How to Apply to University UK 2027: Complete UCAS Guide
Everything you need to apply to university in the UK for 2027 entry. UCAS deadlines, the new three-question personal statement format, Clearing, student finance, and what to do at every stage of the process.
How do I apply to university?
Almost all undergraduate applications go through UCAS. You create an account, choose up to five courses, write your personal statement (now three structured questions), get a teacher reference, pay the £28.95 fee and submit. That is the process.
When is the UCAS deadline?
For 2027 entry: 15 October 2026 for Oxford, Cambridge, medicine, dentistry and vet courses. January 2027 for most other undergraduate courses. Applications open on 2 September 2026.
What is new with the personal statement?
The format changed for 2026 entry and stays for 2027. Instead of one open essay, you now answer three structured questions with a combined limit of 4,000 characters. Minimum 350 characters per question.
How much does UCAS cost?
The UCAS application fee is £28.95 regardless of whether you apply to one course or five. Tuition fees (up to £9,790 per year) are separate and covered by a student loan paid directly to your university.
How UCAS works
UCAS (the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service) is the central application system for undergraduate courses at UK universities. Rather than applying to each university separately, you submit one application through UCAS and distribute it to up to five course choices simultaneously.
Your UCAS application has several components: your personal details, your qualifications, your five course choices, your personal statement (now in three-question format), and a reference from a teacher, tutor or adviser. Once submitted, universities review your application and respond with an offer, a conditional offer, or a rejection.
The process runs on an annual cycle. Most students applying for a September start submit in the autumn and winter of the preceding year, with decisions arriving in spring and confirmed places sorted by summer. According to UCAS, around 700,000 students apply to UK universities each year.
What UCAS covers and what it does not
UCAS handles the vast majority of full-time undergraduate applications. It does not cover most postgraduate courses (applied for directly), degree apprenticeships (applied for through employers), or part-time courses (contact universities directly). A handful of specialist conservatoires and medical schools have separate admissions processes alongside UCAS.
- Maximum five course choices per application
- One application submitted to all five simultaneously
- Application fee: £28.95 (2026 entry)
- Personal statement: three questions, 4,000 characters combined
- One reference required from a teacher, tutor or adviser
- Cannot apply to both Oxford and Cambridge in the same cycle
- Clearing opens July 2027 for students without a confirmed place
- Student finance applied for separately via Student Finance England
Key dates and deadlines for 2027 entry
Missing a UCAS deadline can seriously affect your chances. Here is the full timeline for students starting university in autumn 2027.
Choosing your courses
You can apply to a maximum of five courses through UCAS. These can be five different courses at five different universities, or the same course at five universities, or any combination. There is no rule requiring you to use all five, but most applicants do.
A common mistake is applying to five highly competitive courses and ending up with nothing. A sensible approach is to build in a range: aspirational choices where the typical offer is slightly above your predicted grades, matched choices where the offer aligns with your predictions, and one insurance choice with an offer comfortably below your likely grades.
The Oxford and Cambridge rule
You cannot apply to both Oxford and Cambridge in the same UCAS cycle. If you apply to either, that takes one of your five choices. Some medical schools also have restrictions on how many you can apply to simultaneously. Check individual course requirements before submitting.
Course vs university: what matters more?
For most careers, the specific university matters less than the quality of the degree and what you do during it. But for certain paths (law, finance, medicine, academia), the university's reputation and alumni network can be genuinely significant. Research both the course content and the university's standing in your chosen field before applying. The UCAS course search is the best starting point.
- 1 to 2 aspirational choices: where the typical offer is slightly above your predicted grades
- 2 to 3 matched choices: where the offer aligns with your expected grades
- 1 insurance choice: where the offer is comfortably below your predictions
- Do not treat your insurance choice as an afterthought: choose somewhere you would genuinely be happy attending
- Cannot apply to both Oxford and Cambridge in the same cycle
- Some medical schools restrict how many you can apply to simultaneously
Considering where to study
University city matters significantly. Where you study affects your cost of living, social life, career network and overall experience. Costs vary by over 200% between the cheapest and most expensive student cities.
The personal statement: three-question format
For 2026 entry onwards, the personal statement changed permanently from a single open essay to three structured questions with a combined limit of 4,000 characters (including spaces) and a minimum of 350 characters per question.
Why do you want to study this course or subject?
- What sparked your interest: a book, event, person or moment?
- What excites you about the subject at degree level?
- How does it connect to your future goals?
- Any specific areas of the course that appeal to you?
- Be specific and personal, not generic
How have your qualifications and studies helped you prepare?
- Which subjects or modules are most relevant to your chosen course?
- Specific skills developed through formal education
- Online courses, EPQ or additional qualifications
- Do not repeat grades: those appear elsewhere on your form
- Focus on what you learned, not just what you achieved
What else have you done to prepare outside of education?
- Work experience, internships or shadowing
- Volunteering, societies or leadership roles
- Part-time jobs with transferable skills
- Independent reading or projects beyond the curriculum
- Personal experiences that developed relevant qualities
Six things that make the difference
The reference
Your UCAS application must include a written reference from a teacher, tutor, careers adviser or appropriate professional. Your application cannot be submitted without it.
Academic reference
Your form tutor, subject teacher or head of sixth form typically provides the reference. Give them plenty of notice, well before your school's internal UCAS deadline. Share your personal statement drafts and any achievements or context they might not be aware of. A well-briefed referee writes a much stronger reference.
Independent reference
Mature students, gap-year applicants or those not in education nominate a referee via UCAS. This can be a previous teacher, an employer or a professional who can speak to your academic potential and character. They cannot be a family member.
Updated reference format
The teacher reference format has been simplified. Referees are now asked to cover three areas: a general statement about the student's school or college, any extenuating circumstances that affected their education, and any other supportive information relevant to their application.
After you apply: understanding offers and decisions
Once submitted, universities respond with an unconditional offer, a conditional offer, or a rejection. Track everything through your UCAS Hub.
| Decision type | What it means | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Unconditional offer | You have already met all requirements. The place is yours if you want it. | Accept as firm if it is your first preference, or hold while waiting for other decisions. |
| Conditional offer | You have a place subject to achieving specified grades (e.g. AAB at A-level) | Accept as firm or insurance once you have all decisions, then work to meet the conditions. |
| Rejection | The university is not offering you a place. | Move on. If all five choices reject you, UCAS Extra or Clearing are your next steps. |
Firm and insurance choices
Firm choice
- Your first preference university and course
- You are committed to going here if you meet the conditions
- Choose the place you most want to attend, not just the most prestigious
- Can be an unconditional or conditional offer
Insurance choice
- Your safety net if you miss your firm choice conditions
- Should have an offer condition lower than your firm choice
- Do not pick somewhere you would not be happy attending
- Many students underestimate how important this choice is
Adjustment
If you exceed the grade conditions of your firm choice on results day, you can use Adjustment: a short window (usually five days) to apply to universities with higher entry requirements. You keep your original firm place while you look, so there is no risk. It is worth considering if you significantly outperformed your predicted grades.
Contextual admissions
Many universities make lower offers to applicants from certain backgrounds: students who attended schools with lower than average A-level attainment, students from lower-income households, care leavers, or first-generation university students. If you think you might qualify, check each university's contextual admissions policy before applying. It can make a significant difference to the offers you receive, and some universities automatically flag eligible applicants without requiring you to identify yourself.
Clearing and UCAS Extra
Not getting the expected offers or not meeting grade conditions is not the end of the road. UCAS has two systems specifically designed for this situation.
UCAS Extra
Extra runs from approximately February to June or July each year. It is available to applicants who have used all five choices and are not holding any offers. Through Extra you apply to one additional course at a time. If you do not receive an offer you can apply to another, and so on until Extra closes. Contact the university directly before applying to check they have spaces.
Clearing: step by step
Clearing opens in early July and runs until mid-October. Thousands of courses are available through Clearing, including some at well-regarded universities. Good courses remain available for weeks, not just hours.
Student finance basics
You apply for student finance separately from UCAS through Student Finance England (or the equivalent body in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland). You do not need a confirmed place to start your application.
Up to £9,790 per year (2026/27)
Covers your full tuition fees, paid directly to your university. You never handle this money. Repayment only begins once you are earning over £25,000, at 9% of anything above that threshold.
Up to £10,830 per year outside London
Paid into your bank account each term to cover living costs. The amount depends on your household income and where you live. Maximum for 2026/27 is £10,830 outside London or £14,135 in London.
Non-repayable support
Many universities offer bursaries for students from lower-income households, care leavers or students with disabilities. These do not need to be repaid. Check each prospective university's financial support page. Millions in bursaries go unclaimed every year.
Apply as soon as the portal opens
Typically in spring before your September start. You can apply without a confirmed place and update details later. Late applications can delay your first maintenance loan payment, which arrives at the start of term.
Sorting accommodation
Once you have a confirmed or highly likely university place, accommodation is your next major task. The best rooms go quickly. Do not leave this until August.
University halls
Apply through your university's accommodation portal after accepting your offer. Most universities guarantee a halls place for first-years who apply by the deadline. Bills usually included.
University halls guidePrivate halls (PBSA)
Book directly with providers like Unite Students, iQ or Student Roost. No need to wait for a confirmed offer. Modern facilities, all-inclusive pricing, available in most university cities.
Compare PBSA providersPrivate renting
Most students move into a shared private house from second year. The best properties in popular student areas get taken as early as October of first year. Plan ahead.
Private renting guideAccommodation costs
Costs vary from £93 per week in Bradford to £395 per week for PBSA in London. Know your numbers before committing. Our guide includes a maintenance loan calculator.
Full costs guideAlternative routes to university
UCAS undergraduate is not the only path. These routes may suit you better, or be worth considering alongside a standard application.
| Route | What it is | Best for | How to apply |
|---|---|---|---|
| Degree apprenticeship | Full degree combined with work experience and a salary. No tuition fees. | Students who want to earn while they learn | Direct to employer, not through UCAS. Search on UCAS or Gov.uk |
| Foundation year | An additional year before your degree to build subject knowledge | Students who missed grade requirements or want to change subject direction | Through UCAS, listed as a separate course on most university sites |
| HNC or HND | Vocational qualification equivalent to one to two years of a degree | Students who prefer a practical, skills-focused qualification | Through UCAS or direct to the college or provider |
| Gap year with deferred entry | Apply now for a place starting a year later | Students who want to travel or work before starting | Through UCAS: tick deferred entry when applying |
| Mature student entry | Applying without traditional A-levels, using work experience and Access courses | Students aged 21 or over returning to education | Through UCAS: contact universities directly about mature entry requirements |
Application checklist
Use this as your reference throughout the application cycle.
Before you apply
- Research courses and universities thoroughly
- Attend open days (in-person or virtual)
- Check entry requirements for each course
- Research admissions tests for your courses and register early
- Identify your referee and brief them well in advance
- Start drafting your personal statement answers
- Create your UCAS Hub account
- Check your school's internal UCAS deadline
- Confirm predicted grades with your teachers
- Book any required admissions tests before their deadlines
The application itself
- Personal details entered accurately
- All five course choices added and verified
- Qualifications section complete and correct
- Personal statement question 1 drafted and reviewed
- Personal statement question 2 drafted and reviewed
- Personal statement question 3 drafted and reviewed
- All three answers read as a coherent whole
- No university names mentioned in the personal statement
- Reference confirmed and submitted by your referee
- £28.95 application fee paid and application submitted
After you apply
- Check UCAS Hub regularly for decisions
- Respond to any interview invitations promptly
- Reply to offers by the UCAS deadline
- Firm and insurance choices confirmed
- Apply for student finance, do not wait for results
- Apply for accommodation as soon as possible
- Note A-level results day in your calendar
- Have a Clearing plan ready if needed
- Check UCAS Extra if not holding any offers
- Apply for accommodation quiz to find best-fit housing
Applying to university: FAQs
Can I apply to more than five universities?
What happens if I miss the January UCAS deadline?
What is the new personal statement format for 2027 entry?
Can I apply to university without A-levels?
What is contextual admissions?
What is an unconditional offer and should I accept it?
When should I apply for student finance?
What should I do if I do not get any offers?
Can I apply to university and a degree apprenticeship at the same time?
Application sorted. What is next?
Find accommodation options, costs and student life guides for every major UK university city.
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