NHS 111 online · NHS App

Why this matters: GP opening times, registration status, online forms, access facilities and inspection notes can change. This page links back to official sources so users can verify live details before calling, travelling or relying on the information.

The Arch Medical Practice FAQs

Is The Arch Medical Practice open today?
NHS.uk lists The Arch Medical Practice as open Monday from 8am to 8pm and Tuesday to Friday from 8am to 6:30pm. It is listed as closed on Saturday and Sunday. Always check the official NHS profile or practice website before travelling because bank holidays, training days and local updates can change access.
What is the phone number for The Arch Medical Practice?
The listed reception phone number for The Arch Medical Practice is 0161 226 0606. Use this number for appointment questions, registration help, prescription problems, access needs and general practice queries. For emergencies, call 999 instead.
Where is The Arch Medical Practice located?
The Arch Medical Practice is located at Hulme Medical Centre, 175 Royce Road, Hulme, Manchester, Greater Manchester, M15 5TJ. Use the full address in your map app or sat-nav. Searching only “Arch” can show other services with similar names.
Is The Arch Medical Practice accepting new patients?
NHS.uk currently shows The Arch Medical Practice as accepting new patients. You should still check your home postcode before registering because GP practices usually cover a local area. Use the NHS profile, online registration page, or contact reception.
How do I book a GP appointment at The Arch Medical Practice?
You can call reception on 0161 226 0606, use the official practice website for non-urgent online contact, or use linked NHS online services where available. If your problem is urgent, say that clearly at the start. If symptoms are life-threatening, call 999.
Can I walk into The Arch Medical Practice without an appointment?
Do not assume walk-in GP appointments are available. GP surgeries usually ask patients to use phone, online, NHS App, or reception booking routes. If your symptoms are urgent and the surgery is closed, use NHS 111. If symptoms are life-threatening, call 999.
How do I order repeat prescriptions?
Use the NHS App if available, linked online prescription services, pharmacy support, or call reception if you cannot use online services. Order early before weekends and bank holidays. If you are almost out of important medicine, tell the surgery or pharmacy clearly.
How do I get test results from The Arch Medical Practice?
Ask the practice when your result should be ready and how you will hear. Some results may appear in the NHS App or linked online services if record access is available. If symptoms get worse or you have not heard when expected, contact the surgery or use urgent care if needed.
How do I request a sick note or fit note?
Use the online form if available or call reception and explain the dates you have been unwell. Your employer may accept self-certification for the first part of sickness. If you were treated in hospital, ask the hospital team about paperwork too.
Does The Arch Medical Practice have disabled access?
NHS.uk lists wheelchair access, step-free access, disabled toilet, induction loop, text relay, signing service, Braille translation service, car parking and disabled parking. If you need a specific adjustment, call before travelling so the practice can advise you.
What should I do if The Arch Medical Practice is closed?
Call 999 for life-threatening symptoms. Use NHS 111 online or call 111 for urgent medical help that is not life-threatening. Use a local pharmacy for minor illness and medicine advice. For mental health crisis support, use NHS 111 or Samaritans on 116 123.
What is the CQC rating for The Arch Medical Practice?
CQC currently lists The Arch Medical Practice as rated Good. The latest inspection was in October 2016, and the report was published in November 2016. CQC also reviewed information in July 2023 and did not find evidence that reassessment was needed at that stage.
What if I cannot get through by phone?
Try again later, use the online contact route if your request is not urgent, check NHS online services if relevant, or ask a pharmacy for medicine advice. If the problem is urgent and cannot wait, use NHS 111. If it is life-threatening, call 999.
Can I ask for help in another language?
Yes. Ask reception if interpreter support can be arranged. Say the language you need and whether the appointment is by phone or in person. If you need hearing support, ask about text relay, signing support, induction loop or other reasonable adjustments.
Is this the official The Arch Medical Practice website?
No. This is an independent patient guide, not the NHS and not The Arch Medical Practice. Use the official NHS profile, CQC record and official practice website for final live details.
Independent directory disclaimer: medicalpracticeuk.org is not the NHS, not The Arch Medical Practice, and not CQC. This page is for general patient information only. Opening times, services, registration status, online forms, access details, parking and contact routes can change. Always confirm important details with NHS.uk, the official practice website, CQC, NHS 111, or the surgery before relying on them.
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