Skip to content
Study in UK
Go back

Emergency Numbers, Non-Emergency Lines, and When to Call What

The UK has clear emergency protocols. 999 is for immediate life threats (unconsciousness, severe bleeding, chest pain, violent crime in progress). 101 is for non-emergency police (theft, fraud, noise complaints). 111 is for medical advice (not urgent; answers within 2–4 hours). NHS 999 only calls cost nothing. Most international students don’t know these distinctions and call the wrong number, which delays help. Memorize these numbers before you need them.

The Main Numbers

SituationNumberResponse TimeCost
Life-threatening emergency999<10 minFree
Serious but not immediately life-threatening1112–4 hours (not immediate)Free
Police non-emergency10124–72 hoursFree
Poison/overdose111 or 999Immediate or 2–4 hours depending on severityFree
Medical advice (out of hours)1112–4 hours call-backFree
Mental health crisis999 or 111 or Samaritans 116 123VariesFree

999: Emergency Services (Police, Fire, Ambulance)

Call 999 if:

What to expect:

  1. Call connects to emergency services (usually within 5–10 seconds)
  2. Operator asks: “Which service do you need: police, fire, or ambulance?”
  3. You’re transferred to the relevant service
  4. They ask location, nature of emergency, number of casualties
  5. Ambulance/fire/police dispatched (usually within 10 minutes for urban areas; up to 30 min for rural)

Tips:

Response times:

If you live far from a hospital or services, paramedics will provide first aid on scene and arrange transport.

111: NHS Medical Advice (Not Emergency)

Call 111 if:

What to expect:

  1. Call connects to NHS 111 call centre (within 20 seconds)
  2. Nurse asks about your symptoms
  3. Nurse decides: “You can self-care,” “Visit walk-in centre,” “Go to A&E,” or “GP urgent appointment tomorrow”
  4. No cost; free NHS advice
  5. Call usually lasts 10–15 minutes

Alternative: Use the 111 online service (111.nhs.uk) to check symptoms without calling. It’s often faster if not urgent.

Response time: 2–4 hours for nurse callback (if they decide you need to be called); immediate call-through if urgent.

101: Police Non-Emergency

Call 101 if:

What to expect:

  1. Call connects to local police (within 1–5 minutes)
  2. Operator takes details
  3. Police attend if crime is in progress; otherwise, you’ll receive a call-back within 24–72 hours
  4. For theft, you’ll get a crime reference number (for insurance claims)

For theft/burglary:

Tips:

Response time: 24–72 hours for non-emergency police call-back (unless crime is actively happening).

Samaritans: Mental Health Crisis

Call 116 123 (Samaritans) if:

What to expect:

Alternative text service:

If actively suicidal:

NHS 111: Out-of-Hours GP

Outside standard GP hours (evenings, weekends, bank holidays), your GP practice is closed. Call 111 for medical advice or urgent GP appointment.

111 will:

This is not the same as visiting A&E. 111 triages you first and only sends you to A&E if necessary.

A&E (Accident & Emergency)

Go to A&E if:

Don’t go to A&E for:

What to expect at A&E:

  1. Register at reception (bring ID, proof of address)
  2. Triage nurse assesses (5–10 min); assigns urgency
  3. Wait (4–6 hours common; can be 8+ in busy periods)
  4. Doctor or nurse sees you
  5. Treatment or advice given

Cost: FREE if you’re registered with NHS (student visa holders are entitled; no National Insurance Number needed).

What to bring: Passport, proof of UK address, any medications you’re taking.

Campus Safety: Who to Call First

If you’re on campus and there’s an emergency:

  1. Tell campus security (number on campus notice boards or student portal) if you’re safe to do so
  2. Call 999 if immediate danger
  3. Campus will usually call emergency services for you in life-threatening situations

Campus security can:

Calling campus security AND 999 is fine; you won’t be wasting time.

Drunk or Substance Intoxication

If a friend is severely intoxicated:

Important: Telling paramedics they’re drunk will NOT cause them trouble. Paramedics don’t judge. They prioritize health over legal concerns.

Non-Life-Threatening Poison

Call 111 or the National Poisons Information Service (0344 892 0111) if:

If unconscious or unresponsive: Call 999 immediately.

Private Hospital vs NHS

If you have private health insurance, you can visit a private hospital instead of NHS A&E. However:

Most international students use NHS A&E in emergencies; private insurance is for non-urgent GP appointments and specialist consultations.

International Students: No Extra Charges

Fact: Emergency 999 calls and NHS emergency care are completely free for all, regardless of immigration status. You do NOT need:

You WILL be asked for:

Some hospitals ask about immigration status for audit purposes. Tell them the truth (student visa, date of arrival). This will NOT affect your ability to get emergency care.

What Happens After: Hospital Bills & Follow-Up

After A&E or ambulance:

If you can’t pay a bill, contact the hospital’s billing department; they work out payment plans.

Summary Cheat Sheet

SituationCallResponseCost
Collapse, unconscious, severe injury, chest pain999<10 min paramedicFree
Can’t stop bleeding, not conscious999<10 minFree
Fever, stomach pain, rash (not severe)1112–4 hoursFree
Doctor advice (out of hours)1112–4 hoursFree
Police theft/non-emergency10124–72 hoursFree
Suicidal thoughts116 123 (Samaritans)Immediate phoneFree
Active mental health crisis999<10 minFree

Sources

Last updated: 2025-04.


Share this article:

Scan with WeChat to share this page

Current page QR code

Link copied

Related Q&A


Back
Best London Student Neighborhoods: Rent, Amenities, and Transport
Next
AI and Machine Learning Masters in the UK: Which Programs Actually Train You?