Close Protection Compliance in Practice (UK)
Close Protection compliance in the UK is often misunderstood, not because the rules are unclear, but because licensing, training, and client requirements are frequently conflated.
This page explains what is actually checked in practice when operating as a Close Protection Operative (CPO), and where responsibility sits between the regulator, training providers, and employers or clients.
It does not introduce new requirements or interpretations. It clarifies how existing ones are applied.
SIA Licensing: The Fixed Requirement
The only statutory requirement to work as a Close Protection Operative in the UK is holding a valid SIA Close Protection licence.
In practice, this is checked:
- When applying for roles
- During client onboarding
- When enrolling on licence-linked training
- At licence renewal
If a licence is expired or invalid, no amount of experience or additional training substitutes for this.
Licence Renewal & Refresher Training
For licence renewal, operatives are required to complete SIA-recognised refresher training once it becomes applicable to their licence cycle.
In practice, this is checked:
- By training providers before allowing course enrolment
- At the point of licence renewal
- Occasionally by employers confirming ongoing compliance
Refresher training updates knowledge and maintains licence eligibility. It does not replace the original qualification.
๐ Read: SIA Close Protection Refresher Training Explained
First Aid & Medical Certification
Medical qualifications are not an optional add-on in Close Protection. They are routinely checked by training providers and employers.
In practice, operatives are asked to hold an RQF-regulated medical qualification, with sufficient validity remaining at the time of training or renewal
Medical certificates are commonly checked:
- Prior to refresher training
- During onboarding with companies
- For higher-risk or international contracts
๐ Read: Close Protection Medical Training Guide
ACT Awareness & ACT Security Training
ACT Awareness and ACT Security e-learning are not SIA licences and are not standalone legal requirements.
In practice, however:
- Many training providers expect completion before or alongside licence-linked courses
- Employers increasingly request evidence during onboarding
- Some clients treat completion as a baseline professional standard
These modules are widely used as terror threat awareness CPD, particularly for roles involving public-facing or sensitive environments.
๐ Read: ACT Awareness & ACT Security: What CPOs Need to Know
What Is Not Centrally Checked
Some areas are often assumed to be regulated but are not uniformly enforced at a national level.
These typically include:
- Fitness standards
- Equipment choices
- Operational methods
- Employer-specific procedures
- Client preferences beyond licensing
These are handled by employers, insurers, or clients, not by the SIA licensing process itself.
How This Works in Reality
In day-to-day practice, compliance checks usually happen in layers:
- Licence validity
- Training eligibility (refresher, medical, prerequisite learning)
- Employer or client expectations
Understanding which layer applies, and when, prevents confusion and unnecessary assumptions.
Summary
Close Protection compliance in the UK is not about accumulating courses.
It is about maintaining licence validity, meeting training prerequisites, and understanding where responsibility sits.
This page exists to clarify that boundary, not to add to it.
See Our Latest CP Guides & Resources
Visit our Close Protection Hub