Gaelic Interpreter Services

  • UK-wide Gaelic cover
  • 24/7 telephone interpreting
  • 1-hour quote response (office hours)
  • 2–4 hours face-to-face in major cities
  • NDA + UK GDPR by default
  • Since 2013

Prism Linguistics provides qualified, professional Gaelic interpreting services across the UK for NHS appointments, court and tribunal hearings, police interviews, council meetings, business conversations and private appointments. English to Gaelic and Gaelic to English, face-to-face, by telephone or by video, with background-checked Gaelic interpreters across the country.

Last updated · About Prism Linguistics
Sectors we serve daily NHS trusts · HM Courts & Tribunals Service · Home Office · UK police forces · local authorities · UK solicitors · private clients
How we work UK GDPR · signed NDA for every linguist · CIOL-registered Gaelic interpreters available where required · Legal Aid Agency rates accepted · NHS framework rates · PO invoicing

We get called for Gaelic interpreting in all sorts of settings. A GP appointment in Manchester one morning. A contested hearing in central London that afternoon. A safeguarding meeting the following week. The job is the same in spirit: make sure both sides understand each other in real time, without the meaning getting lost on the way.

English to Gaelic interpreter (and Gaelic to English)

Most of the work we do is bilateral. The same Gaelic interpreter handles English to Gaelic and Gaelic to English in the same appointment, switching direction as the conversation does. Tell us at quote stage which direction matters most, particularly for written follow-up or evidence purposes, and we'll pick a linguist whose strongest output is in that language.

Gaelic court interpreters and HMCTS work

Gaelic court interpreters with the right credentials for HM Courts & Tribunals Service work, including Magistrates', Crown, County, the Family Court, and immigration and asylum tribunals. We can send a CV or certificate before a hearing so your prep team can confirm fit. Police-cleared linguists are available for interviews, custody and witness statements where the setting calls for additional vetting.

Gaelic interpreting services for NHS, courts, councils, business and private appointments

Most Gaelic interpreting services we provide fall into one of the following settings.

Gaelic medical interpreters (NHS and private healthcare)
GP, hospital outpatient, midwifery, mental health, dentistry. Sensitive conversations handled by Gaelic medical interpreters used to clinical settings.
Gaelic court interpreters (HMCTS and tribunals)
Magistrates', Crown, County, the Family Court, immigration and asylum tribunals. Gaelic court interpreters with the relevant credentials for HMCTS work.
Gaelic police interpreters
Interviews, custody, witness statements, body-worn evidence. Police-cleared Gaelic interpreters with the right vetting for the setting.
Local authority and social care
Social care, housing, education, registry services.
Gaelic business interpreters and legal sector
Solicitor conferences, depositions, board meetings, supplier visits, training sessions. Gaelic business interpreters for corporate meetings and procurement.
Gaelic private interpreters (personal appointments)
Weddings and ceremonies, notary work, personal meetings, private medical consultations.

Face-to-face, telephone or video: which one fits?

Honestly, it depends on the appointment. If you need help right now and the conversation will be short (a GP receptionist call, sorting out a delivery, taking a doorstep statement), telephone Gaelic interpreting is the right call. We can usually connect within minutes.

For anything longer, more sensitive, or where body language matters (a court hearing, a mental-health assessment, a customer meeting), face-to-face is worth the extra time it takes to confirm. Video sits in the middle. It's useful when the parties are in different places but the conversation still needs eye contact.

Not sure which fits? Tell us about the appointment and we'll suggest what we'd book if it were our own.

Gaelic interpreting modes at a glance
Mode Best for Typical notice
Gaelic telephone interpreter (OPI) Short, urgent calls. Reception, triage, doorstep. On demand
Gaelic video interpreter (VRI) Remote meetings where eye contact still matters. Same day for common languages
Gaelic face-to-face interpreter Hearings, clinical assessments, sensitive meetings. A few hours in major UK cities
Gaelic conference interpreter (simultaneous) Conferences, AGMs, multi-language events. Booth + headsets. 2–3 weeks for kit + linguist team
Gaelic consecutive interpreter One-to-one meetings, depositions, training sessions. A few hours to a day

Lead times we usually work to

Telephone Gaelic interpreting is on demand, day or night. For face-to-face, anything in or near a major UK city can usually be confirmed within a few hours. Less common dialects, very short slots and out-of-the-way venues are the ones that need a day or two. If you can give us 24 to 48 hours' notice for those, the chance of getting your first-choice interpreter goes up considerably.

Same-day or emergency Gaelic interpreter?

Call the main line and we'll triage immediately. Telephone cover is live; for face-to-face in a major UK city we can often confirm within the hour.

☎ +44 (0) 20 3880 6688  ·  Get a quote ›

Qualified, professional Gaelic interpreters: what to look for

Anyone can call themselves an interpreter. Public bodies tend to look for the right qualifications and the right checks, and so should you. Sensible things to ask any agency about its Gaelic linguists:

Public service interpreting
A recognised UK qualification in the relevant pathway (law, health or local government).
Conference and business work
An interpreting Masters, or membership of a UK professional body.
Court work
Court-register entry where one exists for the language, and police vetting where the setting calls for it.
Background checks
An up-to-date UK background check appropriate to the work, so there's no delay at the door of an NHS or court setting.

We match each booking to a Gaelic interpreter whose credentials fit the setting. If you'd like to see a CV or a certificate before an appointment, just ask.

Dialects of Gaelic and why it matters at booking

Region, country and community all shape how Gaelic sounds and which words feel right. The practical difference shows up in witness statements that read awkwardly because the interpreter and the speaker grew up with different regional vocabulary, or in clinical appointments where a patient hesitates because the words being offered belong to a different community. When you book, let us know where the Gaelic speaker is from if you can — country, region, even a town. That single piece of context lets us place an interpreter who reads as familiar, not foreign. If you also need Gaelic translation of a written record from the same appointment, we will keep dialect alignment between the spoken and written work.

How to book or hire a Gaelic interpreter

1

Tell us the brief

Language, date, venue, type of appointment, anything sensitive. Quote form, phone, or email.

2

We match and price

The right Gaelic interpreter plus a price, normally back within one working hour.

3

Confirm and the linguist works

Briefed interpreter attends in person or dials in. Invoice on your usual schedule — pay-as-you-go, monthly or to a PO.

No long contracts, no minimum spend. Hiring a Gaelic interpreter through us works the same way for a single appointment as it does for a year-long contract. For one-off jobs you pay per assignment. For repeat work (weekly clinics, rolling court lists, ongoing case files) we hold a preferred linguist where possible so you get the same interpreter each time, which builds continuity for the client or patient.

Working with the UK public sector

Our regular instructed work includes NHS trusts (acute, mental health and primary care), HM Courts & Tribunals Service (Magistrates', Crown, County, Family Court, and First-tier and Upper Tribunal immigration and asylum work), the Home Office, a number of UK police forces and probation services, and local authorities for social care, housing, education and registry work. We can supply Gaelic interpreters on framework rates, accept Legal Aid Agency funded bookings for solicitors, raise invoices against a PO, and handle the audit trail that comes with public sector work. Send us a procurement specification or a portal reference and we will mirror the process you already use with other suppliers.

For sector-specific information see our pages on legal and court interpreting, NHS and healthcare interpreting, police and criminal justice work, business and corporate, and our delivery modes: telephone interpreting, face-to-face interpreting, conference interpreting.

Find a Gaelic interpreter near me: cities and towns across the UK

If you're looking for a Gaelic interpreter near you, we cover the whole of the UK. The biggest concentration of in-person Gaelic linguists is in and around London, Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds, Liverpool, Glasgow, Cardiff and Belfast, but smaller towns are covered too. Our local pages link to a Gaelic interpreter near you in most major UK cities; the city list further down this page links to each one. If your area isn't listed yet, we'll still send a local linguist; the local page just hasn't been built.

How much does a Gaelic interpreter cost?

Gaelic interpreting is priced per assignment, not by a single hourly figure that would be misleading. The variables are simple: how long, where, what kind of setting, how much notice. Send us the basics through our quote form and we'll come back with an honest number you can use to plan.

Confidentiality and GDPR

Everything stays confidential. Every linguist on our books signs an NDA. We don't keep recordings unless you ask us to, we don't share appointment details with anyone outside the booking, and any personal data is processed under UK GDPR. If you're working in a regulated sector and need our linguists to sign your own confidentiality form, that's no trouble.

Need a Gaelic translator instead?

If the work is written documents rather than spoken conversation, see our Gaelic translation services page, or the Gaelic document translation page for certificates, contracts, medical reports and the like.

To book or ask a question, call +44 (0) 20 3880 6688, email info@prismlinguistics.co.uk, or use the online quote form. We reply within one working hour in UK office hours.

Gaelic interpreting FAQs

Are your Gaelic interpreters qualified and vetted?

Yes. Every Gaelic interpreter we send is matched to the setting first, then to the booking. For NHS appointments we use linguists with public service interpreting credentials and clinical experience. For HM Courts & Tribunals Service hearings we use court-experienced interpreters who already understand procedure and protocol. For police interviews we use vetted linguists with the right clearance for custody and disclosure work.

CVs, qualifications and background checks are kept on file and we will share them with you before a booking if it helps with your governance or procurement paperwork. We do not allocate any Gaelic interpreter to a setting they are not credentialed for.

How quickly can you provide a Gaelic interpreter?

Telephone Gaelic interpreting is on demand around the clock. Call the main number and we'll connect you within minutes for short calls (receptionist work, ED triage, a doorstep witness statement). For face-to-face Gaelic interpreting in London, Manchester, Birmingham and other major UK cities we can usually confirm within two to four hours during the working day.

Less common Gaelic dialects benefit from 24 to 48 hours' notice so we can place the linguist who will read as familiar to the speaker. Same-day work is often possible for the more common requests. Tell us the deadline and we'll be straight about whether we can hit it.

What kinds of Gaelic interpreting do you offer?

Consecutive, simultaneous (with booth and headset kit for conferences) and whispered (chuchotage) for one-or-two-listener settings. All three delivery modes are available: face-to-face, telephone (OPI) and video remote interpreting (VRI).

Day to day, most NHS, council and solicitor appointments are consecutive face-to-face or by telephone. Larger conferences and AGMs are simultaneous with a Gaelic interpreter team and the right kit, which we can source. We also handle whispered interpreting for client-side work where one delegate needs Gaelic but the room is running in English. If you're not sure which mode fits, describe the setting and we'll suggest what we would book in your shoes.

How much does Gaelic interpreting cost in the UK?

Gaelic interpreting is priced per assignment, not as a single per-hour figure that would be misleading. What moves the price is duration, the setting (NHS, court, corporate, private), how much notice you can give, and whether the work is face-to-face, telephone or video. Travel time and mileage apply for in-person bookings outside our linguists' local areas.

Public sector clients on Legal Aid Agency rates or NHS frameworks are quoted at the appropriate rates. Send the basics through the quote form and you'll have a price within one working hour. No minimum spend, no contract: pay per assignment, monthly invoice, or to a purchase order, whichever suits your accounts team.

Do you provide English to Gaelic interpreters?

Yes. Our Gaelic interpreters work in both directions: English to Gaelic and Gaelic to English. In most appointments the same linguist handles both directions as the conversation switches naturally.

If one direction matters more for your assignment — for example, you need a clean Gaelic output for written follow-up after a meeting, or precise English for a witness statement that will go on the court record — tell us at quote stage and we'll match the booking to a linguist whose strongest output is in that language. For sworn or statement work we can also pair the interpreter with a separate Gaelic translator for the written record afterwards.

Can I find a Gaelic interpreter near me?

Yes. We cover the whole of the UK and we have Gaelic interpreters in or near most major cities and large towns: London (including each borough), Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool, Bristol, Sheffield, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast among others.

Smaller towns are covered too; the local Gaelic interpreter may travel from a nearby city, which we factor into the quote. The city directory further down this page links to local pages where we already cover, and we'll cover unlisted areas the same way (the local page just hasn't been built). Tell us the venue at quote stage and we'll confirm whether we have a Gaelic interpreter near you or whether travel will be involved.

How do I book or hire a Gaelic interpreter?

Three ways. The online quote form is fastest for documented detail. The main number +44 (0) 20 3880 6688 is best for same-day and emergency requests. Email info@prismlinguistics.co.uk for anything else. Tell us the language and dialect if known, the date and time, the venue or remote setup, the type of appointment and anything sensitive we should know.

We come back within one working hour with the right Gaelic interpreter and a price. Once you confirm, the booking is locked in and the linguist is briefed. For repeat or ongoing work (a weekly clinic, a rolling court list, a long-running case file) we hold a preferred Gaelic interpreter where possible so you get the same person each time.

About the Gaelic language

Scottish Gaelic, or Gaelic, is a Celtic language spoken in Scotland. With historical roots dating back to the Gaelic-speaking communities in the Highlands and Western Isles, Scottish Gaelic is integral to the cultural identity of Scotland. Spoken by around 60,000 people, efforts to revitalize and promote Gaelic contribute to preserving the nation's linguistic heritage. Gaelic plays a role in literature, media, and education, serving as a linguistic link to Scotland's Celtic past.

Need a Gaelic interpreter? Request a callback

We reply within one working hour in UK office hours.

Get a quote