BTEC to UCAS Points Converter

BTEC to UCAS Points Converter | All BTEC Types Covered

BTEC to UCAS Points Converter

Select your BTEC type and grade to see your UCAS points, A Level equivalent, and how you compare to university entry requirements.

UCAS Points
tariff points
A Level Equiv.
approximate equiv.
Grade
Your grade in context
Do you meet these entry requirements?
Important: Not all universities and courses accept BTEC qualifications. Points totals are only relevant where the university specifies a BTEC route. Always check whether your target course explicitly accepts BTECs before applying. Use the UCAS course search tool to confirm.
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How BTEC UCAS Points Are Calculated

BTEC qualifications use a grade structure of Distinction* (D*), Distinction (D), Merit (M), and Pass (P). For qualifications with multiple units, like the Extended Diploma, you receive a combined grade like D*D*D or DMM. Each combination has a fixed UCAS Tariff Point value set by the official UCAS tariff.

// BTEC points are looked up, not calculated
UCAS Points = Tariff lookup(BTEC Type + Grade)

// Extended Diploma (3-unit equivalent) examples:
D*D*D* = 168 pts | DDD = 144 pts | DMM = 112 pts | PPP = 48 pts

// Diploma (2-unit equivalent) examples:
D*D* = 112 pts | DD = 96 pts | MM = 64 pts | PP = 32 pts

// Sub-Diploma (1-unit equivalent) examples:
D* = 56 pts | D = 48 pts | M = 32 pts | P = 16 pts
BTEC Extended Diploma vs A Levels: A BTEC National Extended Diploma (3-unit) is designed as a full-time equivalent to three A Levels. The top grade (D*D*D*) is worth 168 UCAS points, equivalent to A*A*A* at A Level. A DDD result is 144 points, equivalent to AAA. On a points basis, a high BTEC result is directly competitive with top A Level grades.
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Complete BTEC National UCAS Points Table

BTEC QualificationGradeUCAS PointsA Level Equivalent
Extended Diploma (3-unit)D*D*D*168A*A*A*
Extended Diploma (3-unit)D*D*D160A*A*A
Extended Diploma (3-unit)D*DD152A*AA
Extended Diploma (3-unit)DDD144AAA
Extended Diploma (3-unit)DDM128ABB
Extended Diploma (3-unit)DMM112BBC
Extended Diploma (3-unit)MMM96CCC
Extended Diploma (3-unit)MMP80CCD
Extended Diploma (3-unit)MPP64CDD
Extended Diploma (3-unit)PPP48DDD
Diploma (2-unit)D*D*112A*A*
Diploma (2-unit)DD96AA
Diploma (2-unit)DM80AB
Diploma (2-unit)MM64BB
Diploma (2-unit)MP48BC
Diploma (2-unit)PP32CC
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Do All Universities Accept BTEC?

This is the most important question a BTEC student needs to answer before applying. The short answer is: many do, but not all, and most have conditions.

Universities that commonly accept BTEC

Most post-1992 universities (also called modern universities) accept BTEC Extended Diplomas as the primary qualification for entry. Many pre-1992 universities also accept them for most of their courses, often with a DDM or above threshold. The University of the Arts London, many business schools, and creative arts programmes frequently list BTEC as a preferred route.

Courses that commonly do not accept BTEC

Medicine, dentistry, and most sciences with significant lab or mathematical prerequisites typically require A Level Chemistry, Biology, or Maths by name. Oxford and Cambridge rarely accept BTEC as the primary qualification. Some engineering and computing programmes at research-intensive universities require A Level Maths regardless of your BTEC subject.

Points do not override subject requirements: Even if your BTEC DDD gives you 144 UCAS points (equivalent to AAA), a course that requires A Level Chemistry will not accept it in place of that specific A Level. Always check the detailed entry requirements, not just the points threshold.

How to check if your course accepts BTEC

Go to the UCAS course search and look at the full entry requirements section. Each course listing shows whether it accepts BTEC and what grade is required. If the course says “including A Level Maths” and you do not have that, points do not help. If it says “or equivalent qualification including BTEC,” you are eligible.

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BTEC vs A Levels: The Points Comparison

On pure UCAS points, BTEC performs competitively. But the comparison is more nuanced than points alone suggest, and it matters for which route you take after sixth form or college.

BTEC Extended DiplomaUCAS PointsA Level EquivalentCompetitive Level
D*D*D*168A*A*A*Top universities
D*D*D160A*A*ACompetitive Russell Group
DDD144AAAStrong pre-92 universities
DDM128ABBMid-tier universities
DMM112BBCMost universities
MMM96CCCLower-tariff universities
Combining BTEC with A Levels: Many students take a BTEC alongside one or two A Levels. If your course allows this, your total UCAS points combine your BTEC points and your A Level points. Use the full UCAS Points Calculator on this site to calculate your combined total.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a BTEC DDD the same as AAA at A Level?
In terms of UCAS Tariff Points, yes. Both equal 144 points. However, they are not always treated identically by universities. Some courses accept both as equivalent. Others will accept a BTEC DDD for courses where subject-specific A Level knowledge is not essential, but will not accept it in place of subject-specific A Levels for courses like Medicine or Engineering. Always check each course’s specific entry requirements on UCAS.
What is the highest UCAS score I can get from a BTEC?
The highest is 168 points from a BTEC National Extended Diploma at D*D*D*. This is the same as A*A*A* at A Level. In practice, very few students achieve D*D*D*, but it is mathematically possible and fully equivalent in points terms.
Can I combine BTEC and A Level UCAS points?
Yes. UCAS points from any combination of Tariff qualifications add together. A BTEC Diploma (2 units) plus one A Level is a common combination. If your BTEC Diploma is DD (96 points) and your A Level is B (40 points), your total is 136 points. Check each course’s requirements to see whether they accept this type of combination.
Does my BTEC subject matter for university entry?
Yes, often more than you might expect. A BTEC in Business is well accepted for Business, Management, Marketing, and many social science courses. A BTEC in Health and Social Care is widely accepted for Nursing and Allied Health. A BTEC in IT is accepted for most Computing degrees at the majority of universities. The subject match between your BTEC and your course matters. A BTEC in Art and Design will not strengthen an application to Engineering.
What is the difference between BTEC National and BTEC Level 3?
BTEC National and BTEC Level 3 refer to the same qualification level. “National” is the commonly used name; “Level 3” refers to the qualification level on the Regulated Qualifications Framework (RQF). All BTEC Nationals are Level 3. The UCAS Tariff applies to Level 3 BTECs. BTEC First (Level 2) qualifications do not carry UCAS points.
Will my BTEC be accepted for nursing or healthcare courses?
BTEC Health and Social Care, and BTEC Applied Science, are widely accepted for nursing and many allied health courses at universities and NHS trusts. A common minimum requirement is a BTEC Extended Diploma at DMM or above. However, some universities also require a GCSE in Science at Grade 4 or above, and all nursing courses require English and Maths at GCSE Grade 4. Check each course individually as requirements differ between universities.

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