UCAT thresholds compared
Cambridge's published UCAT threshold for home applicants is around 2150, while North Wales (Bangor) sits at approximately 1700. That's a 450-point gap — large enough to put the two schools in completely different competitiveness tiers. An applicant scoring in the 1900-2000 band would be competitive at North Wales (Bangor) but borderline at Cambridge.
A-Level and academic profile
Cambridge requires A*A*A including Chemistry and Biology. North Wales (Bangor) requires AAA including Chemistry and Biology. Cambridge is the stricter A-Level offer; North Wales (Bangor) is slightly more forgiving. If your predicted grades are borderline, North Wales (Bangor) carries the lower academic-rejection risk pre-interview. GCSE profile matters at both schools — Cambridge: Strong GCSE profile expected (typically 9-10 A*/8-9 grades) but used holistically, not algorithmically. North Wales (Bangor): Min 5 GCSEs at grade 6 including Maths, English Language, dual-award Science. Welsh-language ability welcomed but not required.
Interview formats
Cambridge uses Panel (Traditional panel interviews with academic focus); North Wales (Bangor) uses MMI (Multiple Mini Interviews (MMI)). These two formats reward different skills — Panel emphasises narrative coherence and the ability to develop a thread under follow-up questioning, while MMI rewards breadth and quick recovery. If your strengths lie in conversational depth, Cambridge may suit you more. If you prefer discrete capsule answers under time pressure, North Wales (Bangor) is the better fit. Interview windows: Cambridge interviews in December; North Wales (Bangor) in December - March.
Curriculum and teaching style
Cambridge runs a Traditional curriculum; North Wales (Bangor) runs a PBL curriculum. The teaching philosophies are different — Cambridge delivers more didactic lectures with structured systems-based progression, while North Wales (Bangor) centres learning around clinical cases. Specifics: Three pre-clinical years at Cambridge (mostly lecture/lab-based, with college supervisions), then three clinical years at Addenbrooke's Hospital and C Four-year accelerated MBBCh (Cardiff) for graduates, or 5-year route. Strong rural/community placement strand across North Wales (Betsi Cadwaladr UHB) Intake size: Cambridge — ~280 home + ~26 overseas fee status places per year across all colleges (A100 Standard Entry Medicine).; North Wales (Bangor) — ~30 places per year (small cohort, designed for local retention).. A larger cohort means more peer breadth; a smaller cohort means more tutor contact.
Post-interview offer rate
Cambridge: Home (predicted grades): 253/979 = 26% (2025); International (predicted): 8/58 = 14%. ~30 more offers to those with achieved grades.. North Wales (Bangor): Refused to disclose. New medical school, has been in clearing in past years.. Post-interview odds give you the clearest signal of how competitive each school is at the final stage — a school with a 60% post-interview success rate is structurally easier to convert than one at 25%, even if the interview thresholds look identical on paper.
What makes each distinctive
Cambridge: UCAT replaced BMAT from 2024 entry. Variation between colleges in average UCAT scores and success rates, but the pooling system smooths over it - applying to "less popular" colleges does not meaningfully change your odds. North Wales (Bangor): Refused to disclose UCAT cut-offs or shortlisting weighting. Anecdotally lower thresholds, particularly for Welsh applicants. Has entered clearing in past years.