Knowledge Hub Guide

UCAS Points Explained: A Parent and Student Guide

Understand UCAS tariff points, how A-Level grades and other qualifications can convert into points, and why course requirements vary.

Clear UK guidance
Parent-friendly explanations
DBS-checked tutors
No guaranteed outcome claims
Direct answer

How UCAS points work

UCAS points are a tariff system used by some UK universities and colleges to compare qualifications. Not every course uses points, and many courses ask for specific grades or subjects instead, so students should always check individual course requirements.

Explained simply

How UCAS points work

UCAS tariff points give numerical values to certain qualifications, including A-Levels and some vocational qualifications. They can help universities compare different routes, but they are not the whole application. Some courses ask for a points total, while others require specific grades, subjects or entry tests.

  • Use this guide to understand the terminology before making decisions.
  • Check the official UCAS or school information when deadlines or individual requirements matter.
  • Speak to NLG if your child needs subject support before exams or applications.
Quick comparison
QuestionWhat it means
Are UCAS points the same as grades?No. Points are a way of comparing qualifications, but many courses still require specific grades.
Do all courses use UCAS points?No. Some courses use tariff points; others list grade requirements such as ABB or specific subject grades.
What affects points?Qualification type, grade and sometimes course size or level.
What should students check?The exact course page, required subjects, accepted qualifications and any extra tests.
Practical steps

What to do next

1

Check the university course page

Do not rely on a generic points total if the course asks for specific grades or subjects.

2

Map current grades to target requirements

Compare predicted or current grades against the entry route.

3

Identify weak subjects

If a required subject is below target, support it early rather than waiting for final exams.

4

Build a revision and support plan

Use tutoring, school feedback and independent study to work towards realistic grade goals.

Related NLG guides and support

Use these links to move from information to practical support.

FAQ

UCAS Points Explained: A Parent and Student Guide FAQs

UCAS points are tariff values assigned to certain qualifications so universities can compare different study routes.

UCAS tariff values depend on the grade and qualification. Students should check the current UCAS tariff calculator for exact values.

Some competitive courses focus on specific grades and subjects rather than a points total, so always check the course entry requirements.

Tutoring cannot guarantee grades, but it can help students strengthen subject knowledge, confidence and exam preparation.

Need subject support before the next step?

National Learning Group can help students build confidence, strengthen subject knowledge and prepare for exams with DBS-checked online tutors.