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Foundation Year (Year 0): everything you need to know

Updated: 8 May 2026
In short

A Foundation Year is a preparatory Year 0 built into a four-year degree. If it is part of the degree, Student Finance England funds it. If it is not — you will pay up to £22,000 out of pocket. The difference is critical.

4
years
total duration of IFY + degree
£5,760
maximum
fee for humanities IFY per year (2025-26)
£22k
risk
private programme with no SFE funding

What is a Foundation Year?

A Foundation Year (Year 0) is a bridging year of university-level study for students whose current qualifications do not meet direct Year 1 entry requirements. It is most relevant for Cohort A students (Attestat holders) and some Cohort F students (once their English is strong enough).

Two types: Integrated vs Private

Type 1: Integrated Foundation Year (IFY) — suitable for refugees
An IFY is owned and delivered by the university itself. It forms a single four-year course (Year 0 + Years 1-3). You apply through UCAS for the four-year course code. Student Finance England treats the whole programme as one "long degree" and funds all four years, including Year 0. This is the route eligible home-fee students should use.
Type 2: Private International Foundation Programme — NOT for refugees
These are run by commercial providers (Study Group, INTO, Kaplan, NCUK) who may rent space near a university. They are designed for international students who pay full international fees (£15,000–£22,000 for one year). They are not integrated into the degree — after completing them you must make a separate UCAS application. They are not eligible for SFE tuition fee loans.

Refugees and others with home-fee status must not sign contracts with private foundation providers expecting SFE to fund it. It will not.

Foundation Year fee caps (as of 2026-05-08)

For integrated foundation years at approved providers:

Classroom-based subjects (business, humanities, social sciences):
Maximum fee capped at £5,760 at TEF-awarded providers with an Access and Participation Plan. Providers without TEF or an APP may charge less — some charge as low as £3,735.
Lab-based subjects (sciences, engineering, medicine-allied):
Fee cap aligns with the standard undergraduate maximum — £9,535 for 2025-26 and £9,790 for 2026-27. Always check the specific course page.
SFE provides Tuition Fee Loans up to the applicable cap, and your Maintenance Loan continues throughout Year 0.

Progression from Year 0 to Year 1

Progression is structured but not automatic.

Humanities, business, and non-regulated subjects: you must achieve a defined pass threshold (typically 40–50%) across foundation modules.
Nursing, social work, and allied health: you must also pass a professional interview, an Occupational Health assessment, and obtain a clear DBS (criminal record) certificate during Year 0. Failure at any of these gates means you cannot progress into the regulated degree.

Sanctuary Scholarships and Foundation Year

Not all Sanctuary Scholarships automatically cover Year 0. Verify with each university separately:

Oxford Brookes University: Sanctuary Scholarship covers the full four-year duration for students on Integrated Foundation Courses, provided they pass Year 0 and progress to the degree.
University of Sheffield: Sanctuary Scholarship provides £10,300 per year in living cost support. Foundation course applicants should contact Sheffield to discuss eligibility — they are not automatically included.
University of Gloucestershire (Michael Perham): Tuition fee waivers are for undergraduate or postgraduate taught degrees only. Foundation years are NOT covered.
⚠️ Red flags
  1. Signing a contract with a private foundation provider and expecting SFE to fund it.
  2. Confusing a Foundation Year (Level 3, leads to Year 1) with a Foundation Degree (Level 5, two-year vocational qualification).
  3. Not checking the exact course-level progression requirements, especially for health or regulated professions.
  4. Not verifying whether your sanctuary scholarship covers Year 0 — many do not automatically.

Frequently asked questions

What is a Foundation Year and why does it exist?

A Foundation Year (Year 0) is a bridging year of university-level study for students whose current qualifications do not meet direct Year 1 entry requirements. It is most relevant for CIS Attestat holders (Cohort A) and students whose English has reached a sufficient level (Cohort F).

Does Student Finance England fund a Foundation Year?

SFE funds only an Integrated Foundation Year (IFY) — a programme that is part of a four-year degree and applied for through UCAS as a single course code. Private international foundation programmes from Study Group, INTO, or Kaplan are not funded by SFE. Refugees with home-fee status must not sign contracts with private providers expecting SFE to pay.

How much does an Integrated Foundation Year cost?

For classroom-based subjects (business, humanities, social sciences): maximum £5,760 per year. For lab-based subjects (sciences, engineering, medicine-allied): up to £9,535 for 2025-26 and £9,790 for 2026-27. Always check the specific course page for the confirmed fee.

Do students automatically progress from Year 0 to Year 1?

No. Progression is structured but not automatic. For most subjects you must reach a defined pass threshold (typically 40-50%). For nursing, social work, and allied health, you must also pass a professional interview, Occupational Health assessment, and obtain a clear DBS certificate during Year 0.

Do Sanctuary Scholarships cover Foundation Year?

It depends on the university. Oxford Brookes covers all 4 years. University of Sheffield considers foundation applicants individually — not automatically. University of Gloucestershire (Michael Perham) does not cover Foundation Year at all. Always verify with the specific university.

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⚠️ StartNewLife is an information project — not regulated by the IAA (Immigration Advice Authority). We do not provide immigration advice within the meaning of Section 84 of the Immigration & Asylum Act 1999. All content is general information only and does not replace advice from a regulated lawyer (IAA / SRA / BSB) about your specific case.