T Level students are only marginally more likely to gain a university place than the first cohort four years ago, and still struggle to enter the top Russell Group institutions.
FE Week analysis of data from 85 universities shows 70 per cent of T Level applications resulted in an offer for last September, up from 67 per cent for the first cohort who applied to enter university in the 2022-23 academic year.
Closer analysis reveals only 32 per cent of applications to Russell Group universities resulted in an offer, up from 23 per cent in 2022.
The data suggests universities treat T Level applicants much like they treat BTEC students, despite ministers’ ambition for the technical qualification to become the “gold standard” vocational route into higher education.
T Levels were launched by the previous government in 2020. They were designed to equip students to progress to skilled employment, apprenticeships and higher education, and carry the same UCAS tariff points as three A Levels.
Requests for data
FE Week submitted freedom of information requests to all 142 UK universities, with 85 providing usable data on T Level applications and offers for entry between 2022-23 and 2025-26.
Applications from T Level students rose from 951 for university entry in 2022 to 13,347 for last year, as more subjects were rolled out and more colleges and schools offered them.
Nick Hillman, director of the Higher Education Policy Institute, said the small margin of improvement for applications was consistent with wider uncertainty about the qualification.
“T Levels are not as mainstream a qualification as the previous government hoped they would be,” he said. “They have always been a very confused qualification with confused goals and objectives, and policymakers have mucked around with them a lot. They obviously haven’t lived up to their original ambitions.”
Russell Group says no
The sharpest split was between Russell Group universities and the rest of the HE sector. The 16 Russell Group institutions that supplied data made offers to 23 per cent of applications from T Level students in 2022-23, rising to 32 per cent last year. Across the rest of the sector, the equivalent figures were 76 and 78 per cent.
Within the Russell Group there was wide variation. Cardiff, Newcastle and Exeter universities each made offers on more than half of their applications last year, from 202, 74 and 78 applications respectively.
Manchester received the most applications of any Russell Group university at 465, but made just 98 offers, a rate of 21 per cent. Warwick made two offers from 65 applications, University College London seven from 63, and Sheffield 27 from 178. Glasgow received 11 applications and turned them all down.
A University of Manchester spokesperson said T Levels were not accepted for all courses, particularly where degrees required subject content “not sufficiently covered” by the qualification.
They added: “It is essential that our students are appropriately prepared to cope with the demands of our programmes. Where any UK qualifications or subjects are less favoured, this is made clear within the published selection criteria for individual programmes.”
A Russell Group spokesperson said its universities would keep reviewing entry requirements as new subjects were rolled out and more students took T Levels, “to assess which qualifications best prepare candidates for degree-level education”.
They retained oversight of their own admissions, the spokesperson added, and were committed to “creating pathways for students from a wide range of backgrounds and educational experiences”.
Treated like a BTEC
Ministers describe T Levels as the “gold standard” technical route, with a design meant to appeal to universities more than the long-established BTEC, including a 45-day industry placement.
Universities made offers to 69.9 per cent of T Level applications last year, against 72.4 per cent of applications from students holding only BTECs. Applications from A Level students fared better, at 77.6 per cent.
Among Russell Group universities, T Levels and BTECs drew an identical 32 per cent. For non Russell Group institutions, T Levels were at 77.7 per cent and BTECs 78.2 per cent.
Hillman said universities appeared to treat BTECs as a proxy when weighing T Level applications.
“T Levels look and feel a bit like a BTEC and they’re meant to be a replacement,” he said. “In general, universities don’t want to admit people unless they’ve got a very good understanding of the likelihood of that person surviving at their institution and not dropping out.”
However, the University of Salford, which made offers to 91 per cent of its 666 T Level applicants last year, said T Level entrants performed in line with other students once enrolled, adding there was “no obvious differences in critical success factors such as retention levels or first-time pass module rates”.
The Department for Education said T Levels were “rigorous and high-quality qualifications” with a proven record of supporting students into work, and were already outperforming comparable level 3 qualifications.
It stressed university offers were increasing each year, adding the department would “continue to address the barriers, including through our T Level ambassadors network”.
Winners and losers
Offer rates varied sharply between institutions. Birmingham Newman University, London Metropolitan University and the University for the Creative Arts each made offers on at least 90 per cent of applications across all four cycles.
Among those handling large volumes last year, Liverpool John Moores made 649 offers from 733 applications, Nottingham Trent 451 from 525, and Portsmouth 360 from 431.
Conversely, Bath received 241 applications and made 12 offers. A Bath spokesperson said the figures reflected rising applications to courses requiring specific A Levels, where the equivalent T Level content “did not provide suitable preparation” for degree study.
Admission is a mission
Universities set their own entry requirements but ministers had pressed them to provide clarity.
In January 2023, then skills and universities minister Robert Halfon wrote to vice chancellors telling them to publish statements setting out whether they accepted T Levels, after warning of “too many instances” where students could not tell whether they were eligible to apply.
Since 2022, the DfE has published a list of institutions that confirm they take T Levels for at least one course, but it fails to reveal what those courses are.
Tobi Salawu, T Level digital students and founder of TLevelled website
Tobi Salawu, an 18-year-old digital T Level student at South and City College Birmingham, spent several weeks checking more than 40 universities before building his own website, TLevelled.co.uk, to list which institutions accepted digital, engineering and health T Levels – and on what terms.
He said: “During my first few weeks of second year in September 2025, I realised I couldn’t find any universities that actually accepted T Levels.
“The universities didn’t really list the exact pathway. I felt like I was just applying blindly and wasting my time. I went to the gov.uk site and realised it was just a list of universities. No grades, no courses, no pathway, nothing useful.”
Salawu, who held conditional offers from Cardiff and Newcastle but is now considering an apprenticeship, is extending his site to cover accounting, finance and construction pathways. “The goal is to eventually cover every T Level pathway,” he said. “Longer term I want TLevelled to be a genuine support hub for T Level students, not just a university directory.”
Top-level resistance
Most UK universities accept T Levels for at least one course, including 18 of the 24-member Russell Group, according to the DfE’s list. Six Russell Group members do not appear on it: Imperial College London, Edinburgh, Cambridge, Glasgow, Oxford and the London School of Economics (LSE).
LSE’s website, however, says it accepts T Levels in 11 subjects. It confirmed it received a very small number of T Level applications in recent admissions cycles and had made offers to fewer than five applicants.
A spokesperson said the university had chosen not to appear on the government’s acceptance register as the number of successful entrants was very small, and it did not “wish to imply there is widespread entry to LSE via this route”.
The University of Oxford said it “does not accept T Levels as a qualification for undergraduate study”. Cambridge said the same, adding that T Levels “do not adequately prepare students for a Cambridge degree, particularly in terms of the theoretical grounding that our courses require”.
However, Cambridge noted T Levels in arts, humanities and social sciences subjects were accepted for its foundation year where applicants meet the eligibility criteria. Two T Level students applied for this course but did not receive an offer.
Both Cambridge and Oxford each received five applications in total across all four years but offered no places.
Imperial College London, which received no T Level applications across the four-year period, also does not accept T Levels as its courses predominantly require subject-specific prerequisites including A Level mathematics and further science qualifications.