# University vs Apprenticeship in the UK 2026: The Real Cost Comparison

> A three-year university degree now leaves the average English graduate with £46,000 in student debt, while a degree apprenticeship pays a salary and carries zero tuition fees. Here is the five-year financial comparison with 2026 figures.

*Section: Education — By Marcus Vale (Editor-in-Chief & Business & Markets Editor) — Published June 18, 2026 — 4 min read*

Canonical URL: https://dailyjunction.org/education/cost-of-university-vs-apprenticeship-uk-2026
Tags: university costs, apprenticeships, student loans, degree apprenticeship, education, personal finance, UK students, higher education

## Key takeaways

- The average English student starting a three-year degree in 2026 will graduate with approximately £46,000 in tuition-fee debt alone, before maintenance loans — with interest accruing from the day the loan is taken out.
- A degree apprentice earns a salary from day one (minimum £6.40 per hour for first-year apprentices in 2026, with many large employers paying £18,000–£24,000) and pays zero tuition fees — the employer and government cover the cost.
- Over the first five years post-18, the financial gap between the two routes can exceed £100,000 when you add foregone earnings, debt accumulation and interest.

# University vs Apprenticeship in the UK 2026: The Real Cost Comparison

For school-leavers deciding what to do next, the financial calculus has shifted. A three-year university degree in England now costs £9,535 per year in tuition fees alone — £28,605 before a single textbook is bought or a rent cheque written — while a degree apprenticeship pays a salary from day one and carries precisely zero tuition fees. Over the first five years after leaving school, the financial gap between the two routes can comfortably exceed £100,000.

But the decision is not purely financial, and the long-term picture is more nuanced than the headline numbers suggest. This guide sets out the real costs, the earnings trajectories and the trade-offs, with 2026 figures throughout.

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## The Cost of University in 2026

The table below shows the estimated cost of a three-year degree at an English university for a student living away from home outside London, starting in September 2026.

| Cost category | Per year | Over 3 years |
|---|---|---|
| Tuition fees | £9,535 | £28,605 |
| Accommodation (university halls / private rental) | £6,500 | £19,500 |
| Food, bills & household | £3,200 | £9,600 |
| Books, equipment & course costs | £500 | £1,500 |
| Travel | £800 | £2,400 |
| Social, clothing & miscellaneous | £1,800 | £5,400 |
| **Total gross cost** | **£22,335** | **£67,005** |

Of this, tuition fees and a portion of living costs are typically covered by Student Finance England loans. The maximum maintenance loan for a student living away from home outside London in 2026–27 is £10,227, though the actual amount depends on household income — students from households earning above £70,000 receive the minimum loan of around £4,500.

The critical point is that student loans accrue interest from the day they are drawn down. Under the Plan 5 repayment system (for students starting from 2023–24 onwards), interest is set at the Retail Price Index (RPI) only — there is no additional interest-rate tier. Repayments begin once earnings exceed £25,000 per year, at a rate of 9% of income above that threshold, and any remaining balance is written off after 40 years.

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## The Cost (or Rather, the Income) of a Degree Apprenticeship

A degree apprentice earns a salary, pays no tuition fees, and typically spends 80% of their time working and 20% studying at a partner university. The degree awarded — a full BSc, BA, BEng or equivalent — is academically identical to one earned on campus.

| Income / cost category | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 (typical) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gross salary (large employer estimate) | £20,000 | £22,500 | £25,000 | £28,000 |
| Tuition fees | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 |
| Approximate take-home pay (after tax/NI) | £17,500 | £19,400 | £21,300 | £23,500 |
| Living costs (living at home estimate) | £4,000 | £4,000 | £4,000 | £4,000 |
| **Net financial position (annual)** | **+£13,500** | **+£15,400** | **+£17,300** | **+£19,500** |

Salary figures are indicative for a large corporate or public-sector employer; the statutory minimum for first-year apprentices aged 19+ is £6.40 per hour (April 2026 rate), but the vast majority of degree apprenticeships pay substantially more. The government's Apprenticeship Pay Survey suggests a median salary of roughly £19,000 for Level 6 (degree-level) apprentices.

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## The Five-Year Comparison

If we compare a university graduate and a degree apprentice five years after each leaves school (age 23 for the graduate, age 22–23 for the apprentice who may complete a four-year programme):

| Measure | University graduate | Degree apprentice |
|---|---|---|
| Total student debt at graduation | ~£46,000 (tuition + maintenance) | £0 |
| Net earnings over 5 years (after tax, after living costs) | Negative (student) for 3 years, then ~£52,000 over first 2 working years | ~£76,000 earned over 4 years, then ~£25,000 in year 5 |
| Career progression | Starts at graduate-entry level (salary £26,000–£32,000 typical) | Already has 3–4 years' industry experience, often promoted within the company |
| Degree achieved | Yes | Yes |

The apprentice is roughly £90,000–£110,000 ahead in net terms after five years, once you account for salary earned during study, zero debt, and earlier career progression. The gap narrows over time if the graduate enters a high-earning profession, but it takes most graduates a decade or more to close it.

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## What the Averages Conceal

The financial case for an apprenticeship is strongest in engineering, technology, accounting and financial services — sectors where large employers run well-established degree-apprenticeship programmes with clear salary progression. In fields such as law, medicine, academia and parts of the creative industries, the traditional university route remains the only realistic path to qualification.

The graduate premium — the additional lifetime earnings attributable to a degree — also varies sharply by subject. The IFS has shown that medicine, economics, law and engineering graduates earn substantially more than non-graduates over their careers, while graduates in creative arts and some social sciences see a much smaller premium, and a significant minority earn less than the median non-graduate by mid-career.

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For school-leavers weighing the two routes, the numbers in 2026 point clearly in one direction on pure financial terms — the apprenticeship wins hands down over the first decade. But the calculation changes depending on subject, ambition, and whether the career you want requires a conventional degree as a gatekeeping credential. The right answer is not universal, but the cost data should at least be universal in the conversation.

## Frequently asked questions

### How much student debt does the average graduate leave university with?

Tuition fees in England are capped at £9,535 per year for 2026–27. Over a three-year course, that is £28,605 in tuition debt alone. Maintenance loans — which vary by household income and whether you live at home — can add £4,000–£10,000 per year. The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) estimates the average total borrowing at graduation is now around £46,000, with interest applied from the day the first instalment is paid.

### Do apprentices really get a degree for free?

Yes. Degree apprenticeships — which combine paid work with part-time study at a university — are funded by the employer and the government through the Apprenticeship Levy. The apprentice pays no tuition fees and receives a salary throughout. The degree awarded is a full bachelor's or master's from a recognised university, identical in standing to one earned through the traditional route.

### Which route leads to higher earnings long-term?

Graduates still earn more on average over a lifetime — the IFS estimates the graduate premium at roughly £100,000–£130,000 in additional lifetime earnings for men and somewhat less for women. However, this varies enormously by subject and institution. A degree apprentice in engineering or technology who progresses to a £40,000+ role within three years may out-earn a humanities graduate working in a non-graduate job for several years after university.

## Sources

- [GOV.UK: Student Finance 2026–27](https://www.gov.uk/student-finance)
- [Institute for Fiscal Studies: Higher Education Finance](https://ifs.org.uk/taxlab/taxlab-key-questions/what-are-alternatives-current-student-loan-system)
- [GOV.UK: Become an Apprentice](https://www.gov.uk/become-apprentice)
- [UCAS: Degree Apprenticeships](https://www.ucas.com/explore/careers-employment/degree-apprenticeships)

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Daily Junction — https://dailyjunction.org/education/cost-of-university-vs-apprenticeship-uk-2026
