<p>UK conversion courses are one of the most distinctive features of the British higher education system: one-year master’s-level programmes that take students from any undergraduate background and deliver professional or academic qualification in a new field. For international students, they offer a fast, cost-efficient path to career change—but the intensity is extreme.</p> <h2 id="tldr">TL;DR</h2> <ul> <li>Conversion courses compress a three-year undergraduate discipline into 9–12 months of postgraduate study</li> <li>The most established conversion routes are Law (GDL/MA Law), Psychology (BPS-accredited MSc), and Computer Science</li> <li>Entry requirements are typically a 2:1 in any subject—you do not need prior study in the target field</li> <li>International fees range from GBP 20,000–38,000</li> <li>These programmes are academically demanding: expect 20–30 contact hours per week plus substantial independent study</li> <li>Career outcomes depend heavily on the university’s industry connections and the student’s ability to secure relevant work experience alongside study</li> </ul> <h2 id="graduate-diploma-in-law-gdl--ma-law">Graduate Diploma in Law (GDL) / MA Law</h2> <p>The GDL is the original UK conversion course: a one-year programme that compresses the seven foundations of legal knowledge into a single academic year. It is designed for students who hold a non-law undergraduate degree and want to qualify as a solicitor or barrister in England and Wales.</p> <h3 id="programme-structure">Programme Structure</h3> <p>The GDL covers the seven foundations required by the Bar Standards Board and (historically) the Solicitors Regulation Authority:</p> <ul> <li>Public Law (Constitutional &#x26; Administrative)</li> <li>Criminal Law</li> <li>Law of Tort</li> <li>Contract Law</li> <li>Land Law</li> <li>Equity &#x26; Trusts</li> <li>EU Law</li> </ul> <h3 id="the-sqe-transition">The SQE Transition</h3> <p>As of 2021, the solicitor qualification route has changed. The Legal Practice Course (LPC) is being phased out in favour of the Solicitors Qualifying Examination (SQE). The GDL is no longer formally required—you can sit the SQE directly with any undergraduate degree. However, most aspiring solicitors still complete a law conversion course (now often branded as MA Law, MSc Law, or PGDL) because:</p> <ol> <li>The SQE assessments test substantive law knowledge that non-law graduates typically lack</li> <li>Law firms expect trainees to have completed a conversion course</li> <li>The structured environment and peer cohort support learning</li> </ol> <h3 id="top-providers-and-fees-international-202627">Top Providers and Fees (International, 2026–27)</h3> <table><thead><tr><th>Institution</th><th>Programme</th><th>Duration</th><th>International Fee</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>BPP University</td><td>PGDL</td><td>8 months (full-time)</td><td>GBP 14,000–17,000</td></tr><tr><td>University of Law</td><td>PGDL / MA Law</td><td>9–12 months</td><td>GBP 15,000–18,000</td></tr><tr><td>City, University of London</td><td>GDL</td><td>1 year</td><td>GBP 18,000–20,000</td></tr><tr><td>Cardiff University</td><td>GDL</td><td>1 year</td><td>GBP 18,000</td></tr><tr><td>University of Birmingham</td><td>MA Law</td><td>1 year</td><td>GBP 21,000</td></tr></tbody></table> <p><strong>Career outcomes</strong>: Law conversion course graduates who secure training contracts (now QWE—Qualifying Work Experience) at commercial law firms can earn starting salaries of GBP 40,000–55,000 in London and GBP 25,000–40,000 regionally. Competition for training contracts at top firms is intense—expect to apply to 10–20 firms and face multiple interview rounds. The conversion course itself is the easy part; securing a training contract is the real barrier.</p> <h2 id="msc-computer-science-conversion">MSc Computer Science (Conversion)</h2> <p>Computer Science conversion master’s programmes have proliferated over the past decade as demand for software engineering talent has grown. These programmes take students from humanities, social science, or other non-STEM backgrounds and deliver programming competence and CS theory in 12 months.</p> <h3 id="programme-structure-1">Programme Structure</h3> <p>Typical modules:</p> <ul> <li>Programming Fundamentals (Python, Java, or C++)</li> <li>Data Structures &#x26; Algorithms</li> <li>Databases &#x26; Web Development</li> <li>Software Engineering</li> <li>Machine Learning / AI (introductory)</li> <li>Individual Project (software development)</li> </ul> <h3 id="top-providers-and-fees-international-202627-1">Top Providers and Fees (International, 2026–27)</h3> <table><thead><tr><th>Institution</th><th>Programme</th><th>International Fee</th><th>Key Feature</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Imperial College London</td><td>MSc Computing Science</td><td>GBP 39,000</td><td>Most prestigious; mathematics requirement</td></tr><tr><td>UCL</td><td>MSc Computer Science</td><td>GBP 35,000</td><td>Strong industry links in London</td></tr><tr><td>University of Bristol</td><td>MSc Computer Science (conversion)</td><td>GBP 32,000</td><td>Research-led teaching</td></tr><tr><td>University of Birmingham</td><td>MSc Computer Science</td><td>GBP 28,000</td><td>Strong employability support</td></tr><tr><td>University of Glasgow</td><td>MSc Software Development</td><td>GBP 27,000</td><td>Includes team project with industry</td></tr><tr><td>Newcastle University</td><td>MSc Computer Science</td><td>GBP 26,000</td><td>6-month individual project</td></tr><tr><td>Cardiff University</td><td>MSc Computing</td><td>GBP 25,000</td><td>Lower entry requirements than above</td></tr><tr><td>Queen Mary University</td><td>MSc Computing and Information Systems</td><td>GBP 27,000</td><td>London location; lower cost than Imperial/UCL</td></tr></tbody></table> <p><strong>Entry requirements</strong>: Typically a 2:1 in any subject. Imperial requires A-Level Mathematics or equivalent. Most other programmes do not require maths beyond GCSE-level competence, but a quantitative aptitude test or online preparatory course may be required.</p> <p><strong>Career outcomes</strong>: Conversion CS graduates from strong programmes (Imperial, UCL, Bristol, Birmingham) successfully place into software engineering, data analysis, and technology consulting roles. Starting salaries range from GBP 28,000–45,000 depending on location, employer, and prior experience. Graduates from less established conversion programmes face more competition—the UK graduate software engineering market has become more crowded as conversion programme output has increased.</p> <p><strong>The key variable</strong>: A one-year conversion gives you programming competence, not software engineering depth. You will be competitive for junior roles but will need to continue learning on the job. The strongest conversion graduates supplement their programme with personal projects, open-source contributions, and hackathon participation to build a portfolio that compensates for the compressed timeline.</p> <h2 id="msc-psychology-conversion">MSc Psychology (Conversion)</h2> <p>The BPS-accredited psychology conversion course is the standard route for graduates from other disciplines to achieve Graduate Basis for Chartered Membership (GBC)—the prerequisite for professional psychology training in the UK.</p> <h3 id="programme-structure-2">Programme Structure</h3> <p>Taught modules covering BPS core areas:</p> <ul> <li>Cognitive Psychology</li> <li>Developmental Psychology</li> <li>Social Psychology</li> <li>Biological Psychology</li> <li>Individual Differences</li> <li>Research Methods &#x26; Statistics</li> <li>Empirical Research Project (dissertation)</li> </ul> <h3 id="top-providers-and-fees-international-202627-2">Top Providers and Fees (International, 2026–27)</h3> <table><thead><tr><th>Institution</th><th>Programme</th><th>International Fee</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>UCL</td><td>MSc Psychology (Conversion)</td><td>GBP 32,000</td></tr><tr><td>King’s College London</td><td>MSc Psychology (Conversion)</td><td>GBP 30,000</td></tr><tr><td>University of Edinburgh</td><td>MSc Psychology of Mental Health (Conversion)</td><td>GBP 30,000</td></tr><tr><td>University of Glasgow</td><td>MSc Psychological Science (Conversion)</td><td>GBP 27,000</td></tr><tr><td>University of Bristol</td><td>MSc Psychology (Conversion)</td><td>GBP 29,000</td></tr><tr><td>University of Nottingham</td><td>MSc Psychology (Conversion)</td><td>GBP 27,000</td></tr><tr><td>Cardiff University</td><td>MSc Psychology (Conversion)</td><td>GBP 25,000</td></tr></tbody></table> <p><strong>The conversion course is not the endpoint</strong>: After completing a BPS-accredited conversion course, you are not a psychologist. You are eligible to apply for professional doctoral training in clinical, counselling, educational, forensic, or occupational psychology—all of which are competitive (clinical psychology DClinPsy acceptance rates are ~15–20%). Employment directly after the conversion course is possible in assistant psychologist roles, research assistant positions, and mental health support work, but salaries are modest (GBP 22,000–30,000).</p> <p>The conversion course is a stepping stone to professional training—not a standalone qualification for practice.</p> <h2 id="msc-finance-conversion-and-business-conversion">MSc Finance (Conversion) and Business Conversion</h2> <p>Less common than Law, CS, and Psychology conversions, but available:</p> <table><thead><tr><th>Institution</th><th>Programme</th><th>Target Background</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>University of Bristol</td><td>MSc Finance and Investment</td><td>Any subject (quantitative aptitude expected)</td></tr><tr><td>University of Exeter</td><td>MSc Finance and Management</td><td>Any subject</td></tr><tr><td>University of Leeds</td><td>MSc Finance and Investment</td><td>Any subject</td></tr><tr><td>Lancaster University</td><td>MSc Finance</td><td>Any subject (quantitative modules required)</td></tr></tbody></table> <p>These programmes are designed for graduates from non-finance backgrounds (including humanities and social sciences) who want to enter financial services. They are more common at post-92 universities and less common at the most selective institutions, where finance master’s programmes typically require a relevant undergraduate degree or quantitative background.</p> <h2 id="conversion-course-strategy-for-international-students">Conversion Course Strategy for International Students</h2> <h3 id="is-a-conversion-course-right-for-you">Is a Conversion Course Right for You?</h3> <p>A UK conversion course is a good fit if:</p> <ul> <li>You have a clear career change goal and understand the post-course qualification pathway</li> <li>You are willing to study intensively for 12 months with limited time for part-time work</li> <li>You have the financial resources to cover the programme cost and living expenses without substantial income during study</li> <li>You have researched the post-course job market in your target field and country (home or UK)</li> </ul> <p>A conversion course is not a good fit if:</p> <ul> <li>You are uncertain about your career direction and see it as a year to explore—the intensity doesn’t allow exploration</li> <li>You expect a guaranteed job at the end—conversion courses provide the credential and baseline competence, not guaranteed employment</li> <li>You are primarily looking for a way to stay in the UK—while the Graduate Route makes this possible, the cost-to-ROI calculation only works if you genuinely want to work in the new field</li> </ul> <h3 id="choosing-a-programme">Choosing a Programme</h3> <ol> <li> <p><strong>Accreditation matters more than prestige</strong>: For Law, choose a programme that prepares you for the SQE. For Psychology, choose a BPS-accredited programme. For CS, accreditation is less formalised—rely on graduate outcomes data and industry placement records.</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Industry connections determine outcomes</strong>: The university’s employer relationships and careers service matter disproportionately for conversion students, who lack the undergraduate network and internship history that traditional-path students have.</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Location for networking</strong>: London programmes (Imperial, UCL, KCL, City, QMUL) offer proximity to employers and easier access to networking events, internships, and interviews. The premium in living costs may be justified by improved career access.</p> </li> </ol> <h2 id="faq">FAQ</h2> <p><img src="https://img.studygb.com/留学/2026-05-16-uk-conversion-courses-2026-1880x1254.jpg" alt="studygb-com 配图"></p> <p><strong>Q: Can I get a Skilled Worker visa after a conversion course?</strong> A: Yes, if you find an employer willing to sponsor you in your new field. The challenge is that conversion graduates compete with traditional-path graduates who have deeper subject knowledge and longer CVs in the field. Sponsorship is more likely in fields with skills shortages (software engineering, data science) and less likely in saturated fields. The Graduate Route visa (2 years post-study) provides a buffer for building experience and finding a sponsoring employer.</p> <p><strong>Q: Are conversion courses respected by employers?</strong> A: Mixed. In fields with established conversion traditions (law, psychology), conversion graduates are a known quantity and routinely hired. In fields where conversion is newer (computer science), employer awareness varies. Larger employers (big tech, banks, professional services) are familiar with conversion programmes from specific universities. Smaller employers may not be. Imperial, UCL, Bristol, and Birmingham CS conversion graduates are well-recognised; graduates from less established programmes may need to demonstrate competence more actively.</p> <p><strong>Q: How does the workload of a conversion course compare to a standard master’s?</strong> A: Substantially higher. A conversion course compresses an undergraduate discipline into 12 months. Contact hours are typically 15–25 per week compared to 8–12 for a standard taught master’s. Assessment volume is higher (often 8–12 modules with coursework and exams versus 4–6 modules for a standard master’s). The intellectual pace is the equivalent of taking an intensive language immersion course—you are learning a new discipline’s vocabulary, methods, and professional norms simultaneously.</p> <p><strong>Q: Can I study a conversion course part-time or online?</strong> A: Part-time GDL/conversion law programmes exist (2 years) and are popular for UK-based career changers. Online law conversion programmes also exist. Part-time CS and Psychology conversions are less common. For international students on a Student Route visa, full-time study is typically required to meet visa conditions. Check specific programme and visa requirements.</p>