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Best Universities for Neuroscience in the UK 2027: Unifresher Student Rankings

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Unifresher Rankings · 2027

Best Universities for Neuroscience in the UK 2027

University of Exeter tops our 2027 neuroscience ranking with 110 points, combining 94% academic support and 89% teaching quality. Lancaster University comes second with 98 points, achieving 93% academic support and 92% teaching quality. University of Nottingham is third with 82 points and 93% teaching quality. We ranked 26 UK universities offering neuroscience degrees across eight metrics: graduate earnings, teaching quality, student satisfaction, academic support, safety, cost of living, social life and sustainability.

Neuroscience graduate earnings range from £24,000 (University of Central Lancashire) to £30,000, with six institutions producing graduates at £30,000: Nottingham (3rd), Warwick (7th), Aberdeen (joint 5th), Edinburgh (joint 10th), Middlesex (joint 19th) and University of Dundee's St Andrews programme. University of Aberdeen (joint 5th) achieves 95% academic support — the highest in the field. University of Westminster (joint 19th) has the lowest academic support at 68%. University of Leeds and Keele University (both joint 9th and 10th) share the lowest teaching quality at 76%.

For how these universities compare across all subjects, see the Unifresher best universities overall ranking and our best universities for employability.

Neuroscience University Rankings 2027

All 26 universities ranked across 8 metrics. Read the full methodology.

# University Grad Earnings Satisfaction Teaching Quality Academic Support Score
1
University of Exeter
Exeter
£29,000 79% 89% 94% 110
2
Lancaster University
Lancaster
£27,500 82% 92% 93% 98
3
University of Nottingham
Nottingham
£30,000 74% 93% 86% 82
4
University of York
York
£28,000 77% 82% 86% 81
5
University of Bristol
Bristol
£25,000 73% 84% 79% 79
5
University of Aberdeen
Aberdeen
£30,000 76% 86% 95% 79
6
University of Leicester
Leicester
£28,500 73% 86% 88% 77
7
University of Warwick
Coventry
£30,000 74% 87% 79% 76
8
University of Glasgow
Glasgow
£27,000 75% 90% 84% 75
9
University of Leeds
Leeds
£27,500 74% 76% 77% 74
9
University of St Andrews
St Andrews
£28,000 84% 81% 87% 74
10
Keele University
Newcastle-under-Lyme
£24,500 81% 76% 87% 71
10
University of Edinburgh
Edinburgh
£30,000 74% 86% 79% 71
10
University of Southampton
Southampton
£28,500 76% 89% 82% 71
11
University of Sussex
Brighton and Hove
£26,500 77% 84% 86% 69
11
King's College London
London
£28,000 67% 88% 80% 69
12
University of Birmingham
Birmingham
£28,500 72% 81% 89% 65
13
University of Manchester
Manchester
£26,000 70% 80% 76% 64
14
University of Central Lancashire
Preston
£24,000 71% 88% 92% 63
15
Queen Mary University of London
London
£27,000 69% 85% 81% 60
16
University of Dundee
Dundee
£25,500 75% 81% 88% 58
17
Aston University
Birmingham
£26,000 75% 86% 82% 55
18
UCL (University College London)
London
£26,000 68% 79% 74% 51
19
Middlesex University
Middlesex
£30,000 69% 74% 74% 43
19
University of Westminster
London
£28,000 68% 77% 68% 43
20
University of Roehampton
London
£28,000 72% 83% 77% 39

What the ranking tells you about studying neuroscience

Neuroscience is one of the fastest-growing life science degrees in the UK, available at 26 universities. It combines biology, psychology, chemistry and physics to study the nervous system — from molecular mechanisms to behaviour and cognition. With only 26 institutions in this ranking, programme quality varies significantly in terms of laboratory access, imaging equipment availability (fMRI, EEG, TMS), research-active faculty, clinical placement links and postgraduate pathways. Course delivery scores are particularly meaningful in this context.

26
Universities ranked
£24k
Lowest grad earnings (University of Central Lancashire)
£30k
Highest grad earnings — Nottingham, Warwick, Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Middlesex
18th
UCL's ranking position — 74% academic support, 79% teaching quality

UCL at 18th: the course delivery data behind a prestigious address

UCL ranks 18th with 51 points, achieving 79% teaching quality and 74% academic support — both among the lowest in this field. The field average teaching quality is approximately 84% and average academic support approximately 83%. UCL's neuroscience department has a global research reputation with access to the Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging, world-class imaging facilities and Nobel-level faculty. Its 18th-place position reflects London's maximum cost of living, very low student satisfaction (68%) and the measured course delivery scores. For students who want access to UCL's research infrastructure and postgraduate positioning, the tradeoff between course delivery metrics and research environment is real. For students who want the best-measured undergraduate teaching experience in neuroscience, the top 10 provides better-measured options.

University of Aberdeen at joint 5th: 95% academic support — highest in the field

University of Aberdeen ranks joint 5th with 79 points and achieves 95% academic support — the highest in this ranking — alongside £30,000 graduate earnings. Aberdeen's neuroscience programme benefits from the university's strong biomedical research infrastructure and proximity to NHS Grampian for clinical neuroscience links. It ranks joint 5th because Aberdeen's low sustainability score and social life ranking suppress the overall position relative to its course delivery and earnings performance. For students prioritising academic support quality and graduate earnings in neuroscience, Aberdeen's data is the strongest combination in the field.

Lancaster University at 2nd achieves 93% academic support and 92% teaching quality with the highest student satisfaction score in the top 5 at 82%. Lancaster's neuroscience programme is taught within its strong psychology and biomedical sciences departments, with research strengths in cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging. It ranks 2nd with 98 points — close to Exeter's 110. Lancaster's position reflects genuinely strong all-round performance: it achieves high course delivery scores, strong satisfaction, decent graduate earnings (£27,500) and benefits from Lancaster's relatively low cost of living and strong safety scores. For students who want a consistently strong measured experience across every metric rather than one standout score, Lancaster's data profile is the most complete in the top 10.

Career pathways after neuroscience

Neuroscience graduates access a wider range of careers than the subject title might suggest. Many pursue postgraduate study — an MSc or PhD in neuroscience, clinical psychology, neuroimaging, pharmacology or cognitive science. Clinical psychology routes require a BPS-accredited psychology component at undergraduate level (some neuroscience degrees include this, others do not — check before applying). Non-clinical pathways include pharmaceutical research, drug development, medical device companies, healthcare technology, science communication, teaching and the NHS. Neuroscience's combination of quantitative skills, laboratory competence and analytical reasoning also transfers well into data science, finance, technology and consulting. For research-focused careers, postgraduate study is almost always expected.

For a broader view of how these universities compare, see the Unifresher overall best universities ranking.

Neuroscience degrees: your questions answered

University of Exeter is the best university for neuroscience in the UK according to the 2027 Unifresher Rankings with 110 points and 94% academic support. Lancaster (2nd) achieves 93% academic support and 92% teaching quality. University of Aberdeen (joint 5th) achieves the highest academic support in the field at 95%. UCL (18th) has 74% academic support and 79% teaching quality. University of Westminster (joint 19th) has the lowest academic support at 68%.
Neuroscience is the scientific study of the nervous system — the brain, spinal cord and peripheral nervous system. A neuroscience degree typically covers molecular and cellular neuroscience (neurons, synapses, neurotransmitters), neuroanatomy, developmental neuroscience, cognitive neuroscience (attention, memory, perception, consciousness), behavioural neuroscience, pharmacology, neuroimaging techniques (fMRI, EEG, TMS), computational neuroscience and clinical neuroscience (neurological and psychiatric disorders). Neuroscience draws on biology, chemistry, psychology and physics — it is a genuinely interdisciplinary science degree. The balance between these components varies significantly between institutions. Some programmes are more molecular and biochemical; others lean more cognitive and psychological. Check the specific modules offered before applying.
Neuroscience graduate salaries range from £24,000 to £30,000 within six months of graduating, based on 2027 data. Most universities produce graduates earning between £26,000 and £29,000. Graduates entering research positions, the pharmaceutical industry, NHS clinical support roles or science communication typically start at £24,000 to £30,000. Graduates who continue to postgraduate study before entering research, clinical psychology or medical careers typically access significantly higher salaries of £35,000 to £60,000+ within five years. Neuroscience's analytical and quantitative skills also support entry into data science, finance and technology at competitive starting salaries.
Neuroscience graduates work in academic and university research, pharmaceutical and biotech research and development, clinical trials management, NHS neuroscience and clinical support roles, science communication and journalism, data science and bioinformatics, medical devices and neurotechnology companies, healthcare technology, occupational therapy and allied health (with further training), clinical psychology (with further postgraduate training), medicine (via graduate-entry medicine programmes), teaching and science education, and management consulting and finance. Major employers include GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Roche, the MRC (Medical Research Council), the Wellcome Trust, NHS Trusts, GCHQ and tech companies developing neural interface and AI systems. The degree is a strong foundation for clinical psychology training or graduate-entry medical school.
Biology A-level is required or strongly recommended by most neuroscience programmes. Chemistry and/or Psychology are commonly required or preferred as the second or third science. Maths is useful for programmes with strong computational or quantitative neuroscience components and is required or recommended at the most research-intensive institutions. Entry requirements range from ABB at less selective institutions to A*AA at competitive programmes. Without Biology, access to most neuroscience degrees is very limited. Check individual requirements carefully — neuroscience admissions requirements vary more than most science subjects because the degree sits at the intersection of biology, psychology and chemistry.

Author

  • Connor is a seasoned content expert at Unifresher, specialising in publishing engaging and insightful student-focused content. With over four years of experience in data analysis and content strategy, Connor has a proven track record of supporting publishing teams with high-quality resources. A graduate of the University of Sussex with a BSc in Accounting and Finance, he combines his academic background with his passion for creating content that resonates with students across the UK. Outside of work, Connor enjoys staying active at his local gym and walking his miniature dachshunds.

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