- UCAS course code
- B230
- UCAS institution code
- M20
Master of Pharmacy (MPharm)
MPharm Pharmacy
- Typical A-level offer: AAB including specific subjects
- Typical contextual A-level offer: ABB including specific subjects
- UK refugee/care-experienced offer: BBB including specific subjects
- Typical International Baccalaureate offer: 35 points overall with 6,6,5 at HL, including specific requirements
Overview
Course overview
- Study at a university ranked 17th in the world and 6th in the UK for Pharmacy and Pharmacology (QS World University Rankings 2024).
- Gainclinical experience through placements in a range of settings each year of our GPhC-accredited course.
- Learn in modern facilities using state-of-the-art equipment including specialised laboratories, SimMan 3G patient simulator and clinical diagnostic aids.
- Open up a range ofcareer options -our graduateshave goneinto the NHS and private hospitals, GP practices and Primary Care Networks, the pharmaceutical industry, community pharmacy and more.
Open days
Attending an open day is a great way to find out what studying pharmacy at Manchester is like. Find out about our upcoming open days .
Contact details
- School/Faculty
- Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health
- Telephone
- +44 (0)161 529 4563
- ug.pharmacy@manchester.ac.uk
- Website
- https://www.bmh.manchester.ac.uk/pharmacy
- School/Faculty overview
-
Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health
Courses in related subject areas
Use the links below to view lists of courses in related subject areas.
Entry requirements
A-level
AAB including Chemistry, either Mathematics or Biology, and one further rigorous academic subject (we do not accept General Studies or Critical Thinking).
Selection for interview is normally based on predicted grades matching the entry requirement (i.e. AAB). However, in some cases we may consider an applicant whose predictions are ABB (with the A in Chemistry, Biology or Mathematics).
We will consider resit applications provided you have obtained a minimum of A-level grades BBB at the first attempt (or equivalent qualifications).We do not accept grade equivalents such as ABC.
Please note that the specific offer conditions will be based on the assessment of the interviewer.
Practical skills are a crucial part of science education and therefore will be a requirement to pass the practical element of any science A Level taken. Where applicants are applying for science and related degrees, this is likely to be made explicit in the offer you will receive.
Applicants taking A Levels are normally expected to offer three full A Levels. If you’re taking more than three A Levels, these won’t be included in your offer. We will only make offers consisting of three A Levels.
A-level contextual offer
ABB including specific subjects including Chemistry, either Mathematics or Biology, and one further rigorous academic subject (we do not accept General Studies or Critical Thinking).
Practical skills are a crucial part of science education and therefore will be a requirement to pass the practical element of any science A Level taken. Where applicants are applying for science and related degrees, this is likely to be made explicit in the offer you will receive.
Applicants taking A Levels are normally expected to offer three full A Levels. If you’re taking more than three A Levels, these won’t be included in your offer. We will only make offers consisting of three A Levels.
Contextual offers are available for applicants who:
- live in the UK and will be under the age of 21 on 1 September of the year they will start their course; and
- live in an area of disadvantage or with low progression into higher education; and
- have attended a UK school or college for their GCSEs or A-levels (or equivalent qualifications) that has performed below the national average over multiple years.
See our contextual admissions page for full details and to check your eligibility.
UK refugee/care-experienced offer
BBB including including Chemistry, either Mathematics or Biology, and one further rigorous academic subject (we do not accept General Studies or Critical Thinking).
Practical skills are a crucial part of science education and therefore will be a requirement to pass the practical element of any science A Level taken. Where applicants are applying for science and related degrees, this is likely to be made explicit in the offer you will receive.
Applicants taking A Levels are normally expected to offer three full A Levels. If you’re taking more than three A Levels, these won’t be included in your offer. We will only make offers consisting of three A Levels.
UK refugee/care-experienced offers are available for applicants who:
- have been looked after in care for more than three months; or
- have been granted refugee status by the UK government or have been issued a UK visa under one of the Ukrainian schemes (Homes for Ukraine, Ukraine Family Scheme or Ukraine Extension Scheme).
See our contextual admissions page for full details and to check your eligibility.
International Baccalaureate
35 points overall. 6 , 6,5 including in Higher Level Chemistry, alongside either:
- higher level Biology and standard level Mathematics, or;
- higher level Mathematics and standard level Biology.
For this programme of study we will accept Higher Level Mathematics: Analysis and Approaches or Applications and Interpretation.
Please note the specific offer conditions will be based on the assessment of the interviewer
Applicants studying the International Baccalaureate Career Related Programme (IBCP) should contact the admissions team prior to applying so that their academic profile can be considered.
GCSE/IGCSE
Applicants must demonstrate a broad general education including acceptable levels of Literacy and Numeracy. We require at least five GCSEs or IGCSEs; four at minimum including English Language at grade 5/B and Mathematics at grade 6/B.
For applicants whose status has been confirmed as WP+ using the University's Contextual Data Eligibility tool , we will allow an overall reduction of 2 grades on the full GCSE requirements. Please note, however, that no individual subject should be lower than grade 4/C.
For applicants whose status has been confirmed as WP++ using the University's Contextual Data Eligibility tool , we will allow an overall reduction of 4 grades on the full GCSE requirements. Please note, however, that no individual subject should be lower than grade 4/C.
GCSE/IGCSE English Literature will not be accepted in lieu of GCSE/IGCSE English Language.
Please note that if you hold English as a second language IGCSE qualification, we may also require you to offer one of our acceptable equivalent English Language qualifications or achieve a higher grade in your IGCSE than the one stated above. Please contact the admissions team in your academic School/Department for clarification.
Other entry requirements
Other entry requirements exist for this course. You may view these by selecting from the list below.
Country-specific entry requirements
We welcome applications from overseas students. Country-specific information can be found on the University website . However, this is for general information only, as specific entry requirements may be different for the MPharm.
Please contact us at ug.pharmacy@manchester.ac.uk to check specific requirements for your country before you apply for the MPharm course.
Advanced Placement Tests
554 (specific subjects required).
English language requirements
All applicants to the University (from the UK and Overseas) are required to show evidence of English Language proficiency. The minimum English Language requirement for this course is either:
GCSE/IGCSE English Language grade B / 5, or;
IELTS 7.0, with no component less than 6.5, or;
An acceptable equivalent qualification.
Please note that if you hold English as a second language IGCSE qualification, we may also require you to offer one of our acceptable equivalent English Language qualifications or achieve a higher grade in your IGCSE than the one stated above. Please contact the academic School for clarification.
If you need to improve your English language skills to meet the entry requirements for your academic course, the University Centre for Academic English (UCAE) summer pre-sessional courses can help. Check if your academic course offers the option of taking a pre-sessional course on the UCAE page .
The UK Visas and Immigration (UKVI) requires that every student requiring a visa to study in the UK must show evidence of a minimum level of English Language (common European Framework (CEFR B2 level) to be granted a Student Route visa (previously known as a Tier 4 visa) to study at undergraduate or postgraduate level.
In addition, our academic Schools/Departments may require applicants to demonstrate English proficiency above the B2 level. Further information about our English Language policy, including a list of some of the English Language qualifications we accept, can be found here .
English language test validity
Fees and funding
Fees
Fees for entry in 2026 have not yet been set. For entry in 2025 the tuition fees were £9,535 per annum for home students, and are expected to increase slightly for 2026 entry.
Additional expenses
We work hard to ensure that our course can be completed without significant additional study costs over and above the tuition fee.
The two areas where additional costs can be incurred are travel to clinical placements and reading. In both of these situations, we seek to ensure that additional costs are kept as low as possible.
The University defines low cost as an annual cost that is no more than 1% of the annual home undergraduate fee.
Policy on additional costs
All students should normally be able to complete their programme of study without incurring additional study costs over and above the tuition fee for that programme. Any unavoidable additional compulsory costs totalling more than 1% of the annual home undergraduate fee per annum, regardless of whether the programme in question is undergraduate or postgraduate taught, will be made clear to you at the point of application. Further information can be found in the University's Policy on additional costs incurred by students on undergraduate and postgraduate taught programmes (PDF document, 91KB).
Application and selection
How to apply
Advice to applicants
"Pharmacy offers so many opportunities to get to know others through social events and academic support groups.
"This means you never feel alone."
Maeve Sparks / Year 2 student
Please refer to the application process page for further information on:
- how to apply
- how your application is considered
- advice to applicants
- personal statement guidance
- interview requirements
- after the interview.
Please note that all applications are considered for first-year entry only onto the MPharm course.
International applicants
Please note, a satisfactory overseaspolice check isrequired for international applicants.
Resit applications
We will consider resit applications provided you have obtained a minimum of A-level grades BBB at the first attempt (or equivalent qualifications).
Home-schooled applicants
Non-standard educational routes
Mature students are some of our most well-equipped learners, bringing skills and attributes gained from work, family and other life experiences. Students come from a whole array of backgrounds, study every kind of course, undertake full-time and part-time learning and are motivated by career intentions as well as personal interest. There is no such thing as a typical mature student at Manchester.
The application process is the same as for other prospective undergraduates. If you require further clarification about the acceptability of the qualifications you hold please contact the academic School(s) you plan to apply to. Further information for mature students can be found here ( http://www.manchester.ac.uk/study/undergraduate/mature-students/ )
How your application is considered
Interview requirements
Interviews are part of the selection process. Please refer to the application process page for more information.
Returning to education
We will only consider applicants who obtained the relevant qualification within the three years prior to commencing the MPharm. If your most recent qualification was taken more than three years ago, please contact the Admissions Office ( ug.pharmacy@manchester.ac.uk ). We will consider each application individually and may require you to submit further information, such as transcripts and details of employment.
Overseas (non-UK) applicants
Applicants living overseas (excluding Northern Ireland, ROI and the Channel Isles) will not need to attend a face-to-face interview in Manchester. However, you will be required to attend a Zoom interview.
We will contact candidates after consideration of their UCAS form to arrange the Zoom session and will ensure it is timetabled at a mutually convenient date/time with sufficient advance notice. In some cases, we may contact applicants for additional supporting documents (eg transcripts, syllabus of courses) which may delay the timetabling of the Zoom interview.
Please note that occasionally overseas qualifications do not permit direct entry onto the MPharm course.
Becoming a pharmacist after a UK-based course (advice from the Pharmacy Schools Council)
After the successful completion of the course, you will receive an MPharm degree. There are further steps to go through before you will be able to register with the General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC) and practise as a qualified pharmacist in the UK.
Once you have completed an MPharm, you will need to apply for a foundation training year, where you will further develop the skills you gained during your degree as a paid employee in a professional environment.
Entrance to a foundation training year is competitive and there is no guarantee that you will receive a place. A proportion of these foundation training places are with the NHS, but the majority of placements involve working with community pharmacists.
Again, you should be aware that your place on the foundation training year is not guaranteed, as the number of available placements is dependent on different factors.
One such factor is that the availability of foundation training places offered by community pharmacies can vary from year to year. International students will require a Graduate Immigration route visa.
After the completion of 52 weeks of foundation training, and subject to you passing the common registration assessment at the end of the training, you will be eligible to register with the General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC) and practise as a fully qualified pharmacist.
Please see the government's visas and immigration pages for further information.
All international applicants will need to provide a Certificate of Good Conduct from their home country at the point their application status is UF.Fitness to practise / health requirements
Pharmacy is a registered healthcare profession, and carries both privileges and responsibilities. You must demonstrate that you are able to exercise those privileges and bear those responsibilities. To join the pharmacy profession at the end of your training, you must abide by the General Pharmaceutical Council's (GPhC) Standards for Pharmacy Professionals, undergo a medical fitness assessment and a Disclosure and Barring Service check at the start of your degree.
When the time comes to apply to join the register of pharmacists, you must also make a health declaration and submit to character checks. If you wish to study pharmacy, you should note that your fitness to practise both before and/or during your studies may impair your eligibility to register and practice as a pharmacist.
Communication and dress code
We have adopted the same policy regarding dress code as set out by the General Medical Council (GMC). The GMC states that non-verbal communication is at least as important as verbal communication, and so how a student or pharmacist appears to patients, relatives or colleagues means as much as what he or she says.
Students (and pharmacists) in professional settings must dress in a manner that adds to, and does not detract from, effective communication.
Furthermore, the Standards for Pharmacy Professionals states that students must learn how to listen to patients and their carers, and communicate effectively with them in a way they can understand.
This applies not only in clinical settings, but also throughout the educational elements of the undergraduate course, which is built around group work with other students and tutors.
In addition, the convention of some units may require wearing white coats, being bare below the elbow or other approved clothing (eg scrubs). Hair should be tied back if it interferes with, or adds risk, to a clinical activity. Nail polish and gel nails are an infection risk and may not be permitted in some clinical areas. Students must abide by all workplace dress codes when on placement, which may vary between sites.
You must be able to participate fully in communication and other skills training, discussion and assessment. As well as adhering to the dress code above, it means being able to interact fully with patients, standardised patients, teachers and examiners of any cultural or ethnic background or either gender. This includes conducting physical examinations that are a compulsory component of the course eg blood pressure, pulse and temperature.
Health requirements and Fitness to Practise procedures
Offers of a place are subject to satisfactory health screening. The health screening procedure is based upon the Higher Education Occupational Physicians/Practitioners (HEOPS) standards of medical fitness to train for pharmacy students.
If you are concerned that your health or disability may affect your ability to fulfil the requirements of the MPharm course, you are encouraged to contact the Occupational Health Service and/or the Disability Advisory and Support Service at an early stage in order to explore the feasibility of making reasonable adjustments.
Health screening requires you to complete a detailed health questionnaire and possibly attend an appointment with the University's Occupational Health Department. In order to be admitted and continue on the course, you must be deemed as medically fit for both campus-based learning and placements by the Occupational Health Department. You will be required to comply with any viral screening and vaccination as requested by the Department of Health.
Where a course requires you to undertake practical training in a quasi-professional role in relation to patients, clients or service users, or where the qualification provides a direct licence to practise, The University of Manchester has a duty to ensure that students are fit to practise.
A pharmacy student's fitness to practise is called into question when their behaviour or health raises a serious or persistent cause for concern about their ability or suitability to continue on the MPharm course. A student's fitness to practise, before or during their period of study as a student, may impair their eligibility to register and to practise as a Pharmacist. For further information, please read the guidance on the GPhC website.
This includes, but is not limited to, the possibility that they could put patients, the public, other students, staff or themselves at risk, and the need to maintain the public's trust in the pharmacy profession. Issues surrounding professional behaviour and fitness to practise are monitored and investigated initially. We consider cases that are brought to us and follow initial investigations via appropriate staff.
For information specific to the University, please read:
- Guidance and procedure for applicants to the Master of Pharmacy (MPharm) (PDF, 179KB)
- Medical Fitness Assessment Procedure (PDF 127KB).
Applicants and students should note that we treat all information disclosed by students in the strictest of confidence. Information about a student's fitness to practise will only be disclosed to the GPhC when the Faculty's Committee on Fitness to Practise has imposed sanctions upon the student.
When sanctions have been imposed, the student must also disclose them to the GPhC if they apply to join the register of pharmacists. Sanctions include:
- conditions or undertakings
- suspension from the course
- expulsion from the course.
Disclosure and Barring Service check
To ensure students are of good character as part of the GPhC's fitness to practise requirements, you must complete a professional conduct declaration form at interview and then annually, and submit to a criminal records check during the first year of the MPharm course.
You must declare any convictions, cautions or reprimands received at any time before or during your studies, either in this country or in other countries.
The criminal records check is an Enhanced Level search by the Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS). We will assist you in the completion of these forms.
International applicants will need to submit an overseas police check and this will be included as a formal offer condition.
To assess good character, the GPhC Good Character Framework is used.
Deferrals
Applications for deferred entry are considered equally to other applications up to the point of confirmation.
Requests for deferred entry are granted on the discretion of admissions staff, and are normally granted for one year only. However, in certain circumstances (for example, if an international student needs to complete National Service), we might consider a request to defer for 2 years.
Please contact the admissions team directly for advice. Some English Language test results, such as IELTS or TOEFL, are only valid for two years from the test date.
Policy for applicants who resit their qualifications
Re-applications
If you have applied via UCAS previously, any subsequent application should provide updated information on your suitability for the course. We reserve the right to draw on any information from previous applications.
If you have already achieved your A-level grades, you must have obtained a minimum of AAB in three suitable subjects including Chemistry, and either Biology or Mathematics.
Transfers
Transfer requests are not accepted as such. All applications must be directed through UCAS and applicants must satisfy our specific entry requirements, ie a minimum of AAB in three suitable A-level subjects including Chemistry and either Biology or Mathematics (or equivalent qualifications). We do not accept insufficient A-level grades alongside one or two years on an alternative degree course.
Advanced entry
All applications are considered for first-year entry only onto the MPharm course.
Course details
Course description
Our four-year Master of Pharmacy (MPharm) course will give you the knowledge and practical skills you need to enter the pharmacy profession.
We integrate science and practice throughout the course, giving you a sound understanding of how to apply your knowledge to solve clinical problems. You will also learn from practising pharmacists and pharmacist prescribers throughout your studies and gain workplace experience in a range of settings and different sectors of pharmacy practice.
You will develop your consultation, clinical decision-making, professional and leadership skills in order to work effectively with patients, carers and other healthcare professionals and to adapt to the challenges and developments that may occur during your career.
Our MPharm degree is accredited by the General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC). Upon successful completion of the course, you will need to undertake a foundation training year, take the GPhC's common registration assessment and meet fitness to practise requirements before becoming a fully-fledged pharmacist.
Additional course information
Visas for the pharmacy foundation training year
All international/EU and EEA students who are graduating with an MPharm from a British university must apply for a visa to work in the UK, ie to undertake their foundation training year.
Further information about the Graduate Immigration Route visa can be found here .
Teaching and learning
We use an enquiry-based learning (EBL) approach to provide you with important skills that will help you become an independent, motivated and confident learner. You will benefit from a variety of teaching and learning activities throughout our MPharm course, including EBL workshops, core concepts lectures, tutorials, practical classes, group assignments, interactive online learning and a research project.
You will also go on an extensive range of placements as part of the course. Find out more about these and the other ways you will learn on the Teaching and Learning page .
Coursework and assessment
Your knowledge, understanding and practical skills will be assessed through a variety of methods, including examinations, assignment reports, portfolios, staff observations and testimonials, group work, peer assessment and oral or alternative-format presentations.
End of semester examinations include a multiple choice question paper, calculations paper, integrated case-based papers, and web-based learning programmes.
Report writing skills are assessed throughout the course, and your practical, consultation and clinical skills are continuously assessed during classes and placements.
The final degree mark is based on the results of assessments in all four years of the course, including the Year 4 research project.
Course unit details
You will take integrated course units throughout the four-year MPharm course, each developing your knowledge and understanding, practical and clinical skills and professional attributes.
Course units are organised by body systems, which increase in complexity year on year. Within each body system block, you will develop your learning in medicines design, disease management, professional skills and clinical practice.
The taught content of the course is common to all students, however each student has their own unique learning journey, experienced through our enquiry-based learning approach, extensive range of placements, inter-professional events and a master's level research project in Year 4.
Every six weeks, throughout the course you will have the opportunity to attend organised placements which take place in NHS hospitals, community pharmacies and GP surgeries. Your placements will take place in Greater Manchester each year of the course. There may be an additional opportunity to attend an organised placement within the pharmaceutical industry.
Course content for year 1
Course units for year 1
The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.
Title | Code | Credit rating | Mandatory/optional |
---|---|---|---|
PHAR11001 | 60 | Mandatory | |
PHAR11002 | 60 | Mandatory |
Course content for year 2
Course units for year 2
The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.
Title | Code | Credit rating | Mandatory/optional |
---|---|---|---|
PHAR22001 | 60 | Mandatory | |
PHAR22002 | 60 | Mandatory |
Course content for year 3
Course units for year 3
The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.
Title | Code | Credit rating | Mandatory/optional |
---|---|---|---|
PHAR33001 | 60 | Mandatory | |
PHAR33002 | 60 | Mandatory |
Course content for year 4
Course units for year 4
The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.
Title | Code | Credit rating | Mandatory/optional |
---|---|---|---|
PHAR40400 | 30 | Mandatory | |
PHAR44001 | 30 | Mandatory | |
PHAR44002 | 30 | Mandatory | |
PHAR44200 | 30 | Mandatory |
What our students say
The guidance and support I received helped me towards my dream of becoming a pharmacist in Canada. My time in Manchester was an amazing adventure.
Eric Huynh
Find out more about what it's like to study at Manchester on the Biology, Medicine and Health Student Blog .
Facilities
You will learn in a range of pharmacy facilities throughout the course.
You will also have access to the University's other facilities for undergraduate students .
Disability support
Practical support and advice for current students and applicants from the Disability Support Office
Careers
Career opportunities
"It's been a hard slog, training many times a week and competing, and combining that with my studies. There's lots of chemistry and biology and you really need to know your stuff.
"But my academic advisors, family and friends have helped me balance my lifestyle. They have been amazing."
Sanjida Faiza / 2017 graduate and national medallist in Taekwondo
You can feel confident that you are starting on a career in which there will always be a need for your services when you take your pharmacy degree. 94% of our graduates go into work or further study after completing our MPharm course.
To be able to use the title of pharmacist in the UK, you must be registered with the General Pharmaceutical Council.
Membership is granted to graduates with a degree in pharmacy from a UK university who have completed a year's training at an approved establishment and passed a registration exam set by the GPhC.
Training is usually arranged as either 12 months in a hospital or community pharmacy, but it can be done for six months in the pharmaceutical industry and six months in either hospital or community pharmacy.
Pharmacy offers a variety of interesting careers with the possibility of flexible working across several of the sectors.
Community pharmacy
Community pharmacists work in high street, local and rural pharmacies. They use their detailed clinical knowledge to ensure that medicines ordered on doctors' prescriptions or bought over the counter are correctly and safely supplied.
Community pharmacists also give advice to patients about how to use medicines in safe and appropriate ways.
They are a readily accessible health advisor to the general public, providing both advice and counselling on the maintenance of good health, together with public health services such as smoking cessation, cholesterol management, blood pressure testing and weight loss programmes.
Learn more on the Community Pharmacy Careers website.
Hospital pharmacy
Hospital pharmacists are a vital part of the healthcare team.
In this setting, the pharmacist works directly with doctors, nurses and other health professionals to ensure that both in-patients and out-patients receive the most appropriate medicines and that those medicines are used in the most effective way.
When a patient is admitted to hospital, the pharmacist will take their medication history and see the patient every day, check their medicines and discuss their progress with the doctor. When the patient leaves hospital, the pharmacist might then liaise with their GP.
You can choose to take your skills on into management or a clinical specialism, eventually becoming a consultant with similar status to that of a doctor.
Industrial pharmacy
The pharmaceutical industry is responsible for research into new medicines and the production and marketing of proven medicines to the public.
Pharmacists are involved in every step of the process, from research and technical and medical information to product development, formulation and production.
Clinical Pharmacists in General Practice
Clinical pharmacists work as part of the general practice team to resolve day-to-day medicine issues and consult with and treat patients directly.
This includes providing extra help to manage long-term conditions, advice for those on multiple medications and better access to health checks.
Primary care
Primary care pharmacists operate at a senior level in the healthcare system.
They have a strategic role, making the best use of resources allocated for medicines and ensuring they are well spent.
They also analyse medicines and work closely with hospitals, GPs, practice nurses and other community healthcare professionals.
In recent years, there has been a big shift in focus within the NHS towards primary care to preventing people from becoming ill and encouraging healthier lifestyles to keep them out of hospital.
Prevention is better than cure, and pharmacists are ideally placed to play their part.
Regulatory pharmacy
Regulatory pharmacists work for government bodies, such as the MHRA, which are set up to help protect public health.
Their job is to ensure that medicines submitted by drug companies are safe before they can be manufactured and marketed to the public.
You need critical evaluation skills for this branch of the profession.
Other careers
Pharmacists can also work in:
- veterinary pharmacy
- universities
- the armed forces
- prisons
- medical journalism
- forensic service
- the NHS
- the National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE).
Find out more about the role of pharmacists on the NHS Health Careers website and see more information about possible careers through HEE's interactive Pharmacy Careers Map .
Accrediting organisations
This course is accredited by the General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC).
Regulated by the Office for Students
The University of Manchester is regulated by the Office for Students (OfS). The OfS aims to help students succeed in Higher Education by ensuring they receive excellent information and guidance, get high quality education that prepares them for the future and by protecting their interests. More information can be found at the OfS website.
You can find regulations and policies relating to student life at The University of Manchester, including our Degree Regulations and Complaints Procedure, on our regulations website.