A record number of UK 18-year-olds accepted offers for university courses this year, figures show, amid a significant swing towards elite institutions and declining international applications.
聽shows that 36.4 per cent of 18-year-olds from across the UK accepted places this year 鈥 up from 35.7 per cent in 2023 and arresting two years of falling entry rates.
The total number of accepted applicants rose 1.9 per cent, and the number of UK-domiciled 18-year-olds accepted increased 2.9 per cent to a record 279,550.
The figures will be welcomed by universities, particularly after the same data last year聽triggered warnings of an 鈥渋nescapably weak picture of demand and entry鈥 for the UK.
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Mark Corver, co-founder of the dataHE consultancy and former director of analysis and research at Ucas, told聽探花视频聽that universities will be paying close attention to such聽a key data set聽set this year.
鈥淭he headline end of cycle figures are consistent with earlier releases, with the higher success rate for UK 18 year olds enough to flip falling application rates into the rising entry rates, remaining the most important strategic signal for the sector,鈥 he added.
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Dr Corver highlighted聽a 鈥渞emarkable鈥 rise in record of prior acceptance (RPA) students who do not apply via Ucas in England, with growth concentrated in older age groups.聽The sector can also take comfort that the number of UK 18-year-olds from the most disadvantaged backgrounds who accepted a place is also at a record high.
However, the Ucas data shows a continuing trend聽from statistics released during clearing of top institutions hoovering up much of this year鈥檚 cohort.
Of UK 18-year-old accepted applicants, 37.9 per cent went to higher-tariff institutions 鈥 up from 34.5 per cent in 2023 and the largest annual increase since Ucas records began.
Medium-tariff providers accepted just 29.3 per cent of this cohort, which was a joint record low. And just 32.8 per cent went to the least-selective universities as a result of the largest fall on record.
Visa figures have聽repeatedly demonstrated the effect of the country鈥檚 ban on dependants, with international student numbers significantly down on last year.
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The Ucas data, which only represents a small portion of the total market, shows that the number of international accepted applicants fell 2.3 per cent from 2023. At 69,905, this is the lowest figure in eight years.
Recent Ucas data for the coming autumn鈥檚 medicine, dentistry and veterinary courses, or to study at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge,聽revealed a record number of early applications from China.
The end-of-cycle figures show that Chinese students still make up a quarter of all accepted applicants from overseas, but their total number fell 1.9 per cent.
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There were also聽declines in student numbers from the UK鈥檚 other top markets 鈥 India (14.8 per cent down), Hong Kong (8.3 per cent down) and Malaysia (1.8 per cent down).
Ucas chief executive Jo Saxton welcomed the increase in the number of UK 18-year-olds accepting places 鈥 particularly the record numbers of disadvantaged students.
鈥淩emoving barriers 鈥 both real and perceived 鈥 is an absolute priority for us, and it鈥檚 encouraging to see those numbers growing,鈥 said Dr Saxton.
鈥淯cas is here to help all applicants take their next step, and I remain committed to ensuring that everyone has access to the life-changing opportunities that higher education brings.鈥
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The figures also show that the number of UK-domiciled mature students who accepted a place grew from 106,195 in 2023 to 109,780.
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