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Placement years

Placement Years UK 2026/27 | Complete Guide | Unifresher
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What exactly is a placement year?

A placement year (also called a sandwich year, industrial year, or year in industry) is a 12-month period of full-time paid work embedded within a degree — typically between second and final year. You remain enrolled as a student, keep access to university support, and return to complete your final year. Your degree takes four years instead of three, but the career advantage is substantial.

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Do placement students get paid?

Yes — all placement students must be paid at least the National Minimum Wage for their age. In practice most structured placements pay significantly more: £18,000–£28,000/year is typical, with technology and finance placements often paying £25,000–£35,000+. You also continue to receive a reduced maintenance loan from Student Finance England during your placement year.

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How does a placement affect my degree classification?

This varies by university and course. At most institutions the placement year is assessed but does not count towards your final degree classification — it typically results in a pass/fail or merit/distinction grade recorded on your transcript. Some universities do weight the placement year grade. Check your specific course regulations; your placement office will confirm exactly how it's assessed.

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Is a placement year actually worth it?

Consistently yes, by almost every measure. Placement students graduate with higher final year grades on average, find graduate employment faster, earn more in their first role, and are significantly more likely to receive a return offer from their placement employer. The evidence is unusually strong for something students routinely talk themselves out of.

Placement years — the honest picture

A placement year is one of the highest-return decisions available to most undergraduate students, and one of the most commonly talked out of. The concerns that stop students — adding a year to their degree, the anxiety of a competitive application process, uncertainty about whether they're "ready" — are understandable. They're also, in almost every case, outweighed by the outcomes on the other side.

The data is consistent: placement students graduate with better grades, get jobs faster, earn more, and report significantly higher confidence in professional settings than peers who didn't do a placement. The year adds time to your degree, but it compresses the timeline from graduation to a good job — often significantly.

What this guide won't do is pretend a placement year is the right choice for everyone. Some courses don't support them. Some students have circumstances that make a four-year degree impractical. And not every placement is a great experience. This guide gives you what you need to make an informed decision — and if you decide to go for it, to do it well.

Placement students' final year grades
+5–8%
higher on average than non-placement peers on the same course
Return offer rate
~65%
of placement students receive a graduate job offer from their placement employer
Average placement salary
£22,000
across all sectors; technology and finance placements typically pay £28,000–£35,000+
Time to first graduate job
40% faster
placement graduates secure their first professional role significantly quicker post-graduation
Student finance during placement
50%
of standard maintenance loan still paid during a placement year abroad; less for UK placements
Courses offering placements
Most
business, engineering, sciences, computing, and many humanities degrees offer a sandwich year option

Types of placement & which suits you

Not all placement years look the same. The structure, employer, and nature of work vary significantly by sector, course, and how you find the role. Understanding what's available helps you target the right type from the start.

TypeDurationHow it's foundAssessed?Best for
University-supported placement Usually 9–13 months Via your university's placement office — they have existing employer relationships and vet roles for suitability Yes — usually Students who want support through the process and a vetted role that counts formally towards their degree
Self-sourced placement Usually 9–13 months Found independently via job boards, networking, or direct approaches — then approved by your university Yes — if approved Students who know where they want to work and are proactive enough to secure it independently
Graduate scheme-style placement programme 12 months Large employers (GSK, Dyson, Rolls-Royce, KPMG, Goldman Sachs, etc.) run structured year-long placement schemes with cohorts of placement students Depends on uni Students targeting competitive employers — these offer the most structured experience and highest salaries
International placement Typically 12 months Via your university, Erasmus+ successor programmes, bilateral agreements, or self-sourced Yes — usually Students who want an international experience as part of their degree — carries additional personal and professional development value
SME / startup placement Flexible — 6–12 months Direct approach, LinkedIn, local business networks — less competitive but requires more initiative to find Depends on uni Students who want broader responsibility early — at a small company you'll often cover more ground than at a large corporate

Reasons to do a placement year

  • Significantly improves graduate employment prospects
  • Clarifies — or corrects — your career direction before final year
  • Builds professional skills that can't be learned in a classroom
  • Grows your network before you graduate
  • Often generates a return offer — removing graduate job stress
  • Placement salary more than covers the extra year's cost for most students
  • Placement year consistently linked to higher final year grades
  • Demonstrates initiative and commitment to future employers

Reasons it might not be right for you

  • Adds a full year to your degree — relevant if you have financial or family pressures
  • Application process is competitive and can be stressful during second year
  • Not all courses or universities formally support placement years
  • You may be separated from your friend group who graduate a year earlier
  • Some placements are poorly structured — not every year is a positive experience
  • If your career goal requires postgraduate study, timing implications are worth considering

When to apply — the application calendar

The single most common placement mistake is applying too late. Large employers fill their placement cohorts by January or February — applications that arrive in spring for a September placement are often too late for the best schemes. The calendar below shows when to act for a placement starting in the summer or autumn after your second year.

May–Jul (Y2 start)

Prepare

Research sectors and target employers. Update CV. Attend summer careers fairs if your uni runs them.

September

🔴 Apply now

Major schemes (GSK, Deloitte, Rolls-Royce, KPMG, Amazon, etc.) open portals. Apply immediately — first-come-first-served in many cases.

October

🔴 Peak window

Most large employer schemes still accepting. Online tests and first-round interviews begin. Apply broadly.

November

🔴 Final push

Several top schemes close. Assessment centres begin for September applicants. Keep applying to those still open.

December–Jan

Assessment centres

Final-stage interviews and assessment centres. Some offers made before Christmas. Continue applying to schemes still open.

February–Mar

Mid-market window

Large schemes mostly closed. SMEs, startups, and many public sector placements still actively hiring — often less competition.

April–May

Late window

Roles still available but fewer. Focus on direct approaches, LinkedIn, and university placement office for remaining opportunities.

June–Sep

Placement begins

Most placements start June–September. Induction, onboarding, and first weeks at your employer.

September is the most important month in your placement search. Most students don't start thinking about placements until spring of their second year. By then, the best schemes have already closed. Set a calendar reminder for the first week of September in your second year — this is when the application portals open, and this is when you should be submitting your first applications, not researching what a placement year is.

Finding and securing a placement

The application process for a placement year mirrors the graduate recruitment process in miniature — most large employers use the same online application, psychometric testing, video interview, and assessment centre format. The preparation principles are the same; the competition is typically slightly less fierce.

Where to find placements

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Your university placement office

Your first stop. Most universities have a dedicated placement team with existing employer partnerships, vetted role listings, and application support. They know which employers consistently offer good placements for your subject area, and they can review your CV and applications. Use them early — not after you've already had rejections.

RateMyPlacement

The leading UK platform for student placements and internships. Lists thousands of roles with student-written reviews of what each placement is actually like — not just what the employer says in their brochure. An essential research tool before you decide where to apply, as well as a job board in its own right.

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Employer career portals directly

For large employers you've specifically targeted, go directly to their careers page. Search "placement year" or "industrial placement" on their site. Many of the best-known programmes — Dyson, BAE Systems, Goldman Sachs, Unilever, Google, the NHS — list their placement schemes exclusively or first on their own portal.

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LinkedIn and direct approaches

For SMEs, startups, and niche employers, a well-crafted direct message or email to a hiring manager or relevant team lead on LinkedIn can yield results that the job boards don't. Small companies often don't advertise — they hire someone motivated enough to ask. Identify companies you genuinely want to work for and reach out directly.

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Alumni and existing contacts

Your university alumni network is one of the most underused placement resources. Alumni who did placements at specific companies are often willing to provide referrals or advice. Your university's LinkedIn alumni search makes this easy. A message that says "I noticed you did a placement at X — I'm considering applying and would love 15 minutes of your time" has a high response rate.

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Careers fairs

University careers fairs — especially autumn-term engineering and STEM fairs — are attended by employers specifically looking for placement students. Bring printed CVs. Research attending employers beforehand so you can have specific conversations rather than generic ones. The recruiter you speak to at a fair will often remember a motivated, prepared student when applications arrive.

The application process — what to expect

Large employer placement applications follow a predictable sequence. Knowing what's coming lets you prepare for each stage rather than reacting to it.

StageWhat it involvesHow to prepare
Online application form CV upload, motivational questions ("why this company?", "why this role?"), academic history, eligibility checks Tailor every application. Research the company specifically — not just their sector. Minimum degree class requirements are often enforced automatically; check before applying.
Psychometric tests Numerical reasoning, verbal reasoning, logical/diagrammatic reasoning, situational judgement tests (SJTs). Usually timed, online, unsupervised. Practice matters significantly. Use free tests from SHL Direct, Assessmentday.co.uk, and the test provider named in your invitation. Aim to complete 10+ practice tests before your first real one.
Video / recorded interview Pre-recorded answers to competency questions, often via HireVue or Spark Hire. You get 30–60 seconds to prepare and 2–3 minutes to respond. Practise answering competency questions aloud on camera. The gap between thinking of an answer and delivering it confidently to a lens is larger than most people expect. Do at least five mock runs.
Telephone / live first interview 30–45 minute competency-based interview, usually with HR. Standard STAR-format questions. Prepare 8–10 strong STAR examples from university, part-time work, societies, and projects. Have them ready to adapt to different question framings.
Assessment centre Half or full day — group exercise, case study or presentation, written task, final interview. Usually held at the employer's offices. Research the company thoroughly. Practise case studies (especially for consulting/finance). In group exercises, be collaborative and build on others' contributions rather than dominating. Your interaction with other candidates is being assessed, not just your individual performance.
Apply broadly and expect rejections. A 10–15% success rate across placement applications is normal for competitive schemes. That means sending 15–20 applications and expecting rejections from most of them. Students who get placements are not necessarily better than those who don't — they often just applied earlier and applied to more places. Rejections at the online test or video interview stage cost you nothing except time. Apply widely, refine as you go, and don't interpret early rejections as evidence you won't succeed.

Pay, finances & student loan during placement

What placement students actually earn

Technology & Software Engineering

£25,000–£38,000per year

The highest-paying placement sector. Google, Amazon, Microsoft, and large UK tech firms pay £28,000–£38,000. Startups typically pay less but may offer more responsibility. Most roles are London or hybrid.

Investment Banking & Finance

£28,000–£40,000per year

Highest salaries in the market. Bulge-bracket banks (Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley) pay £30,000–£40,000+ annualised. Extremely competitive to secure and demanding once in — but the return offer rate is high.

Engineering & Manufacturing

£20,000–£28,000per year

Rolls-Royce, BAE Systems, Dyson, Airbus, and Jaguar Land Rover are major placement employers. Often include structured training programmes. Placements commonly based outside major cities — accommodation cost of living may be lower.

Consulting & Professional Services

£22,000–£32,000per year

Big Four (Deloitte, PwC, EY, KPMG) and large consulting firms run established placement programmes. Client-facing work from early on. High return offer rates for those who perform well.

Pharmaceutical & Life Sciences

£20,000–£28,000per year

GSK, AstraZeneca, Pfizer, and Johnson & Johnson are the major placement employers. Lab-based and commercial roles available. Highly structured programmes with strong graduate pipeline.

Marketing, Media & FMCG

£18,000–£26,000per year

Unilever, P&G, L'Oréal, and major agencies run marketing placements. Generally lower salaries than finance/tech but competitive for commercial roles. Central London locations mean living costs absorb more of the salary.

Public Sector & Charities

£18,000–£24,000per year

NHS, local government, Civil Service, and third-sector organisations offer placements, particularly for health sciences, social work, public policy, and management students. Lower pay but meaningful work and strong development.

SMEs & Startups

£18,000–£28,000per year

Highly variable. Smaller companies often offer more breadth and responsibility — you might handle work that would be siloed at a large corporate. Require more initiative to find, but competition is much lower and the experience can be more formative.

Student finance during your placement year

You remain a registered student during your placement year, which means you're still entitled to student finance — but at a reduced rate. Your tuition fee loan is also significantly reduced, because most universities charge a lower "placement year fee" rather than the full annual tuition.

During placement year
Tuition fee£1,850/year (typical placement year fee)
Tuition loanAvailable up to the placement fee amount
Maintenance loan (UK placement)Reduced rate — around £1,500–£2,500/year
Maintenance loan (overseas)50% of standard rate — around £4,000–£5,000/year
Placement salary£18,000–£35,000+ (varies by sector)
Net financial positionMost students are significantly better off than in a normal academic year
Normal academic year (for comparison)
Tuition fee£9,790/year (2026/27 cap)
Tuition loanUp to £9,790 (full fee)
Maintenance loanUp to £10,830/year (outside London, max)
Maintenance loanAverage received: ~£7,500–£8,500/year
Part-time incomeTypically £3,000–£7,000/year (10–15hrs/wk)
Net financial positionUsually a shortfall — most students spend more than their loan
Your placement salary will add to your student loan debt — but only marginally. The reduced maintenance loan during your placement year means you borrow less than in a normal academic year. Your placement salary is employment income, not loan income — it doesn't increase your student debt. Many students find the placement year is the only year of their degree where they're able to save money rather than accumulate debt, which can make the overall financial picture of a four-year course more manageable than a three-year course without one.

Tax on your placement salary

You are a full employee during your placement year and will be taxed through PAYE in the same way as any other worker. The Personal Allowance is £12,570 per tax year — you'll pay 20% income tax on earnings above this. At a £22,000 salary, that's roughly £1,886 in income tax and around £1,068 in National Insurance for the year. Make sure your tax code is correct (it should be 1257L) — placement students on their first job sometimes get placed on emergency codes. Check your first payslip and contact HMRC if it looks wrong.

How a placement year affects your degree

The administrative and academic implications of a placement year vary by university and course, and it's worth understanding them clearly before you commit — not after you've accepted an offer.

Assessment and grading

The most common model across UK universities is that the placement year is assessed separately — usually resulting in a pass, merit, or distinction recorded on your degree transcript — but does not count towards your final degree classification. Your 2:1 or First is determined by your final year (and sometimes second year) grades alone, as if the placement year hadn't happened.

A minority of universities and courses weight the placement year grade within the final classification — typically at 10–20%. Some require a placement portfolio, reflective report, or presentation in addition to the employer's assessment. Check your course handbook and speak to your placement office early so you know exactly what's required and when.

Always confirm your specific course regulations. Placement year assessment rules differ between universities, between departments at the same university, and sometimes between course variants (e.g. BSc vs MEng). Don't assume the general rule applies to your course. Ask your placement office: "Does my placement year grade count towards my final degree classification, and what exactly do I need to submit?"

Why placement students get better final year grades

The evidence for placement students outperforming non-placement peers in their final year is robust and consistent, and it's worth understanding why — because it helps you make the most of the year rather than just citing the statistic.

Returning to university after a year of professional work makes academic study feel purposeful and concrete rather than abstract. The "why does this matter?" question has an answer you've experienced.
Placement students arrive in final year with better time management, self-discipline, and independent working habits developed in a professional environment.
A confirmed return offer (or at minimum strong employability prospects) removes the anxiety about post-graduation employment that distresses many final year students. Less anxiety means better academic performance.
You're clearer on which aspects of your subject are relevant to your career — which helps you prioritise your effort in final year modules rather than spreading it evenly across everything.
Dissertations and projects benefit directly from professional experience — real data, real problems, and industry contacts who can support your research.

Starting your placement — what to expect

The first few weeks of a placement are genuinely different from anything most students have experienced before. Understanding the transition helps you navigate it without misinterpreting normal adjustment as failure.

Weeks 1–2

Induction & orientation

  • IT setup, HR paperwork, security access
  • Meeting your team, manager, and placement cohort
  • Company culture and processes orientation
  • Feeling overwhelmed is normal — everyone does
  • Ask every question — no question is too basic right now
Weeks 3–8

Learning the job

  • Beginning to contribute to real work
  • Building understanding of your team's function
  • Imposter syndrome peaks — this is universal
  • Set up a regular check-in with your manager
  • Take notes on everything; build your own reference docs
Months 3–6

Hitting your stride

  • Contributing independently and proactively
  • Starting to manage small projects or tasks end-to-end
  • Network beyond your immediate team
  • Start keeping a record of achievements for your CV
  • Identify a skill gap to work on in the second half
Months 6–9

Taking ownership

  • The period where the best placements are distinguished
  • Identify and propose your own projects or improvements
  • Mentor newer placement cohort members if applicable
  • Have conversations about return offer process
  • Start reconnecting with university — final year prep
Months 9–12

Transition & handover

  • Document your work for your successor
  • Confirm return offer status and process
  • Ask for a reference and LinkedIn recommendations
  • Update CV while achievements are fresh
  • Exit gracefully — how you leave is remembered
Imposter syndrome is normal and universal. Almost every placement student spends the first two months feeling underqualified, afraid of asking "stupid" questions, and convinced that everyone around them knows far more than they do. This feeling is so consistent and predictable that it's worth naming: you will almost certainly feel this way, and it is not an accurate assessment of your ability. The students and graduates around you felt exactly the same when they started. The solution is to ask questions, take on work, and let the evidence of doing the job well replace the anxiety about whether you can.

Making the most of 12 months

The difference between a placement year that transforms your CV and one that was just a job often comes down to deliberate choices about how you use your time. Most of these cost nothing except intention.

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Set goals at the start — not the end

In your first week, write down three things you want to be able to say you've achieved by the time you leave. Not vague aspirations — specific, evidenceable outcomes. Share them with your manager. Having goals on paper gives you a reference point mid-year when the day-to-day absorbs your attention, and it demonstrates professional maturity that gets noticed.

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Network across the organisation, not just your team

Ask for 20-minute coffee chats with people in other departments. Attend cross-team meetings when invited. Volunteer for cross-functional projects. The professional value of a placement comes as much from the people you meet as from the work you do — and your network from this year will outlast any specific project.

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Keep an achievement log every week

Spend five minutes each Friday writing down what you worked on, what you delivered, and what you learned. By the end of the year you'll have a detailed record of your contributions — invaluable for your CV, for your university placement report, and for interview preparation when you return. If you don't write it down at the time, you'll forget most of it.

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Ask for things — more responsibility, stretch projects, shadowing

Placement students who get the most out of their year are the ones who actively ask for more. Volunteer for projects that stretch you. Ask if you can shadow someone in a role you're curious about. Propose a small improvement to a process you've spotted. Nobody will hand you these opportunities — but almost everyone will say yes if you ask for them.

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Request regular feedback — don't wait for a formal review

Monthly or bi-monthly check-ins with your line manager where you explicitly ask "what am I doing well, and what should I do differently?" are far more useful than an end-of-year review when it's too late to act. Most managers won't offer this proactively. Ask for it, and then actually act on what you hear.

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Connect on LinkedIn before you leave

Send LinkedIn connection requests to every colleague, manager, and person you've met during the year before your last day. Include a brief personalised note. This professional network — maintained lightly over the years — will be one of the most valuable things you take away from the placement. People move companies and carry their goodwill for colleagues with them.

Getting a return offer & what comes next

Around 65% of placement students receive a graduate job offer from their placement employer. This is one of the most compelling reasons to pursue a placement — the prospect of finishing your final year with employment already confirmed removes one of the most stressful aspects of being a final year student.

How return offers typically work

Most structured placement programmes have a formal process for extending graduate offers: a mid-placement review, an end-of-placement assessment or presentation, and a formal offer communicated before you leave or shortly after you return to university. Some employers make offers contingent on achieving a certain degree classification (typically 2:1). Clarify this process with your manager or HR contact at the six-month mark — you want to understand what's expected of you, not find out at the end.

A return offer doesn't mean stop applying. Even if you have a return offer in hand, it's worth continuing to engage with the graduate recruitment process in final year — attending employer events, doing case study practice, keeping applications open for roles you're genuinely interested in. Circumstances change: companies restructure, offers are made conditional on degree results, and preferences evolve. A return offer is a strong position, not a reason to disengage from your career development.

If you don't receive a return offer

Not receiving a return offer doesn't mean your placement was a failure, or that you performed poorly. Companies downsize, graduate headcount gets cut, or roles don't exist in the area you worked. If you weren't offered a return role after a placement you performed well in, ask directly for an honest explanation and a strong reference. Your placement experience, achievements, and network are still yours — they remain on your CV and will carry significant weight in applications to other employers.

Returning to final year after placement

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Re-engage with academic mode deliberately

After a year of professional work, re-entering academic study can feel jarring. Essays, seminars, and exams are a different mode from meetings and deliverables. Give yourself the first two or three weeks to recalibrate — attend everything, re-read what good academic writing looks like, and reconnect with your tutors.

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Use your placement experience in your dissertation

If your dissertation topic can be informed by your placement experience — industry data, a real problem you encountered, contacts who can be interviewed — this is a significant advantage over peers working from purely secondary sources. Discuss it with your supervisor early in final year.

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Update your CV immediately on returning

Your placement year achievements are freshest in September when you return. Update your CV fully before the academic year gets busy. Include three to five quantified bullet points per placement role. This is the version you'll submit for graduate applications in the autumn — don't leave it until October when applications are due.

Placement myths — busted

❌ The myth

You need to have your career figured out before doing a placement.

✓ The reality

One of the most valuable things a placement year does is clarify — or correct — your career direction. Many students discover their expected path isn't right for them, or find an unexpected direction they love. Going in uncertain is completely normal and arguably the most important reason to do it.

❌ The myth

An extra year means graduating with significantly more student debt.

✓ The reality

Your placement year tuition fee is typically around £1,850 vs £9,790 in a normal year. Your placement salary (usually £18,000–£30,000) vastly exceeds any additional borrowing. Most placement students finish the year having saved money — often the only debt-free year of their degree. The fourth year typically adds less total debt than the third year.

❌ The myth

Only engineering and science students do placement years.

✓ The reality

Placement years are available across business, law, economics, computing, psychology, languages, media studies, and many humanities subjects. Any course that offers a sandwich year option makes it accessible. And even courses without a formal sandwich structure allow students to intercalate or take a year out for work experience in many cases.

❌ The myth

If you don't get a placement at a big-name company, it's not worth doing.

✓ The reality

A year at a well-run SME where you take real ownership of meaningful work is often more formative than a year as one of hundreds of placement students at a large corporate where your impact is limited. Graduate employers care that you did a placement, that you can articulate what you learned, and that you have evidence of your contribution — not primarily which logo is on the company letterhead.

❌ The myth

Your friends will have graduated and moved on while you're on placement — you'll be left behind.

✓ The reality

Some of your cohort will graduate a year ahead of you. But you'll likely meet and form strong professional friendships with your placement cohort — often with people from different universities and backgrounds. And when you graduate, you'll enter a job market significantly better positioned than many of those who graduated the year before. The social cost is real but small; the career benefit is real and large.

Frequently asked questions

What if I can't find a placement — does my degree still work?
Yes. If you're on a course with an optional placement year and don't secure one, you simply continue your degree as a three-year programme. There's no academic penalty for not completing a placement if it was optional. Some courses have a mandatory placement or industrial year — for these, your university's placement office has a legal and pastoral obligation to support you in finding one. Speak to them early if you're struggling; they have connections you don't, and they'd rather help you find something than see you progress without the experience or (on mandatory placements) have a problem to resolve.
Can I do a placement abroad?
Yes — international placements are entirely possible and increasingly common. Your university may have bilateral partnerships with overseas employers, or you can self-source a placement abroad and seek university approval. For UK placements abroad, your student loan continues at a higher rate than domestic placements (typically 50% of the standard maintenance loan). You'll also need to consider work visa requirements for the country you're going to, and potentially overseas health insurance depending on the destination. Your university's placement and international offices should both be involved if you're considering this route.
I'm an international student — can I do a placement year?
Yes, in most cases. If you're on a Student visa, a placement that forms a formal part of your degree is generally permitted under your existing visa conditions — you don't need to apply for a separate work visa. The placement must be integral to your course, approved by your university sponsor, and typically last no more than half the total length of your degree. Your university's international student advisory team can confirm the specific conditions that apply to your visa and course. Working on a placement that hasn't been approved by your university as part of your course could constitute a visa breach.
What if my placement employer offers me a full-time job before I've finished my degree?
This is a good problem to have — but handle it carefully. Accept if you want to, but negotiate a start date that allows you to finish your degree. Very few employers who extend a graduate offer at the end of a placement year expect you to leave university early; they're offering you a role starting after graduation. Get the offer in writing, clarify any conditions (especially minimum degree classification requirements), and make sure you understand whether it's a formal graduate scheme offer or an informal expression of intent. Formal written offers are binding on the employer in a way that verbal ones aren't.
My placement year wasn't very good — how do I present it on my CV?
Even a poorly structured or disappointing placement year contains real, evidenceable experience. Focus on what you actually did and what you genuinely learned — including skills you developed, processes you understood, and any outcomes you can point to, however modest. Interviewers will ask about your placement in depth, and authenticity about challenges (including what you'd do differently) is valued. Don't inflate a weak placement into something it wasn't — but don't undersell what you did genuinely learn from it either. If the placement was poor because of the organisation's structure, saying "the role was less structured than I'd hoped, which meant I had to be proactive in defining my own projects" is honest and makes something constructive of the experience.
Does a placement year count towards the Graduate Route visa for international students?
No — time spent on a placement as part of your studies is considered part of your Student visa leave, not separate employment leave. It does not count towards settlement or towards the Graduate Route visa duration. The Graduate Route visa clock starts after you complete your degree and apply for the Graduate Route, regardless of how long your degree took. A placement year extends your total time in the UK under a Student visa, but does not shorten or affect your Graduate Route entitlement once you graduate.

Ready to start applying? Sort your CV first

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