Why study Accounting and Finance in the UK?
UK Accounting and Finance programmes blend technical training in financial reporting, audit, taxation and corporate finance with broader management modules. Most undergraduate degrees carry professional exemptions from ACCA, ICAEW or CIMA — meaning you skip several of their professional papers after graduation, which can save you a year or more of post-graduate study. The Russell Group universities (Warwick, Manchester, Edinburgh, LSE) lead on quantitative finance and investment careers; pathway colleges and post-1992 universities focus on accountancy practice and SME finance. International fees typically range from £14,000 to £25,000 per year at universities and £12,500 to £17,500 at pathway colleges. Foundation Year, Bachelor's, Top-up and Master's routes are all widely available, and many programmes include an optional placement year at a UK accountancy or finance firm.
Career outcomes
First-destination roles include graduate audit associate, tax associate, management accountant, financial analyst, treasury analyst and graduate roles in banking. According to LEO data, Accounting and Finance graduates have a median salary of £28,000-£32,000 fifteen months after graduation, with Big Four trainees starting at £30,000-£35,000 in London. The Graduate Route visa gives international graduates time to find a UK role, and many large accountancy firms sponsor Skilled Worker visas at the end of the training contract.
Courses available through AEN
We work with UK partners offering Foundation Year Accounting and Finance (£5,760-£9,790), HNC/HND Accounting, BSc/BA Accounting and Finance, Top-up Accounting and Finance (£9,535-£12,500), and postgraduate MSc programmes (Finance, Investment, Accounting, Financial Management). Intakes run in January, May and September.
Entry requirements
Direct undergraduate entry typically requires 96-128 UCAS points (CCC-ABB at A-Level or equivalent), with Maths preferred but not always essential. IELTS 6.0-6.5 with no element below 5.5. Foundation Year accepts lower qualifications. MSc Finance programmes often require a quantitative undergraduate background; MSc Accounting programmes are more accommodating of non-finance backgrounds.