Ask a colleague or your line manager
The best person to ask is whoever gave you initial access to patient data, most likely by providing your first smartcard or other authenticator. If that's not possible, any other colleague with their own access may know who to contact.
You can also ask a colleague to search by organisation in Care Identity Management - you cannot do this yourself if your smartcard is locked.
Contact your IT helpdesk
If you cannot get help locally, you can contact your local IT helpdesk to find your Registration Authority.
If the Registration Authority function is provided by your IT team they should be able to help immediately. If not, when you contact them it can help to make it clear you're looking for Registration Authority or smartcard team contact details - if you only tell them you're trying to unlock your smartcard, they may tell you they're not able to unlock smartcards, or direct you to self-service unlock smartcard.
Contact your Commissioning Support Unit (primary care only)
If you work in primary care, such as in a pharmacy, GP surgery, dentist, optician or social care, your Registration Authority is often provided by a Commissioning Support Unit. These are listed by area on the primary care service provider contact details page.
If you think you need a smartcard
If your role means you may need access to clinical and personal data, a Care Identity profile will be created for you and you'll receive a smartcard or other authenticator.
You should not have to do anything to prepare for this, but you will need to have your identity verified. You may need to attend a face-to-face identity check, or you could be invited to use the Apply for Care ID service.
A Registration Authority will not provide you with a smartcard or other authenticator if your organisation is not set up to use them.
Read our main smartcard and authenticator guidance.