<p>The UCAS application cycle spans approximately 15 months. For international students, the timeline is compressed at the front end (visa processing, English language testing) and extended at the back end (CAS issuance, accommodation booking). Missing a single deadline can collapse your entire application. Here is the complete schedule.</p> <h2 id="tldr">TL;DR</h2> <ul> <li>The UCAS 2026 entry timeline runs from May 2025 (research phase) to September 2026 (course start)</li> <li>Three critical deadlines: 15 October 2025 (Oxbridge/medicine), 29 January 2026 (standard), 30 June 2026 (late applications)</li> <li>International students should add 2–3 months of buffer at the start (research, English testing, document preparation) and 2–3 months at the end (visa application, travel, accommodation)</li> <li>The UCAS personal statement (4,000 characters) typically requires 6–10 drafts over 4–8 weeks—do not leave it until December</li> <li>Results day for international qualifications varies by country; plan for Clearing as a contingency even if you’re confident of meeting your offers</li> </ul> <h2 id="phase-1-research-and-preparation-mayaugust-2025">Phase 1: Research and Preparation (May–August 2025)</h2> <h3 id="may-2025-course-research-begins">May 2025: Course Research Begins</h3> <ul> <li><strong>What to do</strong>: Begin researching courses on the UCAS website. Use the course search tool to filter by subject, location, entry requirements, and university type.</li> <li><strong>International-specific tasks</strong>: <ul> <li>Check entry requirements for your specific qualification system (IB, AP, Gaokao, HKDSE, etc.) on each university’s international students page—do not rely on the general A-Level requirements listed on UCAS</li> <li>Check English language requirements (IELTS, TOEFL, PTE Academic, or equivalent)</li> <li>Book an English language test if you haven’t already taken one—test slots fill up well in advance in many countries</li> </ul> </li> <li><strong>Output</strong>: A longlist of 10–15 courses across 8–12 universities</li> </ul> <h3 id="june-2025-open-days-and-shortlisting">June 2025: Open Days and Shortlisting</h3> <ul> <li><strong>What to do</strong>: Attend virtual open days (most UK universities now offer comprehensive virtual events alongside in-person ones). Narrow your longlist to 8–10 courses.</li> <li><strong>International-specific tasks</strong>: <ul> <li>If you’re considering in-person open days, plan travel now—summer flights to the UK fill up and become expensive</li> <li>Start drafting your personal statement—even a rough first draft. The earlier you start, the more iterations you can complete</li> </ul> </li> <li><strong>Output</strong>: A shortlist of 8–10 courses; a first draft personal statement</li> </ul> <h3 id="july-2025-english-language-testing-and-personal-statement-development">July 2025: English Language Testing and Personal Statement Development</h3> <ul> <li><strong>What to do</strong>: Take your English language test if you haven’t already. Begin serious personal statement drafting.</li> <li><strong>International-specific tasks</strong>: <ul> <li>IELTS results are valid for two years. Take the test now if possible—it gives you time to retake if needed</li> <li>For medicine/dentistry/veterinary applicants: book the UCAT (if required) and begin preparation</li> <li>Contact your school for predicted grades and identify your referee</li> </ul> </li> <li><strong>Output</strong>: English language test result; personal statement draft 3–4; referee identified</li> </ul> <h3 id="august-2025-finalise-shortlist">August 2025: Finalise Shortlist</h3> <ul> <li><strong>What to do</strong>: Reduce your shortlist to exactly five courses—the maximum UCAS allows.</li> <li><strong>Strategy for international students</strong>: Your five choices should reflect a realistic assessment of your predicted grades and the offer rates at your target universities. The standard UK advice (“one aspirational, three realistic, one insurance”) applies, but adjust for international student offer rates which may differ from UK-domiciled rates.</li> <li><strong>Output</strong>: Five final course choices; referee briefed and expecting the reference request</li> </ul> <h2 id="phase-2-application-submission-september-2025january-2026">Phase 2: Application Submission (September 2025–January 2026)</h2> <h3 id="early-september-2025-ucas-opens-for-submission">Early September 2025: UCAS Opens for Submission</h3> <ul> <li><strong>What to do</strong>: Submit your application as soon as it’s ready. UCAS processes applications in order of receipt for non-Oxbridge/medicine courses, and submitting early (September–October) signals organisational competence.</li> <li><strong>International-specific tasks</strong>: <ul> <li>Ensure your referee has submitted their reference</li> <li>Double-check that your qualification details are entered correctly—errors in international qualification names or grades are a common cause of processing delays</li> <li>Pay the UCAS application fee (GBP 28.50 for multiple choices in 2026)</li> </ul> </li> <li><strong>Output</strong>: Submitted UCAS application</li> </ul> <h3 id="15-october-2025-oxbridge--medicine--dentistry--veterinary-deadline">15 October 2025: Oxbridge / Medicine / Dentistry / Veterinary Deadline</h3> <p>This is the first hard deadline. Applications for Oxford, Cambridge, and most medicine, dentistry, and veterinary medicine/science courses must be submitted by 18:00 UK time on 15 October.</p> <p><strong>What happens if you miss it</strong>: Your application to these courses will not be considered (with very rare exceptions). If you’re applying to Oxbridge, you must also register for and sit the relevant admissions test (see below).</p> <p><strong>Oxbridge admissions test dates (2025)</strong>:</p> <table><thead><tr><th>Test</th><th>Registration Deadline</th><th>Test Date</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>PAT (Physics Aptitude Test)</td><td>4 October 2025</td><td>Late October 2025</td></tr><tr><td>MAT (Mathematics Admissions Test)</td><td>4 October 2025</td><td>Late October 2025</td></tr><tr><td>TSA (Thinking Skills Assessment)</td><td>4 October 2025</td><td>Late October 2025</td></tr><tr><td>BMAT (BioMedical Admissions Test)</td><td>30 September 2025</td><td>October 2025</td></tr><tr><td>UCAT (University Clinical Aptitude Test)</td><td>September 2025</td><td>July–September 2025 (test window)</td></tr></tbody></table> <p>International students: admissions tests can be taken at British Council offices and other authorised test centres worldwide. Register early—test centre capacity in some countries is limited.</p> <h3 id="novemberdecember-2025-interview-period">November–December 2025: Interview Period</h3> <p>Oxford and Cambridge conduct the majority of their undergraduate interviews in early-to-mid December. Imperial, UCL, and a few other universities interview for specific courses in November–January.</p> <p><strong>For international students</strong>: Most interviews are now conducted online (video call). Check your time zone—a 2pm UK interview may be 9pm in East Asia or 6am on the US West Coast. Technical preparation: stable internet connection, quiet environment, functioning webcam and microphone. Do a test call with a friend in the same setup a week before.</p> <h3 id="29-january-2026-standard-ucas-deadline">29 January 2026: Standard UCAS Deadline</h3> <p>The standard deadline for the majority of courses. Applications must be submitted by 18:00 UK time.</p> <p><strong>What happens if you miss it</strong>: Your application enters “late” status. Universities are not obligated to consider late applications equally, though many do for courses that aren’t oversubscribed. Do not miss this deadline if you can avoid it—your application will be processed after all on-time applications, and popular courses may already be full.</p> <h2 id="phase-3-receiving-and-responding-to-offers-februaryjune-2026">Phase 3: Receiving and Responding to Offers (February–June 2026)</h2> <h3 id="februarymay-2026-offer-period">February–May 2026: Offer Period</h3> <p>Universities issue offers on a rolling basis. You may receive offers within days or wait until April. Some highly selective courses (particularly at LSE and Imperial) may not issue decisions until March or April.</p> <p><strong>Types of offer</strong>:</p> <ul> <li><strong>Conditional</strong>: You must achieve specified grades/qualifications. This is the most common offer type.</li> <li><strong>Unconditional</strong>: Your place is confirmed regardless of results. Rare for competitive courses; more common if you already have your final grades.</li> <li><strong>Unsuccessful</strong>: Your application is not being taken forward.</li> </ul> <p><strong>For international students</strong>: Conditional offers may include English language conditions (e.g., IELTS 7.0 overall with 6.5 in each component). These conditions are separate from academic conditions and must also be met.</p> <h3 id="early-june-2026-reply-deadline">Early June 2026: Reply Deadline</h3> <p>You must respond to your offers by selecting:</p> <ul> <li><strong>Firm choice</strong>: Your first preference. If you meet the conditions, this is where you’ll study.</li> <li><strong>Insurance choice</strong>: Your backup. Typically has lower entry requirements.</li> </ul> <p><strong>Strategy tip</strong>: The gap between your firm and insurance entry requirements matters. If your firm requires A<em>AA and your insurance requires AAA, you have one grade of safety margin. If both require A</em>AA, you have no margin—if you miss the A* you miss both.</p> <h2 id="phase-4-results-and-confirmation-julyseptember-2026">Phase 4: Results and Confirmation (July–September 2026)</h2> <p><img src="https://img.studygb.com/留学/2026-05-16-ucas-timeline-2026-2026-1880x1208.jpg" alt="studygb-com 配图"></p> <h3 id="julyaugust-2026-results-period">July–August 2026: Results Period</h3> <p>Results release dates vary by qualification system:</p> <ul> <li><strong>IB</strong>: Early July</li> <li><strong>A-Levels</strong>: Mid-August</li> <li><strong>Gaokao</strong>: Late June</li> <li><strong>AP (US)</strong>: Early July</li> <li><strong>Indian Standard XII</strong>: May–June (varies by board)</li> </ul> <p>When your results are released, UCAS receives them directly for most UK qualifications (A-Levels, IB). For international qualifications not automatically transmitted to UCAS, you must send your results to your firm and insurance universities directly.</p> <p><strong>Results day outcomes</strong>:</p> <ol> <li><strong>You meet your firm offer</strong>: Congratulations. Your place is confirmed. The university will issue your CAS for visa application.</li> <li><strong>You miss your firm but meet your insurance</strong>: Your insurance becomes your confirmed place. Accept it or enter Clearing.</li> <li><strong>You miss both</strong>: You enter Clearing. Do not panic—thousands of students find university places through Clearing every year, including at Russell Group universities.</li> </ol> <h3 id="julyseptember-2026-clearing">July–September 2026: Clearing</h3> <p>Clearing opens in early July and runs through September. It’s the UCAS system for matching unplaced students with unfilled course places.</p> <p><strong>Key Clearing dates</strong>:</p> <ul> <li>5 July 2026: Clearing opens</li> <li>August 2026 (A-Level results day): Peak Clearing activity</li> <li>September 2026: Clearing continues until courses are full</li> </ul> <p>For international students, Clearing works but requires fast action. When you call a university during Clearing, have your UCAS ID, qualification details, and English language test results ready. Universities make verbal offers during Clearing calls and you must enter the choice in UCAS Track within a specified time window (typically 24–72 hours).</p> <h2 id="phase-5-pre-arrival-juneseptember-2026">Phase 5: Pre-Arrival (June–September 2026)</h2> <h3 id="cas-and-visa-application">CAS and Visa Application</h3> <p>Once your place is confirmed (via offer conditions met or Clearing acceptance), the university will issue your Confirmation of Acceptance for Studies (CAS). This is required for your Student Route visa application.</p> <p><strong>CAS timeline</strong>: Universities begin issuing CAS numbers from June onward. Priority is typically given to students with unconditional offers. During Clearing (August–September), CAS issuance can be slower due to volume.</p> <p><strong>Visa application timeline</strong>: Standard processing is 3 weeks from the date of your biometric appointment. Priority service (5 working days) and super priority (next working day) are available for additional fees. Apply as soon as your CAS is issued—do not wait.</p> <h3 id="accommodation">Accommodation</h3> <p>University accommodation application deadlines typically fall in June–August. Most universities guarantee accommodation for international students who apply by the deadline. If you miss the deadline, you’ll need to find private accommodation, which is more complex from overseas.</p> <h3 id="travel-and-arrival">Travel and Arrival</h3> <p>Most UK university welcome weeks (Freshers’ Week) begin in mid-to-late September. Plan to arrive at least one week before your course start date to handle:</p> <ul> <li>Accommodation check-in</li> <li>Bank account opening</li> <li>GP (doctor) registration</li> <li>International student orientation events</li> <li>Biometric Residence Permit (BRP) collection</li> </ul> <h2 id="the-international-students-ucas-calendar-at-a-glance">The International Student’s UCAS Calendar at a Glance</h2> <table><thead><tr><th>Month</th><th>Key Actions</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>May 2025</td><td>Course research; book English test</td></tr><tr><td>June 2025</td><td>Virtual open days; start personal statement</td></tr><tr><td>July 2025</td><td>Take English test; draft personal statement; contact referee</td></tr><tr><td>August 2025</td><td>Finalise five choices; complete personal statement</td></tr><tr><td>September 2025</td><td>Submit UCAS; register for admissions tests (Oxbridge)</td></tr><tr><td>October 2025</td><td><strong>15 Oct: Oxbridge/medicine deadline</strong>; sit admissions tests</td></tr><tr><td>November 2025</td><td>Track UCAS Track for offers</td></tr><tr><td>December 2025</td><td>Oxbridge interviews</td></tr><tr><td>January 2026</td><td><strong>29 Jan: Standard UCAS deadline</strong></td></tr><tr><td>February–April 2026</td><td>Receive offers; attend offer-holder events</td></tr><tr><td>May 2026</td><td>Prepare for final examinations</td></tr><tr><td>June 2026</td><td><strong>Early June: Reply to offers</strong> (firm + insurance)</td></tr><tr><td>July 2026</td><td>IB results; Clearing opens; apply for accommodation</td></tr><tr><td>August 2026</td><td>A-Level results; confirm place; receive CAS; apply for visa</td></tr><tr><td>September 2026</td><td>Travel to UK; welcome week; course starts</td></tr></tbody></table> <h2 id="faq">FAQ</h2> <p><img src="https://img.studygb.com/留学/2026-05-16-ucas-timeline-2026-2026-1880x1254.jpg" alt="studygb-com 配图"></p> <p><strong>Q: Can I apply to both Oxford and Cambridge?</strong> A: No. UCAS rules prohibit applying to both in the same cycle. You must choose one. This rule applies to undergraduate applications only; postgraduate applications to Oxford and Cambridge are independent.</p> <p><strong>Q: What if I want to apply to more than five courses?</strong> A: UCAS limits you to five choices. If you want to apply to more institutions, you could consider applying to some universities directly (outside UCAS) for courses that accept direct applications. However, very few undergraduate courses accept direct applications from international students—UCAS is the standard route. Another option: some international students also apply through UCAS Conservatoires (for music/dance/drama courses), which is a separate system with its own choice limit.</p> <p><strong>Q: Can I change my choices after submitting?</strong> A: Within 14 days of submission, you can change your choices freely. After 14 days, you can only substitute choices (one-for-one swap) and only if the original choice hasn’t made a decision. Once a university has made you an offer or rejected you for a specific choice, that choice is locked.</p> <p><strong>Q: What if I already have my final grades when applying?</strong> A: If you’ve already completed your qualifications, you may receive unconditional offers. You should still submit through UCAS following the standard timeline. Having final grades at the time of application can be an advantage—universities don’t need to estimate your performance from predicted grades.</p> <p><strong>Q: Do I need to pay a deposit when I accept an offer?</strong> A: No. UCAS does not require a deposit. When you accept an offer (firm or insurance), no payment is due. You will pay tuition fees directly to your university according to their payment schedule, typically after enrollment.</p>