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Medical school comparison

Hertfordshire vs Oxford

Hertfordshire and Oxford are both UK medical schools, but the path to an offer at each is meaningfully different. Both sit in England, so location and clinical-placement breadth are similar — the differentiation comes from selection methodology, interview style and curriculum philosophy. Their A-Level requirements (AAA vs A*AA) place them in slightly different academic-strictness tiers. The interview formats diverge — MMI vs Panel — and the prep approaches for the two are fundamentally different. Oxford is the older institution (founded 1096); the other (founded 2025) has shaped its medical school around modern integrated-curriculum thinking.

Side-by-side comparison

Hertfordshire

Hatfield

Quick comparison

Location
Hatfield, UK
A-Level offer
AAA at A-level including Chemistry or Biology, completed in one sitting across a maximum of two years. Applicants encouraged to consider Arts/Humanities for their 3rd A-level.
TrueScore
1700intl
UCAT home cut-off
-
Interview format
Multiple Mini Interviews (MMI)
Post-interview chance
-
Decision date
March onwards

Oxford

Oxford

Quick comparison

Location
Oxford, UK
A-Level offer
A*AA at A-level (and A*AA predictions) including Chemistry plus one of Biology, Mathematics, Further Mathematics or Physics
TrueScore
2230
UCAT home cut-off
~2230+ /2700 for high interview chances; mean offer-holder ≈ 2348 (2025 entry)
Interview format
Traditional or Panel Interviews
Post-interview chance
Home student: 165/393 = 42% (2025); International: 8/33 = 24%. ~425 total home + international shortlisted each year.
Decision date
January

Hertfordshire vs Oxford - in detail

A-Level and academic profile

Hertfordshire requires AAA offer including chemistry or biology, completed in one sitting across a maximum of two years. Applicants encouraged to consider arts/humanities for their 3rd A-level. GCSEs: minimum 5 subjects at grade 6 including English, maths, biology, chemistry and physics (or dual award).. Oxford requires A*AA including Chemistry and Biology/Physics/Mathematics. Oxford is the stricter A-Level offer; Hertfordshire is slightly more forgiving. If your predicted grades are borderline, Hertfordshire carries the lower academic-rejection risk pre-interview. GCSE profile matters at both schools — Hertfordshire: Min 5 GCSEs at grade 6 including Maths, English Language, dual-award Science. Oxford: Mean 10 A* (96% A* proportion) at GCSE for interviewees, contextualised to school performance. <90% A* still possible (~30 interviewed) where school performance is weaker.

Interview formats

Hertfordshire uses MMI (Multiple Mini Interviews (MMI)); Oxford uses Panel (Traditional or Panel Interviews). These two formats reward different skills — MMI emphasises breadth, station-recovery and structured answers under time pressure, while Panel rewards depth and consistency. If your strengths lie in conversational depth, Oxford may suit you more. If you prefer discrete capsule answers under time pressure, Hertfordshire is the better fit. Interview windows: Hertfordshire interviews in December - March; Oxford in December.

Curriculum and teaching style

Hertfordshire runs a PBL curriculum; Oxford runs a Traditional curriculum. The teaching philosophies are different — Hertfordshire leans on small-group case-based learning from year 1, while Oxford uses a more traditional lecture-led structure. Specifics: Five-year MBChB. Hertfordshire-based with East-of-England NHS placements. Three years pre-clinical (Years 1-3 BMBCh first part) at Oxford, then three years clinical at Oxford-affiliated NHS hospitals. Tutorial system means s Intake size: Hertfordshire — ~50-100 places per year (newer cohort).; Oxford — ~165 home + ~24 overseas fee status places per year (A100 Standard Entry Medicine).. A larger cohort means more peer breadth; a smaller cohort means more tutor contact.

What makes each distinctive

Hertfordshire: For international students only and new this year - can apply directly in addition to your 4 UCAS medical choices, so no harm in giving it a try. New medical school actively seeking links with international applicants. Oxford: Pooling system means each applicant is assessed at two colleges, with a centralised shortlist - applying to a "less competitive" college gives no real advantage. GCSE performance is contextualised to your school. Tutors prize lateral reasoning and willingness to engage with the unfamiliar.

Which is right for you?

For applicants with predicted A-Level grades at the lower end of the AAA-A*AA range, Hertfordshire is the lower-risk academic option. Both schools sit in the same England foundation-programme catchment, so post-graduation training paths overlap heavily. If you learn best in small-group case discussion, prefer Hertfordshire; if you prefer lecture-led foundations, the other suits better. Your firm/insurance choice should ultimately weight: where your UCAT and predicted grades sit relative to each school's threshold, which interview format you can prepare for most credibly, and where you'd actually want to live for five or six years.

Common questions

Neither school publishes a single fixed UCAT cut-off; both use UCAT as part of a composite shortlisting score alongside GCSE and personal-statement weighting. Hertfordshire guidance: International students only. SJT not used. New school for 2026 entry - cut-offs will be set as the cycle runs.. Oxford guidance: ~2230+ /2700 for high interview chances; mean offer-holder ≈ 2348 (2025 entry).

Hertfordshire uses Multiple Mini Interviews: Multiple Mini Interviews (MMI). Oxford uses Traditional interview: Traditional or Panel Interviews. The two formats reward different skill sets. Plan separate prep streams for each, with at least 3 full mock interviews per format before sitting either. Interview windows: December - March (Hertfordshire); December (Oxford).

Hertfordshire requires AAA offer including chemistry or biology, completed in one sitting across a maximum of two years. Applicants encouraged to consider arts/humanities for their 3rd A-level. GCSEs: minimum 5 subjects at grade 6 including English, maths, biology, chemistry and physics (or dual award).. Oxford requires A*AA including Chemistry and Biology/Physics/Mathematics. Most successful applicants achieve these grades on first sitting with strong predicted grades from their school. Resit policies differ: Hertfordshire — Resits accepted.. Oxford — Resits accepted in extenuating circumstances only - competitive applicants typically achieve A*AA in one sitting..

Hertfordshire — Min 5 GCSEs at grade 6 including Maths, English Language, dual-award Science. Oxford — Mean 10 A* (96% A* proportion) at GCSE for interviewees, contextualised to school performance. <90% A* still possible (~30 interviewed) where school performance is weaker.

Hertfordshire's selection methodology: Newer programme. UCAT + academic + interview. Hertfordshire-based with strong widening-participation focus. Oxford's selection methodology: 50% GCSE + 50% UCAT for shortlisting top 340 home applicants (out of ~1100). 80 borderline cases reviewed by Shortlisting Committee. Fully contextualised to applicant's school. Understanding each school's exact algorithm is the single highest-leverage piece of pre-application research — it tells you whether your profile is competitive before you spend an application choice.

Hertfordshire is in Hatfield, UK. Oxford is in Oxford, UK. Tuition is £9,250/year at both for UK home applicants; the main cost difference is accommodation (London accommodation typically runs 30-50% above the national average).

Hertfordshire typically releases medicine decisions March onwards. Oxford releases medicine decisions January. If one is earlier than the other, you may need to hold a decision while waiting for the second school — be ready to compare in real time.

Hertfordshire runs a PBL curriculum. Oxford runs a Traditional curriculum. The teaching philosophies differ — pick the style that matches how you learn best. Hertfordshire specifics: Five-year MBChB. Hertfordshire-based with East-of-England NHS placements. Oxford specifics: Three years pre-clinical (Years 1-3 BMBCh first part) at Oxford, then three years clinical at Oxford-affiliated NHS hospitals. Tutorial system means small-group teaching alongside lectures throughout.

You can — UCAS allows 4 medicine/dentistry choices in total, so listing both is feasible if your profile fits each school's selection algorithm. Apply to both only if your UCAT, GCSE and predicted-grade profile is competitive against each school's published weighting. A common mistake is using two of your four slots on similar schools when a more spread-out portfolio (one safe + one stretch) would maximise overall offer probability.