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Physiotherapy Assistant

Support physiotherapists in helping patients recover movement, manage pain, and regain independence after injury, illness, or surgery.

Canonical page: /careers/physiotherapy-assistant
Physical demand

Moderate

People contact

Very high

Time to entry

3–12 months for an entry-level support role; 3 years for a full physiotherapy degree

What you do

As a physiotherapy assistant you work under the supervision of a qualified physiotherapist. Day to day you help patients perform exercises, apply heat or cold treatments, assist with mobility equipment, and keep records of patient progress. You often build close relationships with patients over several sessions, which many people find deeply rewarding. You work in NHS hospitals, community clinics, private practices, and care homes.

Why this career is resilient

Physiotherapy relies on hands-on physical assessment and human therapeutic contact that cannot be replicated by automation. The UK faces an ageing population and growing demand for rehabilitation services, with NHS workforce data consistently showing shortages in allied health professions. Assistants benefit from structured career progression, and many are supported by employers to progress towards a full physiotherapy degree.


Routes in

Employer-funded training

Some employers — particularly the NHS, emergency services, and larger care providers — run their own funded training programmes. You apply for a job and train as you work.

Duration: Varies

Access to Higher Education

A one-year full-time (or two-year part-time) qualification designed for adults who did not take A levels. Recognised by universities and many nursing/allied health programmes.

Duration: 1 year full-time, 2 years part-time

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