Pick your target university degree and we'll show the A-level subjects you need to take — required, strongly recommended, useful complements, and subjects to avoid — with typical UK offers and the famous Oxbridge / LSE / Imperial exceptions. Covers Medicine, Engineering, Law, Economics, Computer Science, Maths, the Sciences, Humanities, Languages, Arts and 15 more degrees.
Pick the degree you're aiming for. We'll show you which A-level subjects you need to take. If you're undecided between two, pick the stricter one — its subjects usually keep the other open too.
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Computing & Technology
Business & Economics
Social Sciences
Humanities
Languages
Arts & Design
Quick answers about picking A-level subjects for university.
Pick the university degree you're aiming for. We map that back to the A-level subjects you need to take — sorted into required (no offer without them), strongly recommended, recommended and useful complements — plus the typical UK offer (or IB total), the famous flagship-university exceptions (Oxbridge / LSE / Imperial), and country-specific notes where the answer materially differs (US / Singapore / Australia).
A-level subject choice is the single most consequential pre-university decision. Universities don't admit applicants with the 'wrong' A-levels regardless of grades — Medicine needs Chemistry; Cambridge Engineering needs Further Maths; Economics at LSE needs Maths. Picking the wrong combination closes degrees off completely.
Yes. For selective degrees, universities flag certain subjects as 'soft' or 'non-facilitating' — they don't actively hurt by themselves but can make a 3-subject combination uncompetitive. Critical Thinking and General Studies are commonly excluded from offers entirely. A-level Law is generally not preferred for LLB degrees (top schools want a different rigorous subject). The result page flags the avoid-list per degree.
Mostly yes for required subjects, but flagship universities (Oxford, Cambridge, Imperial, LSE, UCL, NUS, NTU, ETH Zurich, MIT, Stanford) often layer on additional requirements — Cambridge Engineering wants Further Maths; LSE Economics wants A* in Maths; Oxford Medicine doesn't accept Maths/Further Maths as your only quantitative subject. The result page surfaces the famous exceptions. For your final shortlist, always cross-check each university's specific course page.
US Medicine and Law are post-graduate degrees — different pathway entirely. US universities are generally more flexible about specific subjects (they look at GPA + SAT/ACT + AP credits holistically). Australian universities mirror UK requirements closely for selective degrees like Engineering and Medicine. Singapore universities (NUS, NTU, SMU) are often as strict as the UK Russell Group. The result page flags these country variations for each degree.
The recommendations follow each degree's published entry requirements at the major UK and IB-receiving universities, refreshed annually. Requirements DO drift — flagship universities sometimes tighten or loosen what they accept. Always cross-check the specific course page on the university's own admissions site before locking in your subject choices. This tool is the orientation; the university's own course page is the contract.
Smart move — most students change their mind between Year 11 and Year 13. The strongest 'open-doors' A-level combinations are: Maths + Physics + Chemistry (keeps Engineering, Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy, Veterinary open); Maths + Chemistry + Biology (keeps Medicine, Dentistry, Veterinary, Biology / Biomedical Sciences open); Maths + Economics + a humanity (keeps Economics, PPE, Business open).
Yes. Once you have a shortlist of degrees and a few candidate A-level combinations, Tutopiya tutors can stress-test the combination against your target universities, help you prepare for entrance assessments (BMAT / UCAT / TMUA / STEP / LNAT / MAT) that come on top of grades, and coach your personal statement. Book a free 30-min consult.