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GCSE Grades Explained 2026

GCSE grades in England now run from 9 to 1, replacing the old A*–G system. This guide covers what the numbers mean for sixth form entry, university, and resit requirements.

GCSE grades explained

GCSE grades in England now run from 9 to 1, replacing the old A*–G system. If you sat GCSEs before 2017, or if your child is approaching their exams, this guide explains exactly what the numbers mean and what they unlock.

The GCSE Grading Scale: 9 to 1

GradeOld EquivalentWhat It Means
9A**Top ~3% of students
8A*/AHigh A*
7ALow A* / High A
6BHigh B
5C/BStrong pass — government benchmark
4CStandard pass — minimum threshold
3DBelow standard pass
2E
1F/G
UUUngraded

What Is a “Pass” at GCSE?

There are two pass thresholds:

What GCSE Grades Do You Need for Sixth Form?

Requirements vary by school and subject, but typical expectations are:

What GCSE Grades Do Universities Look At?

Universities primarily look at A-Level results, but GCSE grades matter in specific contexts:

Do You Need to Resit GCSE Maths or English?

If a student does not achieve grade 4 in GCSE English Language or GCSE Maths, they are required by law to continue studying those subjects as part of post-16 education. This typically means resitting in November or the following June.

Early tutoring support is one of the most effective ways to avoid a resit — or to pass the resit comfortably.

What to Do If GCSE Results Are Disappointing

  1. Request a review of marking — enquiries and appeals are available for most exam boards
  2. Consider resitting — November resits are available for Maths and English; June resits for all subjects
  3. Adjust post-16 plans if needed — some college courses have lower entry requirements than A-Levels
  4. Start tutoring early — the earlier support begins, the more options remain open

A tutor can make a significant difference to GCSE outcomes. Find a vetted GCSE tutor on TheTutorLink.

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