Abstract Aims Glasgow-Blatchford Scoring (GBS) determines the need for further interventions in patients presenting with acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding (AUGIB). We aimed to study whether we can safely expand low-risk criteria to patients with GBS 2 and manage them as urgent outpatient. Methods A retrospective study of consecutive adult patients who had inpatient endoscopy for AUGIB in a single surgical unit from September 2021 to September 2022. Patient demographics, clinical and laboratory findings, GBS and endoscopic findings was analysed. Low-risk was defined as GBS 0-1 and high-risk as GBS ≥3. Results 150 patients were identified; 79 (58.7%) were male and median age of 63 years (IQR 53-76). Median total length-of-stay was 3.7 days (IQR 1.9=7.8). Similar to the low-risk group, patients with GBS 2 presented with lower range and frequency of symptoms as the high-risk group (p=0.0002). Severity correlated with admission haemoglobin (p=0.001) and urea count (p<0.0001) but not relevant comorbidities (p=0.560) and admission observations (p=0.456). The frequency of benign endoscopic findings in patients with GBS 2 were similar to the low-risk group with no malignant findings noted. This group also had similar rates of past and re-attendances for AUGIB and 30-day mortality of 0% to the low-risk group. Conclusion While our study has a small sample size, it suggests promising prospect that patients with GBS 2 may not need inpatient endoscopy. Future multi-centre studies are crucial to validate and strengthen this proposition. The potential advantages include decreased inpatient admissions, reduced healthcare costs, and alleviating pressures on emergency endoscopy unit.