Understand how predicted grades, final grades and subject choices can affect UK university applications through UCAS.
A-Level grades can affect university applications because many courses use predicted grades when making offers and final grades when confirming places. Some courses also require specific subjects, not just a total points score.
A-Level grades are one of the main academic signals universities use when considering applications. Predicted grades can influence whether a student receives an offer, while final grades usually determine whether a conditional offer becomes a confirmed place.
| Question | What it means |
|---|---|
| Predicted grades | Used during the application stage to help universities assess likely achievement. |
| Conditional offers | Usually require certain final grades or points before the place is confirmed. |
| Required subjects | Some courses require a specific A-Level subject and grade. |
| Support need | Students should target the subjects most closely linked to the course they want. |
Check whether the course needs grades, points, specific subjects or admissions tests.
Look at whether current predictions match the course requirements.
Focus support on the subjects that are essential for the offer.
Build revision routines, exam technique and confidence well before final assessments.
Use these links to move from information to practical support.
Yes. Universities often use predicted grades when deciding whether to make an offer.
Final grades matter because conditional offers usually depend on achieving the required results.
No, but many courses do. Science, medicine, engineering and some humanities routes can require specific A-Level subjects.
Tutoring can support subject knowledge and exam preparation, but it should sit alongside school guidance and UCAS research.
National Learning Group can help students build confidence, strengthen subject knowledge and prepare for exams with DBS-checked online tutors.