Medicine · Medical School Profile

Medicine at University College London Medical School & Interview Questions 2026

MMI interviewUCAT requiredUpdated 24 June 2026

Reviewed by Dr Akash Gandhi, MBBS MA (Cantab) DGM DRCOG MBA MRCGP

Trusted UK medicine admissions specialists since 2012 · 2700+ students taught

UCL Main Building (Wilkins Building) by LordHarris
UCL Main Building (Wilkins Building) by LordHarris · CC BY-SA 3.0 · via Wikimedia Commons, cropped

At a glance

Location
London, England
Founded
1826
Degree awarded
MBBS (UCAS code A100)
Course length
6 years
Home fee
£9,790 per year (2026/27)
International fee
£57,300 (2026/27 entry)
Annual intake
~337 places per year
Interview format
MMI
UCAT required
Yes (new for 2025 entry)
SJT Band 4 accepted
No
Foundation year
No
Intercalation
Compulsory
QS UK ranking
4

Overview of UCL Medical School

University College London Medical School has a total intake of 350 students per year. It consistently ranks in the top 3 in league tables, and its central London location is a draw for many prospective students. Teaching takes place at hospitals, including University College Hospital (Bloomsbury campus), The Royal Free Hospital (Hampstead), and the Whittington Hospital (Archway). UCL runs a 6 year traditional course with integrated BSc in the third year that is compulsory.

Most students are part of their sports society - RUMS, which allows UCL students to represent the medical teams at a particular sport. This ends the year with a sports ball, attended by these sports members.

The main campus is located in Bloomsbury near Euston Square. Many lectures happen at the Rockerfeller building and the Cruciform building.

Where does UCL (University College London) rank for Medicine?

Complete University Guide 2027

8thof 40 UK medical schools
Top40th
Overall score
97%
Entry standards
77%
Student satisfaction
75%
Research quality
89%

Source: Complete University Guide 2027 medicine league table.

The Guardian University Guide 2026

17thof 36 UK medical schools
Top36th
Guardian score (/100)
74.2
Satisfied with teaching
87.9%
Satisfied with feedback
72.9%
Student to staff ratio
8.3

Source: The Guardian University Guide 2026 medicine league table.

UCL (University College London) Medicine admissions statistics

For 2025 entry, UCL (University College London) received 2,092 applications for Medicine. It made 628 offers, so 30% of applicants received an offer.

All applicants (home and international)

UCL (University College London) Medicine admissions statistics
Entry yearApplicationsInterviewed% of applicantsOffersPost-interview success% of interviewedOffer rate% of applicants
20252,09262830%
% invited to interview:
applicants interviewed divided by applications.
Post-interview success rate:
offers divided by applicants interviewed.
Offer rate:
offers divided by applications. An offer is not a confirmed place.

Last checked June 2026.

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UCL Medicine Course Structure

UCL Medicine Course involves: The modules in each year are themed and focus on:

  • Year 1: Fundamentals of Clinical Science 1
  • Year 2: Fundamentals of Clinical Science 2
  • Year 3: Integrated BSc (can undertake the BSC in a wide range of disciplines across the medical sciences).
  • Year 4: Integrated Clinical Care
  • Year 5: The Life Cycle and Specialist Practice
  • Year 6: Preparation for Practice Students - this is the final year of study, where you will shadow junior doctors to try to improve your chances of being best prepared for F1 and improve your medical practice.

Teaching style

UCL Medical School uses an integrated, systems-based curriculum with a strong emphasis on early clinical exposure. The first two years focus on biomedical and clinical sciences taught through themed modules, alongside weekly sessions in Clinical and Professional Practice. From Year 3, students complete an intercalated BSc before progressing to placement-based learning in hospitals, GP practices, and community settings. Teaching supports the development of clinical reasoning, professionalism, communication, and practical skills, preparing students to think and act like doctors from the start.

Intercalated BSc

UCL Scientific Method in Depth (integrated BSc) A wide range of integrated BSc degree programmes are available, for example, Cardiovascular Science; Global Health; Mathematics, Computers and Medicine; Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering; Neuroscience; Oncology; Paediatrics and Child Health; Pharmacology; Physiology; Primary Healthcare; Surgical Sciences and Women's Health.

UCL Medicine Entry Requirements

A-Levels

The standard conditional offer for UCL Medical School is A*AA, to include A*A in Chemistry and Biology, in either order.

GCSEs

The minimum GCSE grade requirements for UCL Medical School is Mathematics & English Language at grade B (6).

International Baccalaureate (IB)

39 points out of 45 overall.

Subjects: the grades for the three Higher Level subjects must make up at least 19 points and must include Biology and Chemistry, with scores of 6 and 7, in either order. No score below 5 in any subject. This is declared on your UCAS application.

Scottish Highers

Scottish Highers alone are not accepted for entry; UCL requires Advanced Highers. See the Advanced Higher requirement.

Scottish Advanced Highers

A1, A, A at Advanced Highers (or A1, A at Advanced Higher plus A, A, A at Higher), to include Chemistry and Biology at Advanced Higher with either at A1.

Graduates (degree requirements)

UCL Graduate Medicine Requirements Degree: (2.1) degree from a recognised UK university. Science and non-science graduates are considered equally. Degrees awarded by universities outside the UK are not acceptable. Graduate applicants should also offer Chemistry and Biology at A-level. UCL Graduate Entry applicants are normally expected to have achieved grades of at least ABB in A-levels taken prior to their degree. Graduates that have re-sat A-levels prior to their undergraduate degree will be considered. ABB is the UCL benchmark and they do not consider graduates who achieved lower than ABB in their pre-degree A-levels. Any A-levels taken after the degree would need to be at grade A* or A. The standard requirement for grade B at GCSE in both English Language and Mathematics also applies to all offer holders.

English language requirements

IELTS:Overall score of 7.5 and a minimum of 7.0 in each component

Resits

Not accepted

Deferred entry

No

Minimum age requirements

Students must be 18 when they start the programme; under-18 applicants are considered for a deferred place or advised to reapply.

A-Level Requirements at University College London Medical School

Most useful

Admission Tests UCL Entry Requirements

UCAT at University College London Medical School 2026

How Does UCL University College London Medical School Look At The UCAT?

UCL UCAT Cut Off in 2026 for 2027 Entry A100 Medicine

For 2025 entry: UCL UCAT Cutoff score was 2800 to be invited for an interview (non-contextual, home applicants).

👉🏼 LOWEST UCAT score INVITED TO INTERVIEW at UCL (ie UCL UCAT Cut Off Score):

  • 2025 Entry (/3600): 2800 (Home), 2600 (Contextual, Access UCL), 3060 (International)

👉🏼 AVERAGE UCAT score WHO APPLIED TO UCL Medical School:

  • 2025 Entry (/3600): 2859 (Home)

What UCL Have Said:

All applicants must take the University Clinical Aptitude Test (UCAT). For candidates who meet our minimum entry requirements, the overall UCAT is used, to help us select candidates for interview.

(2025 Entry): The total UCAT score was used to rank and select candidates to invite to interview. Where candidates achieved the same UCAT score, the SJT was used to further rank each candidate. The total score will be used to rank and select candidates for interview.

UCL A100 Medicine Selection Criteria

Predicted/Actual Grades:

  • Predicted grades for qualifications not yet completed must meet our published entry requirements - so please do check

There are 24 International/Overseas places at UCL each year.

UCL Graduate Entry A100 Statistics

UCL does not have a separate graduate entry course. But graduate students can apply to the undergraduate course and complete the 6 year degree within 5 years (excluding the 5th year iBSc)

  • 2024 Entry: 30 Applicants, 7 Interviews, <5 Offers
  • 2023 Entry: 39 Applicants, 11 Interviews, 9 Offers
  • 2022 Entry: 58 Applicants, 11 Interviews, 9 Offers

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BMAT

** PLEASE NOTE: For 2025 Entry for Medicine at UCL - the BMAT will not be used. Instead, the UCAT will be used **

How Does UCL Medical School Look At The BMAT? UCL BMAT Cut-Off Scores (Updated for 2023 entry)

BMAT Cut-off Scores for 2023 Cycle

(combined Section 1 and Section 2 scores, with a minimum 2.5 B in Section 3)

  • Home Applicants - 10.1
  • Access UCL Eligible Applicants - 9.9
  • Overseas Applicants - 13.1

Average BMAT scores for UCL applicants

  • 2020 entry - 4.3, 4.1, 2.9A
  • 2021 entry - 4.8, 4.8, 3.1A
  • 2022 entry - 4.5, 4.4, 3.0A
  • 2023 entry - 4.7, 4.8, 3.0A

Average BMAT scores for UCL applicants interviewed

  • 2020 cycle - 5.2, 4.8, 3.2A
  • 2021 cycle - 5.7, 5.8, 3.4A
  • 2022 cycle - 5.8, 5.8, 3.3A

Average BMAT scores for UCL offer holders

  • 2020 cycle - 5.2, 4.8, 3.2A
  • 2021 cycle - 5.7, 5.8, 3.4A
  • 2022 cycle - 5.9, 5.8, 3.4A

There is no formal BMAT cut off score for UCL applicants, but you can use the average scores above to give you some guidance.

What we know is that in 2022 the average student interviewed by UCL had a BMAT score of 5.8 in sections 1 and 2, and 3A in section 3 of the BMAT.

  • BMAT Section 3 is no longer used at interviews.
  • The BMAT result is used in conjunction with predicted grades, a review of the content of the personal statement and reference recommendations
  • A priority score is allocated for the application as a whole.

What is the lowest BMAT score for UCL?

Unfortunately, UCL do not publish the lowest score that gets you an interview, but you can look at the average BMAT scores invited to interview to give some idea about what BMAT scores you should be aiming for.

Numbers of Applicants to UCL

There continues to be considerable pressure on the available places for students to read Medicine. Applications typically exceed 3800 for a total of 334 places. We do not have the capacity to interview all eligible applicants.

Selection for Interview at UCL

All applications are read and assessed carefully by several people.

The following factors are taken into account when deciding which candidates to interview:

  • Predicted and actual grades. Although there is no simple relationship between academic performance and whether or not a student will make a ‘good’ doctor, there is evidence that those with low grades or those who need to re-sit examinations are more likely to have academic problems with the programme. Predicted grades for qualifications not yet completed must meet our published entry requirements.
  • For applications received for 2023 entry onwards, we will no longer be using the Personal Statement as part of the selection procedure. We encourage applicants to use the opportunity of writing their personal statements to think reflectively about their skills and experiences, and how they have helped to prepare them for a career in medicine. This includes evidencing attributes, skills, behaviours and values needed to work within the healthcare service.
  • From 2023 entry onwards, we will be using BMAT scores alone to select eligible students for interviews. Selection will be based upon the ranked sum score of Section 1 and Section 2, plus meeting a minimum of 2.5B in Section 3. Candidates with special considerations as assessed by Cambridge Assessment will be considered on a case-by-case basis. Students who are eligible for Access UCL, our contextual offer scheme, will be automatically flagged to us, and their BMAT scores will be reviewed separately. We have 24 places for Overseas applicants, and for these places, Overseas applicants will be selected separately to our Home applicants.
  • Average scores for our applicants over the last 3 cycles are available on our website. Scores for each section do vary each year and we advise candidates to use the averages as an indicator only.

Re-applicants: If an applicant remains unplaced in the UCAS cycle, they are welcome to reapply. This includes those who have been unsuccessful following interview at UCL Medical School. Re-applicants must sit the BMAT again in the year that they apply.

GAMSAT

No

Work Experience for Medicine UCL

We recommend that applicants have an understanding of what a career in medicine involves. Your reflections on what you learned from your work experience may be assessed at interview and we may request that a small selection of candidates provide evidence of the work experience that they have done. Please also refer to the work experience guidance provided by Medical Schools Council.

Personal Statement for UCL Medical School

UCL does not use personal statements as part of the selection procedure. We encourage applicants to use the opportunity of writing their personal statement to think reflectively about their skills and experiences, and how they have helped to prepare them for a career in medicine. This includes evidencing attributes, skills, behaviours and values needed to work within the healthcare service.

Note: from 2026 entry, UCAS replaced the single free-text personal statement with three structured questions — why you want to study the course, how your studies have prepared you, and what else you have done to prepare. Any guidance above still applies; it is simply spread across those questions. For worked examples and a review of your own statement, see our medicine personal statement examples and review service.

Interview preparation

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Graduate entry at UCL (University College London)

UCL Medicine Graduate Entry: nil. Graduates must apply for the undergraduate program but are exempt from the intercalated year.

Does UCL (University College London) have a gateway or foundation year?

University College London Medicine Interview Questions 2026

- UCL uses MMI (Multiple Mini Interviews) for their medicine interview

- 8 stations, 5 minutes each (2-3 questions in each station)

- In Person interview

Interview dates

UCL Medicine Interview Dates: December to March

🎓 UCL Medicine Interview Questions & Topics for 2026

Assessment at Interview

Selected candidates are invited to interview on a weekday morning or afternoon. If you are successful at the interview then you will be invited to an offer holder event where talks and tours of the Medical School will take place.

Following the interview, the scores of the interviewers will be reviewed by the Admissions Tutor.

Interviewers score the candidate for the following qualities:

  • Academic curiosity and interest in healthcare
  • Motivation for and understanding of a career in medicine (including robustness for the course)
  • Problem-solving and reasoning ability
  • Professional attitudes and values (factors such as flexibility, integrity, empathy, honesty, conscientiousness and compassion)
  • Teamwork, leadership, resilience and individual strengths
  • Communication skills (including verbal ability, listening skills, eye contact)

What sorts of things will be tested?

Just as in a panel interview, we want to find out more about you as a person. This is your opportunity to tell us more about why you want to study medicine, what you understand about the career, and what preparation you have made for your application.

We adopt an NHS values-based approach to our interviews, asking you about your knowledge and understanding of core themes of working in a healthcare setting such as:

  • Putting patients first
  • Respect and dignity
  • A commitment to quality of care
  • Compassion
  • Improving health and wellbeing
  • Everyone counts

The interviewers will be asked to mark your answers on an iPad, in areas such as:

  • Academic curiosity and interest in healthcare
  • Motivation and understanding of the career
  • Problem solving and reasoning ability
  • Professional attitudes and values
  • Team work, leadership and individual strengths
  • Communication skills

❓ UCL Medical Interview Questions 2026 & Likely Topics

These are suggested practice questions based on publicly available information and past trends. They are not official questions from the University and may not appear in your interview. Use them as part of a broader preparation strategy.

Motivation to study medicine

  1. Why medicine?
  2. Why UCL? Why have you applied here?
  3. What did you learn from your work experience?
  4. Your best friend has lost her pet dog and she is heartbroken - have a conversation with her.
  5. What makes you suited to Medicine?
  6. Have you ever doubted whether you want to do medicine?
  7. What qualities of a doctor did you see from your work experience?
  8. What do you know about the UCL Medicine course? How is it taught?
  9. Why do you think you will be well suited to this course?
  10. Why medicine and not dentistry or nursing?
  11. Tell us about your volunteering
  12. What are your hobbies?
  13. What do you understand about what a career in medicine entails? How will the UCL course help you towards this?
  14. What are the negatives of a career in medicine? How did you overcome these thoughts?

Personal Insight

  1. Why should patients trust you?
  2. What are your best qualities?
  3. When have you displayed great teamwork skills?
  4. What are good qualities of a junior doctor?
  5. Have you ever been in charge of a group of people?
  6. How do you manage stress?
  7. What are the qualities of a good doctor?
  8. Can you provide us with an example of a time when you demonstrated resilience?
  9. Give us an example of a time when you demonstrated teamwork.
  10. What are your strengths and weaknesses?
  11. How would your friends describe you?
  12. Tell us about an article that you have recently read.
  13. Are you a good teacher?
  14. Are you good at taking on advice?

NHS & Local Area

  1. What changes would you make to the NHS if you could?
  2. What are the NHS values and why are they important?
  3. What is it like to be a doctor?
  4. How do you deal with overpopulation?
  5. What do you know about the local area here in UCL?
  6. Why is it important to be aware of cultural differences when treating patients?
  7. What are the main challenges that face the NHS?
  8. Would you approve a new drug that costs £100000 per patient to use?
  9. How has COVID changed the way the NHS operates?
  10. What do you think are going to be the long-term consequences of COVID on the NHS?
  11. How does the healthcare system differ here compared to other areas in the UK?

Ethical Scenarios

  1. Understanding of the four ethical principles
  2. Understanding of the GMC’s good medical practice
  3. What is the debate surrounding euthanasia, should it be legalised?
  4. Who would you give this organ to? [Prioritisation]
  5. A medical student friend is openly talking about patients on a bus that is packed - using their names, what would you do?
  6. How might you persuade someone to take a medicine that they dont want to take?
  7. If you notice that a colleague has turned up to work drunk, what would you do?
  8. Who can you escalate concerns to within a hospital?
  9. Your friends have already completed their St Georges Medical School Interview and are talking about it in the playground - what do you do?
  10. Should doctors be paid to go to pharmaceutical conferences?

Other Stations

  1. Discuss the pros and cons of assisted dying. What is the difference between assisted dying and assisted suicide? Reflect on your performance in the group in front of everyone.
  2. Discuss the pros and cons of a sugar tax. Each person must summarise their position at the end.
  3. Antibiotic resistance. What would happen if they were banned tomorrow?
  4. Advantages and disadvantages of free Wi-Fi in schools for 15-16 year olds
  5. Where do you see medicine going in the next 20 years?
  6. Understanding of communication techniques needed for different people
  7. Data interpretation: here is a graph on sugar and diabetes - answer questions on the correlation, confidence intervals etc. What is it showing? Why does it show this?

🗣️ UCL Medicine Interview Tips for 2026

  1. Ethical Scenarios - UCL have ethical scenarios every year at interview. They provided several tips on answering ethical questions. They have mentioned that there is not a single right answer, use evidence or explanation to back up your answers, explain your thought processes, don’t assume prior knowledge on the interviewers’ part - not all interviewers will be medics, and show awareness and recognition of different viewpoints, don’t ‘sit on the fence’ - have an opinion and take a common sense approach
  2. Practice Role Plays: Role plays are unique to medicine interviews and so common at UCL. The only way to ace these stations is to practice! There are so many differentmedicine role-play scenarios that can come up, such asbreaking bad news in the medicine interview, it is paramount that you read about tips for answering role-play scenarios and practice MMI calculation stations. You might want to also consider practising this with a medicine interview tutor, or booking a 1-1 online mock interview.
  3. Learn Medical Ethics & NHS Hot Topics - it is extremely likely that you will be asked about medical ethics at a medicine interview at UCL, so there is no excuse not to brush up on your knowledge on these topics, especially the four pillars of medical ethics. Learn how to provide a balanced argument on this. Check out some of our free articles on NHS Hot Topics here. It is good if you have an opinion on them, as long as you present a balanced and well-reasoned argument, ultimately, which side you choose does not matter, but is helpful to have. Check out our bank of 420+ medicine interview questions.
  4. Have examples ready to use: many of the questions asked at UCL are example-based, ie, they require you to draw on certain examples from your personal life, medical work experience and medical volunteering to help make key points that the selectors are looking for. As such, it is paramount that you spend time learning about these examples and thinking about different scenarios that you can use at the interview. It is helpful if these scenarios are malleable and can be applied to a number of different questions e.g. being a football captain, deputy head girl or playing in the school orchestra.
  5. Know what to expect - Remember interviews can be conducted by a range of professionals and you may not only be interviewed by a doctor. You may encounter careers professional, actors, professional support staff, and teaching staff, particularly in MMIs. Avoid using very technical terms, you may have more clinical knowledge than those assessing you.
  6. Personal Attributes - UCL is very likely to ask you about personal attributes during their MMI interview. As such it is paramount that you go through and learn these.
  7. Know the doctor training pathway: this is useful to mention in answers to show awareness about the career in medicine - and demonstrates that you have a considered approach, fortunately, we have a guide to the NHS and the doctor’s training pathway.
  8. Read the MMI instructions carefully - you get enough time to read the instructions provided before the MMI station. Make sure that you don’t miss anything from this. Try and plan how you will structure your answer thereafter in the reading time that you get. Therefore it is really important that you practice MMI questions and ensure that you think about your structure for as many questions as possible before your interview.
  9. MMI Stations - remember that each MMI station at UCL is independent of the other. Therefore it is paramount that you try to treat them as such, if you have a bad station, try to forget about it and reset for the next station, this gives you the best chance of scoring well overall. Read our ultimate guide to preparing for medicine MMIs here.
  10. Know the UCL Course - we would always recommend doing this for every university that you plan to apply to. It is paramount that you know about the different topics covered each year. How does this differ from other universities? Remember there is very early clinical exposure at UCL - this can be an advantage!
  11. Know the local area - UCL is in a diverse region of London, with a number of local factors and diseases that differentiate the midlands from the rest of the UK. Ensure that you research both communicable and non-communicable diseases in the area. They have a number of services here including UCL university medical centre to support students. How might this impact healthcare provision in the area?
  12. Reflect Well - the UCL Medicine selectors love reflection, make sure that you are good at not just stating what you have learnt, but also how this helped and what you benefitted from, and what you will carry forward about this at medical school and in clinical medicine. This is especially true when reflecting on your medical work experience during the medicine interview.
  13. Don’t over-rehearse - this is a common theme amongst interview students and is very obvious to a trained examiner. As such, we would recommend focusing on the structure of your answer, and then naturally letting it flow when speaking to the answers, concentrating on the delivery of your interview answers. Read about our top tips for medicine interviews here. If you are struggling with this, consider booking sessions with an expert medicine interview tutor.
  14. Learn about the non-academic societies at UCL - this is really important and might augment your Why Medicine question as well as help you formulate an answer to how you will contribute to life at UCL University. Spend time on their website, or looking at their Instagram for ideas about societies that you could think about joining.
  15. Learn the NHS Core Values - This can be drawn into different answers about personal qualities or qualities of a doctor, which has formed a feature of stations in the past, and a good understanding of these core values will help you stand out against others. It is important to know about the NHS in general for your medical interviews - read our article here on this.
  16. Good Medical Practice - UCL also puts emphasis on knowing the values and qualities of a good doctor, which can be found in this document and are likely to come up at the interview in the MMI stations. This is universal to many universities, and something that we always recommend students cover during their medicine interview preparation.

Free UCL (University College London) Medicine Mock Interviews 2026

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Contact details for UCL (University College London)

Medical Admissions Office
UCL
Gower Street
London
WC1E 6BT

Tel: 020 7679 0841
Email: medicaladmissions@ucl.ac.uk

Website: www.ucl.ac.uk/medicalschool

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FAQs

UCL (University College London) medicine FAQs

Where does UCL (University College London) rank for Medicine in the UK?

UCL (University College London) is ranked 8th out of 40 UK medical schools for Medicine in the Complete University Guide 2027.

UCL (University College London) is ranked 17th out of 36 UK medical schools for Medicine in the Guardian University Guide 2026.

Is UCL (University College London) a good medical school?

UCL (University College London) is ranked 8th out of 40 UK medical schools for Medicine in the Complete University Guide 2027.

In the Complete University Guide 2027 it scores 77% for entry standards, 75% for student satisfaction and 99% for graduate prospects.

What are the A-Level requirements for Medicine at UCL (University College London)?

The standard conditional offer for UCL Medical School is A*AA, to include A*A in Chemistry and Biology, in either order.

What are the GCSE requirements for Medicine at UCL (University College London)?

The minimum GCSE grade requirements for UCL Medical School is Mathematics & English Language at grade B (6).

What is the UCAS course code for Medicine at UCL (University College London)?

The UCAS course code for the standard Medicine course at UCL (University College London) is A100, and the degree awarded is the MBBS.

The course is based in London, England and lasts 6 years.

Does UCL (University College London) require the UCAT for Medicine?

Yes, UCL (University College London) requires the UCAT for entry to Medicine (new for 2025 entry).

What UCAT score do you need for Medicine at UCL (University College London)?

For 2025 entry: UCL UCAT Cutoff score was 2800 to be invited for an interview (non-contextual, home applicants).

2025 Entry (/3600): 2800 (Home), 2600 (Contextual, Access UCL), 3060 (International).

2025 Entry (/3600): 2859 (Home).

What UCL Have Said All applicants must take the University Clinical Aptitude Test (UCAT). For candidates who meet our minimum entry requirements, the overall UCAT is used, to help us select candidates for interview.

What is the acceptance rate for Medicine at UCL (University College London)?

For 2025 entry, 30% of applicants to Medicine at UCL (University College London) received an offer (628 offers from 2,092 applications). An offer is not a confirmed place.

What type of interview does UCL (University College London) use for Medicine?

UCL (University College London) uses a multiple mini interview (MMI) format for Medicine interviews.

Does UCL (University College London) offer a foundation or gateway year for Medicine?

No, UCL (University College London) does not offer a foundation or gateway year for Medicine.

Does UCL (University College London) accept graduate entry for Medicine?

UCL Medicine Graduate Entry: nil. Graduates must apply for the undergraduate program but are exempt from the intercalated year.

Is the personal statement assessed for Medicine at UCL (University College London)?

No, UCL (University College London) does not formally score the personal statement for Medicine applicants.

UCL does not use personal statements as part of the selection procedure. We encourage applicants to use the opportunity of writing their personal statement to think reflectively about their skills and experiences, and how they have helped to prepare them for a career in medicine. This includes evidencing attributes, skills, behaviours and values needed to work within the healthcare service.

Do you need to be 18 to study Medicine at UCL (University College London)?

Yes, you need to be 18 to study Medicine at UCL (University College London).

How much does Medicine at UCL (University College London) cost for international students?

The international student fee per year is £57,300 (2026/27 entry).

Can you intercalate during Medicine at UCL (University College London)?

Intercalation is compulsory for Medicine students at UCL (University College London).

UCL Scientific Method in Depth (integrated BSc) A wide range of integrated BSc degree programmes are available, for example, Cardiovascular Science; Global Health; Mathematics, Computers and Medicine; Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering; Neuroscience; Oncology; Paediatrics and Child Health; Pharmacology; Physiology; Primary Healthcare; Surgical Sciences and Women's Health.

2025/26 results

Why Students & Parents Recommend Us

Ultimate Package students from our 2025/26 cycle, with their UCAT scores and offers, who trained with us for the UCAT, personal statements and interviews.

Ultimate Package
Sophie
Medicine, King's College London
2025 UCAT2,590 / 2,700
Harry got my UCAT up to 2,590, working through the sections I kept dropping marks on week by week. Gemma then ran my interview practice so the MMI stations didn't catch me out, and Dr Akash mentored me the whole way through. I'm off to King's for Medicine.
Ultimate Package
Daniel
Medicine, University College London
Medicine offers4 offers
The interview prep was the part that actually moved the needle. Proper mock MMIs, not just lists of questions, and feedback that was honest about what I was getting wrong. I ended up with four offers and firmed UCL.
Ultimate Package
Aisha
Dentistry, University of Birmingham
Dentistry offers4 offers
The Ultimate Package kept me organised from UCAT through to interviews. They knew what dental schools actually ask and tightened up my personal statement. Four offers in the end, and I'm going to Birmingham.
Ultimate Package
Charlotte
Veterinary Medicine, Royal Veterinary College
Vet offers4 offers
Vet applications come down to the written SAQs as much as the interview. Dr Rebecca went through my SAQs line by line, sharpened my answers and prepped me for the panels. I came away with four offers and chose the RVC.

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