Guide to New UK Medical Schools for International Applicants
Looking to study Medicine in the UK? This guide explores the newest medical schools and international campuses, highlighting entry requirements, UCAT expectations, tuition fees, and places available for international students.
Guide to MBBS/MBChB Programmes at New UK Medical Schools
Below we outline the key details for a series of new medical programmes, focusing on entry requirements for international students, UCAT expectations, selection processes, tuition fees, and available international places (where known). All information is for 2026 entry (five-year MBBS/MBChB programmes, not including gateway/foundation courses unless noted).
What do we mean by “new” medical schools?
These are UK programmes launched or expanded in the last decade or so, plus UK universities running overseas campuses (e.g., Malaysia, Malta). Many were designed with input from established partners (for example, Greater Manchester with Leicester; Hertfordshire with St George’s), and often feature modern facilities, early patient contact, and smaller cohorts.
Why international applicants might consider them?
· Subject flexibility: many accept Biology or Chemistry + one more science (some still require both—check each profile).
· Entry profile: typical offers sit around AAA–ABB, a notch down from the A*AA–AAA common at long-established schools.
· UCAT landscape: thresholds are often friendlier; some routes don’t require UCAT (e.g., Buckingham; UCLan for international applicants).
· More international seats: several providers are not limited by the UK 7.5% cap, so cohorts can include 50–100+ international places.
· Direct application options: many accept direct applications (outside UCAS), preserving your five UCAS choices (Brunel is the main exception).
· Cost & location choice: overseas campuses (e.g., NUMed Malaysia, QMUL Malta) can offer lower tuition and living costs with a UK-awarded degree.
· Learning experience: smaller groups often mean more tutor contact; big-city or overseas settings change the case-mix you’ll see.
Disclaimer: FindU is an independent social enterprise promoting UK education and equal opportunities. We have no financial affiliations, sponsorships, or commercial arrangements with any university featured. All information is for general guidance and may change without notice—please verify details directly with the universities.
University of Hertfordshire Medical School – MBBS (A100)
Hertfordshire Medical School (Hatfield) opens its 5-year MBBS programme in September 2026, initially for international students only (plans to include UK students in later years). The programme is delivered with support from St George’s’s, University of London.
Entry Requirements:
Standard offer is AAA at A level (Chemistry and Biology at grade A, plus a third subject at grade A). The third subject can be outside science (humanities/arts welcomed), but General Studies, Critical Thinking etc. are excluded.
IB 36 points with Higher Level 6 in Chem or Bio and HL5 in a second science or Maths. GCSEs: Minimum of 5 GCSEs at grade 6/B or above, including English, Maths, and Double Science (or Biology, Chemistry, etc.). (Do not worry if you did not take GCSEs. Universities are typically flexible with international applicants given their diverse educational backgrounds.)
Graduate entrants need at least a 2:1 in any discipline, plus A levels (at least BBB with B in Chem/Bio).
English language:
IELTS 7.0 overall and 7.0 in each component is required.
UCAT:
Required. All applicants must take UCAT in summer prior to application. No fixed cut-off – Hertfordshire will rank applicants by UCAT score and invite a certain number to interview, provided academic requirements are met. They explicitly state they do not set a standard UCAT cutoff and the threshold for interview will vary each year. (Thus, aim for as high a UCAT as possible; note that Band 4 in SJT is usually not considered in line with common practice, though not explicitly stated here). For reference, being a new school, no historical median is available; all candidates meeting minimum grades are considered with their UCAT in the ranking pool.
Selection Process:
Multiple Mini Interviews (MMIs) are used for shortlisted applicants, held between November 2025 and April 2026. Invitations to interview depend on a combination of academics and UCAT ranking. At interview, they will assess communication, motivation, values, and discuss applicants’ understanding of medicine (including any work or voluntary experience). Personal statements and references are considered in shortlisting and during interviews (especially to discuss work experience and commitment). After interviews, offers are made to the top performers. Conditional offers require health and background clearance and a £10,000 deposit toward fees (for visa CAS issuance).Tuition Fees:
£42,000 per year (International). (Home students are not yet admitted; EU with settled status could qualify as home if/when places open in future.)International Places:
70 international seats in the first cohort (2026). The medical school will train up to 70 students per year initially, all of whom will be international (non-UK) in 2026. (Hertfordshire is working to secure funded home places in the future, but 2026 entry is entirely international.)Professional Accreditations:
This programme is currently under review by the General Medical Council (GMC) , In the unlikely scenario of not receiving GMC accreditation, students would be transferred to our contingency partner university, City St George’s’s to complete their studies. This ensures that students who pass all of their assessments receive a GMC-recognised medical qualification.Direct Application:
International applicants may apply DIRECTLY to the university.
FindU’s notes:
While Hertfordshire’s medicine programme is new, it could pose itself as good value for money amongst the new UK medical schools. At £42,000 per year, it’s tuition is approximately 15% less than its London rivals such as Brunel, St Mary’s and Buckingham, yet it adopted the teaching curriculum from St George’s University of London, which has been teaching medicine and doctor’s training as far back as the 1700s. Located in Hatfield, Hertfordshire is approximately 35 minutes away from zone 1 London by train, and students could enjoy a campus style experience while no sacrificing the London life.
Brunel University London – MBBS (A100)
Brunel’s 5-year MBBS programme (based in Uxbridge, West London) is a relatively new medical school (first intake 2021). It is open to both international and home students, but the majority of places are private (self-funded). Brunel places emphasis on team-based learning and early clinical exposure.
Entry Requirements:
A level requirements are AAA–AAB. Specifically, at least AAB with grade A in Chemistry or Biology, a second science (Chemistry, Biology or Physics) or Mathematics at grade A, and a third subject at grade A/B. The typical offer is AAA (e.g. A in Bio, A in Chem, A in third subject) but AAB may be considered in context.
IB: 36 points with Higher Level 6 in Chem or Bio and HL5 in a second science or maths. GCSE: Minimum 5 GCSEs at Grade B/6 including two sciences, Maths (grade B/5) and English (grade C/4). (Do not worry if you did not take GCSEs. Universities are typically flexible with international applicants given their diverse educational backgrounds.)Graduate applicants need at least a 2:1 in a related subject (or Merit in a relevant Master’s), plus the above GCSEs; Brunel may require recency of study within 5 years.
English:
IELTS ≥7.0 in each component is required.
UCAT (or GAMSAT):
Required. Brunel accepts either UCAT or GAMSAT for admission. School leavers typically take UCAT.
No fixed UCAT cut-off is set; Brunel ranks applicants by their UCAT score each cycle and invites the top segment to interview. (They do not disclose an exact cut-off because it depends on the applicant pool each year. Note: Applicants scoring Band 4 in SJT are automatically rejected. GAMSAT is an alternative for graduates (score validity 2 years).Selection Process:
Shortlisting is primarily by UCAT/GAMSAT score (academically eligible applicants are ranked by test score). The top-ranked are invited to interview until all slots are filled.
Interviews follow a Multiple Mini Interview format (online). Brunel’s MMIs assess motivation, ethical reasoning, communication, and other attributes (personal statements and references are not used for interview selection, but commitment to medicine may be probed during MMI scenarios). Following MMIs, offers are made based on interview performance. Note: Brunel gives special consideration to its own Biomedical Science undergraduates (top students can get fast-track to interview).
Tuition Fees:
£49,395 per year (International). (For reference, a limited number of UK students are admitted who pay £9,250, but these are not publicly funded loans for the first 4 years. The MBBS at Brunel is primarily a self-funded programme, even for UK students.)International Places:
Brunel’s intake is roughly 100 students per year, with the majority being international. Initially, Brunel admitted only international students; it now also admits some UK students (UK seats are limited – e.g. around 10–20% of the cohort). Most places (≈80+ seats) are for international fee-paying student. (Brunel does not have a government quota, so it can expand international numbers as demand allows. The programme is oversubscribed, so a high UCAT is crucial.)
Application:
All applicants must apply via UCAS
University of Lancashire (UCLan) – MBBS (A100)
UCLan (Preston) established its MBBS programme in 2015. It is unique in that it was designed primarily for self-funded international students, with a small number of UK students from the local region. It’s a 5-year MBBS equivalent to other UK programmes (GMC-approved).
Entry Requirements (International):
A level: Typical offer is AAA (including Chemistry and one other science at A; taken in one sitting). UCLan specifies at least two sciences including Chemistry, so e.g. A level grades AAA with Chemistry and Biology would fulfill this.IB: 36 points overall, with 3 HL subjects including Chemistry and another science, totaling 144 UCAS Tariff points (which typically means HL grades around 6,6,5 or better).
Alternative Qualifications:
UCLan accepts a wide range of international qualifications; as guidance, they require equivalent to the above (e.g. Indian XII 90% overall with 90% in Chem and another scienc; US/Canadian – high GPA ~3.6 and strong science background, etc.). GCSE: Grade B/5 in English and Maths (or equivalent) is required, but international students who didn’t take GCSE can satisfy this via their high school results or English tests. UCLan also requires evidence of “broad study of science, English and Maths up to age 16” for international applicants (for many, this is covered by high school curricula).English Requirement:
IELTS 7.0 with 7.0 in each component or equivalent.
UCAT:
Not required for international applicants. UCLan’s policy is that UK (home) applicants must sit UCAT, but international students are not required to take the UCAT. For 2026 entry, if you are an overseas applicant, you do not need a UCAT score – your application will be assessed on academics, personal statement, and a transferable skills (work experience) form instead.Selection Process:
Academic screening:
You must meet the grades and subject requirements. Eligible applicants are then asked to submit a Transferable Skills Statement detailing any relevant work or voluntary experience and skills (clinical experience is not strictly required, but you should demonstrate understanding of caregiving, teamwork, etc.). UCLan places weight on this statement in lieu of admissions tests.Interviews:
Shortlisted candidates are invited to an MMI (Multiple Mini Interview). UCLan conducts MMIs either in person (including sessions in Preston and at some international locations like Dubai, Delhi, Kuala Lumpur, etc.) or via video cal. The MMI will typically have several stations assessing communication, motivation for medicine, ethical scenarios, teamwork, etc. Personal statements and the transferable skills form may be referenced in the interview (e.g. discussing what you learned from any work experience). Final offers are based on interview performance. Note: UCLan’s selection is competitive – for 2020 entry, over 1,600 applied and 700+ were interviewed, for a limited number of spots. They heavily favor candidates who show strong academic consistency and well-rounded experiences in their application.Tuition Fees:
£49,000 per year. This is the 2025/26 rate; fees typically rise with inflation. UCLan’s fee covers tuition and all mandatory course costs (clinical placements, exams, etc. International students must also pay a £15,000 deposit upon accepting an offer (this goes toward the first-year fee).International Places:
UCLan admits approximately 70–75 international students per year. The cohort size is around 80–100, but only ~15 are UK students (from the Northwest region on special scholarships). This means about 80-90% of the class is international.Direct Application:
International applicants apply DIRECTLY to the university.
Queen Mary University of London (Malta Campus) – MBBS (A110)
Queen Mary University of London (QMUL) offers a 5-year MBBS taught by Barts and The London School of Medicine in Malta (Gozo campus). The degree is identical to the QMUL MBBS in London and is GMC-recognised. This programme began in 2017 as a collaboration with the Maltese government. It’s open to international and EU students (UK students can also apply, but no UK funding is available).
Entry Requirements:
A levels: AAA in three subjects, achieved in one sitting. Must include Chemistry or Biology, plus a second science (Chemistry, Biology, Physics or Maths) – both at grade A. The third A can be in any rigorous subject (excluding General Studies or Critical Thinking) GCSEs: Applicants should have at least grade B/6 in GCSE (or equivalent O-level) Maths, English, and Biology, Chemistry (or Double Science). (Do not worry if you did not take GCSEs. Universities are typically flexible with international applicants given their diverse educational backgrounds.)IB: 34 points overall, with 6,6,5 at Higher Level (including Chemistry or Biology and a second science or Maths). (So HL Chem/Bio and HL second science should be at least 6 and 6, with a third HL at 5.)
International qualifications:
European Baccalaureate requires 82% overall with 8.2 in Biology and 8.2 in Chemistry. Other country-specific qualifications are considered case-by-case at equivalent levels (for example, a U.S. student would need APs and SATs comparable to AAA A levels, an Indian student might need ~90% in standard XII plus possibly NEET).Graduate entrants:
At least an upper-second class (2:1) degree. Non-science graduates need A levels in Chem/Bio at B grades in addition to their degree. (Graduate graduate requirements mirror those of London campus.)UCAT:
Required. QMUL Malta uses the UCAT as part of its admissions process. They shortlist based on a combined score of UCAT and academic qualifications (just like Barts London). In practice, they have had a UCAT threshold around the 40th percentile in recent cycles, which is lower than most UK schools but still a factor. They do not explicitly exclude any SJT bands, but a poor SJT could factor into final rankings (Band 4 would be a disadvantage).
UCAT is used to rank applicants alongside their UCAS Tariff (predicted/achieved grades). Malta typically invites a broad range of candidates who meet minimum AAA and have a decent but not necessarily top UCAT.Selection Process:
Shortlisting: QMUL assigns a score combining UCAT and academic achievement (UCAS tariff for school-leavers, or weighted degree score for graduates), similar to their London process. Top-ranked applicants are invited to interview.Interviews:
Typically panel interviews (which may be conducted virtually or in-person in Malta/London). The interview will cover motivation, ethical scenarios, problem-solving, and understanding of being a doctor (including why Malta). Personal statements and references are usually not scored but may inform interview questions. For 2025, interviews were being given as early as December for strong applicants. After interviews, offers are made based on combined scores (academic + UCAT + interview performance).
The offer is conditional on meeting A level/IB grades if still pending, and on a satisfactory health and police clearance. Note: QMUL Malta graduates have the same opportunity to apply for UK Foundation Programme jobs – it’s reported that 100% of MBBS Malta graduates obtained an FY1 placement in the NHS (often in Barts Health NHS Trust or elsewhere in UK), which is a strong outcome.Tuition Fees:
€ 39,500 per year (international). Fees are set in Euros: this is about £33,500 per year which is lower than typical UK international fees. Living costs in Malta (Gozo) are also less than London.International Places:
QMUL Malta takes ~60 students per year.Direct Application:
International applicants apply DIRECTLY to the university.
FindU’s notes:
Queen Mary Malta offers prestigious Russell Group brand with less competitive entry requirements compared to its London campus offerings. Costs are 10,000 – 15,000 gbp per year less than most UK universities ( international fees ), and living costs in Malta is 20% - 50% cheaper than London, and students still maintain an English speaking environment ( Malta was a British colony until its independence in 1964 ). Malta offers a relaxed, Mediterranean atmosphere and those looking for big urban metropolitan life might find it too relaxing.
Newcastle University Medicine Malaysia (NUMed) – MBBS
NUMed is Newcastle University’s branch campus in Johor, Malaysia, offering the same curriculum as Newcastle UK’s MBBS. It’s a 5-year MBBS degree awarded by Newcastle University (UK), accredited by both the UK GMC and Malaysian Medical Council. Graduates earn a UK Primary Medical Qualification and are eligible for provisional registration in both UK and Malaysia. The programme started in 2011; intakes are every September with one cohort per year.
Entry Requirements:
A levels: at least ABB (in Biology, Chemistry, and either Physics or Mathematics)IB: Minimum 33 points with HL in Biology, Chemistry, and Maths, each with score ≥5 (Total 33 includes bonus points; HL 5 corresponds to roughly A level B).
Other qualifications: NUMed lists many equivalents – e.g. STPM (Malaysia) ABB in sciences Australian ATAR 85 or MUFY 80% Canadian Grade 12 average 80% (with sciences), Indian XII 80% (with 80% in Bio and Chem) etc. In all cases, Chemistry, Biology and a third science/maths are needed at a high level.
Foundation: Newcastle’s own Foundation in Biomedical Science (at NUMed or NCUK) with CGPA ≥3.5 is accepted.Graduate applicants with a science degree (2:1 equivalent) are considered.
UCAT: Not required.
NUMed does not use UCAT for admission. (In fact, they explicitly state “A UCAT result is currently not required for entry to NUMed Malaysia”.) Admission is based on academic qualifications and an interview.Selection Process:
Academic review comes first – applicants must meet the grade requirements and subject prerequisites. Those who meet the criteria are then invited to an interview. NUMed typically conducts interviews in a panel format (often via Zoom or in-person in Malaysia for local students). They will assess communication skills, motivation for medicine, understanding of a medical career, ethical reasoning, etc. Because there is no admissions test, the interview is a crucial component. Some international partner agencies note that NUMed expects a personal statement and reference as part of the application, which are considered during selection. The process is competitive but slightly less so than the UK campus – NUMed tends to attract candidates aiming for a quality UK degree with lower entry grades (ABB) and lower cost. Tip: Ensure you can articulate why you want to study in Malaysia and your future plans (since international grads cannot do housemanship in Malaysia, you should have a plan for internship back home or in the UK).Tuition Fees:
For 2025 entry, tuition is RM 126,500 per year for international students (and RM 100,600 for Malaysian citizens. This is about £21,000 per year (considerably cheaper than UK tuition). Note that from September 2025, Malaysia has a 6% SST tax on educational fees, which does apply to international students (adding ~RM7,590 per year. Malaysian students are exempt from this tax. Even with tax, the total (~RM 134k) is around £24,000/year. Living costs in Malaysia are also much lower than in the UK.International Places:
NUMed admits both Malaysian and international students. The class size is around 100–120 students per year, with roughly half Malaysians and half international (this can vary). (Important: International graduates cannot do internship in Malaysia due to local policy, but they are eligible to apply for UK Foundation Programme or return to their home country. NUMed boasts that 100% of their graduates who sought UK Foundation posts have obtained them in the past.)Direct Application:
International applicants apply DIRECTLY to the university.
FindU’s notes:
Newcastle Malaysia (NUMed) is a branch campus of the Newcastle medical school located in Educity, an education focused district right next to international schools, colleges, and University of Reading’s Malaysia campus, and 30 minutes drive away from Johor Bahru ( the major city and border with Singapore ). International student tuition and living costs are cheapest amongst all UK medicine programmes, with student accommodation costing 2,000 – 2,500 gbp for a 40 weeks contract, about 1/2 – 1/4 of what typically 40 weeks would cost in the UK. Graduate prospect is great if students were to seek foundation training upon graduation in the UK, with NUMed reporting 100% foundation training placement rate. Non-Malaysian students, however, cannot complete their foundation training locally.
University of Greater Manchester Medical School (Bolton) – MBChB (A100)
The University of Bolton (Now renamed to University of Greater Manchester) is launching a new 5-year MBChB, delivered in partnership with the University of Leicester’s curriculum. First intake is planned for 2025 (pending GMC approval), limited to international students only.
Entry Requirements (International):
At least 136 UCAS Tariff points (equivalent to A level AAB).Must include Chemistry or Biology, plus a second science (Biology, Chemistry, Physics, or Maths) at A level; third subject can be any (excluding General Studies, Critical Thinking, etc.).
IB: 34 (with 6,6,6 at HL including Chem or Bio and another science). Minimum 5 GCSEs at grades 6/B or higher, including English, Maths, and two sciences. (Do not worry if you did not take GCSEs. Universities are typically flexible with international applicants given their diverse educational backgrounds.)Graduate applicants need a 2:1 degree and at least BBB at A level (including B in Chem or Bio).
English Requirement:
IELTS 7.0 with 7.0 in each component or equivalent.UCAT:
Required. All applicants must sit UCAT in the year of application. There is no specified cut-off yet; UCAT will be used to “widen access and make fairer choices” among highly qualified applicants. (Since 2026 will be the first cycle using UCAT, no historical cut-off is available. Expect that a competitive score will strengthen the application, but all with minimum requirements and a UCAT score will be considered.)Selection Process:
Applications are shortlisted by academic criteria and personal statement, then invited to online interviews (MMIs) if criteria are met. Interviews (virtual MMIs) assess values, communication, problem-solving, and commitment to medicine. Performance at interview determines offers. Work experience is encouraged (can be virtual or in-person) to demonstrate understanding of healthcare; it may be discussed at interview.Tuition Fees:
£45,000 per year (international). No home/EU places are offered (home applicants are not eligible for this course).International Places:
100% international – the course is only available to international students. Exact first-year intake size is not explicitly stated, but being a new programme it is expected to be a small cohort (likely a few dozen students) in its initial years.Direct Application:
International applicants apply DIRECTLY to the university.
University of Buckingham — MBChB
Buckingham is an independent UK medical school delivering a 4.5-year MB ChB that is GMC-accredited (since 2019). There is one January intake per year with a single cohort. Teaching starts with integrated, systems-based learning and progresses to full-time clinical rotations across partner NHS trusts.
Entry Requirements:
A levels: ABB including Chemistry or Biology (achieved in one sitting). If you do not hold both sciences at A level, the other should be to GCSE/IGCSE grade B/6 or equivalent. Maths & English are usually expected at GCSE grade 4/C+.IB: ~32–34 points (three HLs) with HL6 in Chemistry or Biology and HL5+ in the other (plan for 34 as a safe benchmark; confirm with admissions).
Graduates: normally a 2:1 in a cognate subject.
English Requirement:
IELTS 7.0 overall, ≥6.5 in each component. The school recommends UKVI IELTS for visa/alternative course reasons.UCAT:
Not required. Buckingham does not use UCAT or BMAT. Instead, selection runs via the school’s digital Multiple Mini Assessment (MMA) followed by MMI.Selection Process:
1. Academic review — confirming subjects/grades (or predictions) meet the minima.
2. MMA — short computer-based tasks probing analysis, interpretation and judgement aligned to GMC Good Medical Practice. Exceptionally strong performance can lead to an early offer.
3. MMI — multi-station interview assessing communication, ethics, motivation and professionalism.
(For Jan-2026, MMA dates have included mid/late August, with additional dates announced on the course page.)Tuition Fees:
£45,000 per year (international); Deposit £10,000 credited to Year 1 upon accepting an offer.International Places:
As an independent medical school, Buckingham is not subject to the UK 7.5% cap on international students. Intake size is set by the university and is not fixed publicly each cycle.Direct Application:
International applicants apply DIRECTLY to Buckingham via the university portal. The course is also listed on UCAS (code 71A8) if you prefer to use a UCAS choice.
FindU’s notes:
Buckingham is a small, student-centred environment in Buckinghamshire, with placements at partner NHS trusts (e.g., Milton Keynes and surrounding areas). The January start is helpful if you want a mid-academic-year entry, and the no-UCAT route suits applicants who prefer being assessed via MMA/MMI rather than a high-pressure aptitude test. Living costs are generally lower than central London, which helps across multiple years.
St Mary’s University, Twickenham – MBBS
St Mary’s University (Twickenham, London) is opening a new Catholic medical school in 2026 – the first of its kind in the UK. The 5-year MBBS is delivered in partnership with the University of Central Lancashire (using UCLAN’s MBBS curriculum). The first intake (Sept 2026) will be international students only (no UK/home places initially). Teaching will take place on St Mary’s historic London campus with clinical placements in local hospitals and communities.
Entry Requirements (International):
A-level: AAA (achieved in one sitting). Must include Chemistry or Biology (grade A) and a second science (Biology, Chemistry, Physics or Maths at grade A), plus a third subject at grade A. They encourage a broad third subject (even humanities), but do not accept General Studies or Critical Thinking at A2.IB: 36 points with 6,6,6 at Higher Level, including two sciences (Chemistry or Biology, and one other science or maths). GCSEs: Minimum of grade 6/B in Maths, English Language, Biology, and Chemistry (or equivalent Double Science). (At least 4 subjects: Maths, English, Bio, Chem at 6/B). (Do not worry if you did not take GCSEs. Universities are typically flexible with international applicants given their diverse educational backgrounds.)
Graduate applicants need a minimum 2:1 degree (within last 3 years) plus at least A level ABB (including Chemistry/Biology or another science at A).
English Requirement:
IELTS ≥7.0 in all components is required.UCAT:
Required. All applicants must sit the UCAT (no other test accepted; GAMSAT considered only if UCAT unavailable in your country). St Mary’s will use a “gathered field” ranking of UCAT scores to shortlist candidates. They have not published a cut-off; however, being a new school, they likely calibrate each cycle’s threshold based on the applicant pool. In practice: aim for a competitive UCAT – since no cut-off is given, a safe approach is to score at least around the 50th–60th percentile or above to remain competitive. (No SJT band exclusions are stated, but assume Band 4 would be unfavorable.)Selection Process:
Shortlisting is based on academics and UCAT ranking. There is no mention of a point system for GCSEs, but strong grades are expected (they note applicants with just minimum GCSEs are “unlikely to be shortlisted” and they score 8 GCSEs in their internal ranking).Interviews:
Invited applicants will undergo Multiple Mini Interviews (MMIs) online. They will assess personal qualities, ethical reasoning, and motivation. Personal statements and work experience are considered during the interview (not for initial shortlisting) – e.g., they say work experience isn’t required but can be discussed at interview, and the personal statement is used in the interview stage. After MMIs, offers are given to successful candidates.Tuition Fees:
£48,000 per yearInternational Places:
All places in 2026 are international. The programme is not open to UK/home applicants in the first year. The anticipated class size hasn’t been explicitly stated; given similar new schools, expect on the order of 50–70 international students in the inaugural cohort.Direct Application:
International applicants apply DIRECTLY to the university.
FindU’s Recommendations for New Medicine programmes
(Always double-check each school’s website before you apply—rules and numbers can change.)
1) Entry Requirements — Subjects and Grades
Didn’t take BOTH Biology and Chemistry? You might have more doors open than you think!
A lot of the newer medicine programmes accept applicants with either Biology or Chemistry, plus one more science (Chemistry/Biology/Physics/Maths). (Exceptions: Hertfordshire and Newcastle still expect both Biology and Chemistry.)
Check the exact requirement of each programme: some schools consider Maths a “science” subject; a few don’t. Always confirm on the school page before you lock your choices.
Grades: slightly softer, still demanding
Most of these programmes ask for around AAA–ABB, while most long-established MBBS/MBChB (especially Russell Group) courses ask for A*AA–AAA. So yes, you’re often looking at 1–3 grades lighter offers here—without downgrading to a second-tier career outcome (you still graduate to the same respected degree and GMC licence).
What this means for you
If you’re predicted AAA–AAB, these newer options can be your match/reach rather than a long shot. If you’re around ABB, your application needs to sparkle elsewhere (reflections, references, interview performance).
Don’t undercook your choices: mix ambitious + realistic + safety so you’ve got outcomes in April/May, not just hope.
Bottom line:
Pick schools that match the subjects you actually took and the grades you’re realistically on for. It’s not about settling—it’s about aiming smart so you end up in a course where you’ll thrive for five demanding years and a career you are passionate about.
2) Admissions tests (UCAT) — how important is it really?
The UCAT can feel like a big hurdle, but the playing field isn’t identical everywhere.
Newer medicine programmes often set lower UCAT thresholds than the big, oversubscribed UK schools. Satellite campuses tend to be even more flexible: think QMUL London vs QMUL Malta, or Newcastle UK vs NUMed Malaysia—the competitive UCAT percentile is often much lower at the overseas campus in the same year. And at the very relaxed end, UCLan and Buckingham don’t require UCAT for international applicants.
What this means for you
If your UCAT is good-ish but not top-decile, you still have strong Russell Group targets (especially Malta/Malaysia options).
If UCAT just isn’t your test, you can still apply competitively using academics + interviews.
How newer schools actually use UCAT
Lots of places don’t run a blunt “cut-off and goodbye.” More commonly they:
check you meet the academic minimum, then rank applicants using UCAT alongside academics, then invite the top slice to MMI.
Your SJT band may be used as a tiebreaker or to screen out Band 4—so don’t ignore it.
Bottom line:
UCAT matters, but not the same way everywhere. Aim high, but build a list that fits your score profile—and remember that interviews, reflections and real-world experience often decide the offer.
3) International places — what are my chances, really?
Think of UK Medicine programmes like a concert with limited VIP tickets. At most established UK med schools, the government caps international places at 7.5% of the cohort. That’s why even giant names can end up with only a handful of places for overseas applicants—competition is ferocious, and tiny changes in UCAT or grades can decide everything.
Newer and independent programmes (and UK universities’ overseas campuses like Malta or Malaysia) play by different rules. Many aren’t bound by that 7.5% cap and can welcome much larger international cohorts—often 50–100+ students a year. Same degree, same GMC-aligned standards, but simply more seats.
What this feels like as an applicant:
You’ll still need strong academics and a solid interview, but your odds of getting an interview at all improve when there are more international places on the table. It’s the difference between trying to squeeze through a keyhole and walking through a normal doorway.
Bottom line:
if you’re an international applicant, spread your risk. Keep a couple of capped, big-name targets and add programmes with larger international intakes so you aren’t rolling the dice on micro-quotas.
4) Application routes — UCAS vs direct (two lanes, one destination)
Picture two parallel lanes leading to the same goal.
Lane A: UCAS
This is the classic route. For Medicine, you can submit up to four Medicine choices (plus one non-Medicine choice if you want a safety net). The key date is 15 October—that’s the standard deadline for Medicine. UCAS is the only application channel for most traditional medical schools, but it also limits how many shots you get in that lane.
Lane B: Direct applications
Here’s where newer and international-focused programmes shine. Many of them (e.g., UCLan, QMUL Malta, NUMed, St Mary’s, Greater Manchester, Hertfordshire) allow you to apply directly through the university portal. Crucially, direct applications don’t use up your UCAS slots. You can run both lanes in parallel—stick to UCAS timelines and send a few direct applications to widen your net.
What this looks like in practice:
You build a strong UCAS application for four Medicine choices (plus a sensible non-Medicine backup if you want).
At the same time, you submit direct applications to a couple of programmes with larger international intakes or friendlier UCAT expectations.
You track two sets of dates (UCAS deadlines and each university’s direct timeline), keep your documents ready (passport, transcripts, predicted grades, English test), and respond quickly to interview invites.
Bottom line:
Don’t choose between UCAS or direct—use both. UCAS gives you structure and prestige targets; direct keeps your options open and boosts your interview chances without sacrificing your UCAS choices.
5) Reputation & Rankings — More Than a Badge
Brand names matter, but not always in the way people think. In the UK, your degree certificate lists the university, not the campus. So a graduate from QMUL (Malta) still holds a Queen Mary degree; NUMed grads hold a Newcastle degree. That can help with first impressions, LinkedIn searches, and family peace of mind.
What brand doesn’t do is guarantee a better bedside manner or easier exams. Teaching quality depends on curriculum, placements, supervision, and how you learn. Many newer schools were built with experienced partners (e.g., Greater Manchester with Leicester; Hertfordshire with St George’s’s), so the academic DNA is recognisably UK-medical-school standard.
Where brand can matter is outside the UK. Some regulators and employers abroad recognise universities rather than campus locations (e.g., Singapore), which keeps the Russell Group halo intact. Others are stricter (e.g., Hong Kong), so you should check those details early if you plan to return home.
How to use “reputation” well
Treat it as one factor among many: placements, support, exam style, living costs, and the number of international seats you’re actually competing for.
Ask, “Will this environment help me get the scores, references, and experiences I need for Foundation Training, Specialty Training, or a move abroad?”
Bottom line:
A strong brand can open a door, but your academic performance, references, and clinical skills are what keep doors open.
6) Graduate prospects — what really happens after med school
Inside the UK, Medicine is Medicine. The NHS needs doctors, and virtually all UK-med-school graduates move into Foundation training. League tables show Graduate Prospects clustered between 98–100% from the “top” to “bottom” medical school in the UK—so the differentiator isn’t “will I get a job?” but how well prepared you are for Foundation Training and beyond.
Thinking globally?
Singapore: recognises universities, not campuses—good news for Newcastle and Queen Mary grads wherever they studied.
Hong Kong: more restrictive—check the exemption list; NUMed and QMUL Malta aren’t currently on it.
Australia & Canada: value GMC-accredited UK training, but have their own exams and registration steps—totally doable with planning.
USA: usually requires USMLE + US residency; longer road, but many UK grads make it.
Bottom line:
Your day-to-day learning, feedback, and habits will shape your prospects more than a ranking table. Pick the place that helps you perform well and stay well—that’s what translates into jobs, specialties, and options abroad.
7) Study location — more than a backdrop
Where you study shapes what you learn, how you live, and how much you spend. The labs will meet GMC standards everywhere, but the cases you see, the pace on the wards, and your off-duty life can feel very different from place to place.
How it changes your learning
Big cities like London, Birmingham, Manchester are busy, diverse and tertiary-care heavy. You’ll meet patients from many cultures and see complex, specialist cases—brilliant for breadth and communication skills. Smaller UK cities (think Preston for UCLan) tend to offer tighter hospital teams and more continuity; you might follow the same patient over time and get extra hands-on moments because there are fewer students at each bedside. Overseas campuses—Malta (QMUL) or Malaysia (NUMed)—add a new health-system context: similar UK curriculum, different diseases and pathways. That global perspective is gold if you plan to work internationally later.
How it changes your life
Campus feel matters. A self-contained campus often means green space, societies that everyone actually shows up to, and a community you bump into daily. A city campus drops you into cafés, ethnic groceries, major stations and airports—great if you crave energy (and a quick weekend trip). Ask yourself: Where will I concentrate best during exam weeks? What kind of social life recharges me? Do I want everything walkable, or the buzz of a big city even if it means longer commutes?
What it does to your budget
Money isn’t everything, but it’s something. London can cost ~15–35% more overall than many regional cities once you add rent, transport and food. Cooking saves a lot—those “quick bites” add up fast (a Big Mac Meal in 2025 London is about £9). Scholarships for international med students are limited everywhere, and working part-time is capped at 20 hours in term—medicine is intense, so even that can be unrealistic mid-semester. If total cost is front-of-mind, NUMed (Malaysia) and QMUL Malta often mean lower tuition and living costs than a UK city, while keeping a UK-awarded degree.
Bottom line
Pick the environment where you’ll learn best for five demanding years. Big-city breadth, small-city continuity, or overseas global perspective—there isn’t a “right” answer. Match the location to your study style, support system and budget, then go all-in.