- Conditional
- Depends on grades/requirements
- Unconditional
- Place confirmed
- Your replies
- Firm (first) + insurance (backup)
- No offer?
- UCAS Clearing later in the cycle
Key takeaways
- A conditional offer depends on meeting grades or other requirements; unconditional is confirmed.
- You reply with a firm (first) choice and usually an insurance (backup) choice.
- Meet every condition — grades, English and finance — by the stated dates.
- Clearing later in the cycle matches applicants to remaining university places.
Conditional, unconditional, firm and insurance
Most offers are conditional — you must achieve the stated grades or meet conditions such as an English-language score. An unconditional offer means the place is already yours. When all your decisions are in, you choose a firm (first-choice) offer and, sensibly, an insurance (backup) offer with lower conditions, so you are protected if you narrowly miss your firm conditions. International students must also satisfy any English-language and financial conditions, and then move on to the CAS and visa stage.
Meeting conditions and Clearing
Once you have results, the university confirms your place if you have met the conditions. If you just miss, the university may still accept you, offer an alternative course, or you may fall to your insurance choice. If you hold no offers — or decline them — UCAS Clearing matches applicants to courses with remaining places, often a genuine route to a strong university. Study UK Now guides you through replies, condition-meeting and, if needed, Clearing, so you end up in the best place available to you.
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Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between a conditional and unconditional offer?
A conditional offer depends on you meeting specified requirements — usually exam grades, and for international students an English-language score and financial evidence. An unconditional offer means the place is already confirmed. Most international applicants receive conditional offers and confirm their place once results and conditions are met.
What is UCAS Clearing and can international students use it?
Clearing is the UCAS process, later in the application cycle, that matches applicants to courses with remaining places — useful if you hold no offers, declined them, or changed your mind. International students can use Clearing, though visa timelines must still allow enough time. Study UK Now helps you act fast and strategically in Clearing.
Sources — verified June 2026
Visa, fee and policy details change. Always confirm the latest on the official source before you rely on it.