Student Financial Guidance
Our Student Financial Guidance team provide expert financial guidance to students and prospective students on a wide range of issues, so you can get expert help before you even apply for university. The service is free, confidential, impartial and non-judgemental.
For support, contact the team at studentfinancialsupport-london@sunderland.ac.uk or on +44 (0)20 7531 7333.
Guidance notes
When and how will you receive your award?
Bursaries will be awarded based on one of the underrepresented groups listed in the overview section.
Students will be notified of their provisional award shortly after they receive a course offer from us. Following enrolment on an eligible course and confirmation of suitable evidence, bursary awards will be confirmed.
Please note, if we need to verify your household income as part of your bursary application, you must have undertaken a means-tested Student Loans Company (SLC) assessment. You must also agree to share your data with the University via the SLC. The University will liaise with the SLC to verify household income.
Bursary awards will be made in the following instalments in each year of continuous study based on academic progression:
| Course start month | ||||
| August | October | January | April | |
| Tier 1 | £250 on 6 November 2026 and 7 April 2027 | £250 on 8 January 2027 and 7 July 2027 | £250 on 7 April and 7 October 2027 | £250 on 7 July 2027 and 4 January 2028 |
| Tier 2 | £375 on 6 November 2026 and 7 April 2027 | £375 on 8 January 2027 and 7 July 2027 | £375 on 7 April and 7 October 2028 | £375 on 7 July and 4 January 2028 |
| Tier 3 | £500 on 6 November 2026, 8 January 2027, 7 April 2027 and 7 July 2027 | £500 on 8 January 2027, 7 April 2027 and 7 July 2027 and 7 October 2027 | £500 on 7 April 2027, 7 July 2027, 7 October 2027 and 4 January 2028 | £500 on 7 July 2027, 7 October 2027, 4 January 2028 and 4 April 2028 |
Additional information
Recipients of a scholarship or bursary will be expected to participate in surveys, feedback requests, and other market research activities to help the University evaluate and improve its scholarship and bursary provision. This may include sharing insights on your student experience and the impact of financial support.
If you have not registered on your course within three weeks of the course start date or provided sufficient evidence of eligibility, the scholarship or bursary will be withdrawn.
If you do not supply us with the required information by the date mentioned in the table below, the scholarship or bursary provisional award will be withdrawn.
| Course start month | Deadline |
| August 2026 | Friday 27th November 2026 |
| September, October, November 2026 | Friday 26th January 2027 |
| January, February 2027 | Thursday 30th April 2027 |
| April, May 2027 | Thursday 30th July 2027 |
If you withdraw from your course before receiving a scholarship or bursary payment, the award will be withdrawn. If you withdraw after a payment is made, the University may seek reimbursement however, you will not receive any further instalments.
The award is conditional on you maintaining satisfactory engagement and making academic progress on your course in the reasonable opinion of the Programme Team.
The University agrees to pay you, the student, all awards and payments that are due to you while you are on your course of study.
If you transfer to another course or you repeat a year of the same course, the award will not be made in the repeated year. Any payments due to you will continue once you progress onto the following level (s) of study on the course.
If you are on a placement year or studying for a year and not paying full fees, the award will not be paid during that year.
If you take a leave of absence (LOAB), your payments will stop until you return and progress academically.
If you are in debt to the University to the value of £50 or more, you will not receive payment until the debt has been cleared. Awards will only be payable if all tuition fee payments are up to date and there are no monies owed to the University.
All payments will be made into your UK bank account. It is your responsibility to enter your bank details via the e:Vision portal and ensure these are kept up to date. If you fail to enter your bank details to enable payments to be made to you before your course end date (or the date of leaving your course if earlier), all scholarships, bursaries and payments will be withdrawn.
As part of the admissions process, the University will verify various aspects of a UCAS or direct application to determine that you should be classed as ‘Home’. The following criteria will be verified:
- Declared nationality
- Country of birth
- Area of permanent residence
- Date of entry into the UK (if applicable)
- Location of previous education provider
Disclaimer
Every effort is made to ensure that all details included in these guidance notes are correct at the time of writing. They are intended to act as an information source only, and in no way should they be considered legally binding or guarantee an award.
The University will not be deemed to be in breach of any legal or contractual obligations due to changes to eligibility criteria beyond the reasonable control of the University. It should therefore be noted that these guidance notes are regularly reviewed and are naturally subject to change, sometimes without notice. The University’s decision is final.
Appendix
Use the information below to determine what evidence will be required as proof of priority group.
You are a Gypsy, Traveller, Roma, Showman or Boater
Your student record will evidence this following your application and enrolment.
You are a refugee
Your refugee status can be verified using Home Office documents.
You were eligible for free school meals in secondary school (Years 7–11)
Your student record will evidence this following your application and enrolment. For mature applicants that a letter from your school could also be used.
You have caring responsibilities
This can be verified by one of the following:
- By a teacher, adviser or GP that you are a carer who has caring responsibilities for an average of 15 hours per week
- You can provide proof of your average of 15 hours per week caring responsibilities
- You are in receipt of Carer’s Allowance
You reside in a low-participation neighbourhood (POLAR4: Quintiles 1)
This refers to geographic areas where the number of 18 and 19-year-olds participating in higher education is less than two-thirds of the UK average rate. Check your eligibility on the OfS website(opens in new tab)(opens in new tab).
During the enrolment process, the University will verify this based on your postcode. This will be based on your address at the time of applying to the University.
You have an annual household income of less than £30,000
If you are a ‘Home’ student who has applied for means-tested loans and grants from the Student Loans Company (SLC), the University will liaise with the SLC to verify your household income.
You are care-experienced
We use the broader definition of ‘care-experienced’ as this term is inclusive of the range of care settings someone may have experienced.
Our definition of care-experienced is someone who, at any stage of their life, and for any length of time, has been in care in the UK e.g. looked after by the local authority.
This includes the following:
- Spent time in the care of the local authority (e.g. foster care or children’s home)
- Privately fostered
- ‘Looked after at home’ under a supervision order
- In kinship care (where a friend or family member becomes the foster carer). Kinship care can be through a formal agreement, recognised by the local authority, and could be prior to a Special Guardianship Order.
For further information, please contact the London We Care Team, Pamela Afra-Dicko, Student Wellbeing Advisor at londonhealth@sunderland.ac.uk(opens in new tab)(opens in new tab).
You are an estranged student
You have had no contact at all with your parents/carers for at least 12 months and this is unlikely to change.
You can demonstrate on other grounds that you are irreconcilably estranged from both of your parents/carers (e.g. exceptional circumstances)
Or
You are assessed as independent by Student Finance England because you are estranged from both parents/carers.
For estrangement cases that cannot be confirmed by Student Finance England (SFE), proof of evidence of ‘genuine estrangement’ would need to be supplied to the University. All applications of estrangement are assessed on an individual basis.
You will not be considered estranged on the basis that you:
(i) live separately from your parents/carers, or
(ii) have recently fallen out with your parents/carers, or
(iii) your parents/carers are unwilling to complete income assessment forms or contribute towards your student finance.
You do not live on the mainland and have a home address within Northern Island, Isle of Wight, Isle of Man, Isles of Scilly, Channel Islands or Islands of Scotland.
Eligible postcodes
Northern Ireland
BT1, BT2, BT3, BT4, BT5, BT6, BT7, BT8, BT9, BT10, BT11, BT12, BT13, BT14, BT15, BT16, BT17, BT18, BT19, BT20, BT21, BT22, BT23, BT24, BT25, BT26, BT27, BT28, BT29, BT30, BT31, BT32, BT33, BT34, BT35, BT36, BT37, BT38, BT39, BT40, BT41, BT42, BT43, BT44, BT45, BT46, BT47, BT48, BT49, BT51, BT52, BT53, BT54, BT55, BT56, BT57, BT58, BT60, BT61, BT62, BT63, BT64, BT65, BT66, BT67, BT68, BT69, BT70, BT71, BT74, BT75, BT76, BT77, BT78, BT79, BT80, BT81, BT82, BT92, BT93, BT94.
Channel Islands
GY1, GY2, GY3, GY4, GY5, GY6, GY7, GY8, GY9, GY10
JE1, JE2, JE3, JE4, JE5
Isle of Man
IM1, IM2, IM3, IM4, IM5, IM6, IM7, IM8, IM9, IM86, IM87, IM99
Isle of Wight
PO30, PO41, PO31, PO32, PO33, PO34, PO35, PO36, PO38, PO39, PO40, PO41
Isle of Scilly
TR21, TR22, TR23, TR24, TR25
Scottish Islands (Outer Hebrides)
HS1, HS2, HS3, HS4, HS5, HS6, HS7, HS8, HS9
Scottish Islands (Inner Hebrides)
IV41, IV42, IV43, IV44, IV45, IV46, IV47, IV48, IV49, IV55, IV56, PA41, PA42, PA43, PA44, PA45, PA46, PA47, PA48, PA49, PA60, PA61, PA62, PA63, PA64, PA65, PA66, PA67, PA68, PA69, PA70, PA71, PA72, PA73, PA74, PA75, PA76, PA77, PA78, PH42, PH43, PH44
Scottish Islands (Islands of the Clyde)
KA27, KA28, PA20
Scottish Islands (Orkney Islands)
KW15, KW16, KW17
Scottish Islands (Shetland Islands)
ZE1, ZE2, ZE3
The University of Sunderland in London offer a range of bursaries to full-time, Home undergraduate students studying eligible courses. Bursary awards will be allocated to under-represented cohorts according to the following criteria.
|
Under-represented cohorts |
Bursary Award*** |
|
Gypsies, Travellers, Roma, Showpeople and Boaters* |
Awards £3,000: £3,000 cash awarded over academic years 1, 2 and 3 |
|
Asylum Seeker, Refugee or Humanitarian Protection* |
Awards £3,000: £3,000 cash awarded over academic years 1, 2 and 3 |
|
Mature, male, BAME* |
Awards £2,000: £2,000 cash awarded over academic years 1, 2 and 3 |
|
Carer* |
Awards £2,000: £2,000 cash awarded over academic years 1, 2 and 3 |
|
Annual household income of £27,500 or less** |
Awards £1,000: £1,000 cash awarded over years 1, 2 and 3 |
|
Annual household income of between £27,501 to £47,500** |
Awards £500: £500 cash awarded over academic years 1,2 and 3 |
*Subject to receiving evidence see Appendix 1.
**As assessed and confirmed via the Student Loans Company application process.
***Bursaries will be awarded over the period of three academic years for programmes longer than one academic year. Top Up students will receive a one-year award. Direct entrant students will receive the award relevant to the year they start. Please see ‘Awarding Bursaries’ section below.
Who’s eligible?
1. You must be a 'Home', ‘Asylum Seeker or ‘Overseas Island’ student on an eligible course
The Government classes all students as 'Home' or 'International'. This status determines which tuition fees you pay, and which bursaries you are eligible to apply for.
We also categorise a student’s UK immigration status in terms of ‘Overseas Island’, ‘Asylum Seeker’, and ‘EU Students with UK settled status’.
In order to be eligible, a student must belong to one of the following eligible student groups and eligible study levels:
Eligible Student Groups:
- Home Students are eligible to apply for these bursaries.
- Overseas Island; Isle of Man and the Channel Islands students are eligible to apply for these bursaries.
- Asylum Seeker students are eligible to apply for these bursaries.
- EU students with UK Settled Status at the time of application are eligible to apply for these bursaries.
Eligible Study Levels:
- Foundation students applying to commence your studies in the 2025/26 academic year
- First year students applying to commence your studies in the 2025/26 academic year
- Direct entrants students applying to commence your studies in the 2025/26 academic year
- Top-up students joining at Level 3 from a University of Sunderland in London Foundation Degree programme applying to commence your studies in the 2025/26 academic year.
Ineligible Student Groups:
- International students: are not eligible for these bursaries.
- Graduated Students: that is students who already hold an undergraduate degree are not eligible for these bursaries.
- We Care: Bursary Recipients are not eligible for these bursaries.
2. You must apply for and meet the conditions of your offer, then enrol onto and study a relevant course
Details of all full-time undergraduate programmes eligible for bursaries can be found here.
How to apply
If you are starting an undergraduate programme between August 2024 to June 2025, you can apply for this scholarship as soon as you have completed your online enrolment via your e:Vision account. The deadline for applications is 12 noon on the 31st of July 2026. View the list of eligible courses below.
Payment dates for successful applicants:
- August, October, November intake: 5th working day of February 2026
- January, February intake: 5th working day of June 2026
- April, May intake: 5th working day of August 2026
Subject to the date of application, the payment will be the 5th working day of the next month (for successful applicants).
Please note that applying for a scholarship does not guarantee that you will be awarded it.
Awarding Bursaries
Successful applicants will be awarded only ONE of the under-represented groups criteria. Successful applicants will be notified via email to inform them of their provisional award.
Bursary awards will be confirmed following enrolment onto an eligible University of Sunderland in London course and confirmation of satisfactory evidence of belonging to the under-represented group. You MUST giveconsent to the Student Loans Company to share your financial information with the University of Sunderland.
If the number of bursary applications meeting the bursary criteria exceeds the total number of awards available, the University will use the awarding criteria at Appendix 2 to prioritise the applications.
Bursaries will be awarded over the period of three academic years for programmes longer than one academic year. Direct entrants will receive an award from year 2. Top Up students will receive a one-year award. See Appendix 3 for the payment schedules
The award will be paid directly to the student’s bank account. Students must ensure that their full bank account details are added to their e:Vision account to receive their award. If bank details have not been provided through e:Vison in time for the bursary payment, the award will be withdrawn.
The bursary award is intended to support you with any of the following:
- Travel costs – including public transport, petrol, vehicle costs such as insurance, maintenance, other costs such as parking, tolls.
- Digital – IT equipment including laptops, tablets, specialist software and digital connectivity such as broadband costs.
- Childcare costs – related to additional childcare needs for attending university and/or placement
- Other expenses - such as books, specialist equipment and essential course materials.
If you have not registered on your course within three weeks of the course start date or provided evidence of eligibility, the bursary will be withdrawn and offered to another eligible student.
The bursary award is conditional on you maintaining satisfactory engagement and making academic progress in your course of study in the reasonable opinion of the Programme Team. If you withdraw from your course before receiving a bursary payment, the bursary offer will be withdrawn. If you withdraw after a bursary payment is made, the University will not seek reimbursement, however you will not receive any further instalments.
If you transfer to another course and repeat a year, or if you repeat a year of the same course, the bursary willnot be awarded in the repeated year. However, the bursary award will continue once you progress onto the following year(s) of study.
If you take a Leave of Absence (LOAB) in academic year 2025/26, you will be eligible to receive the remainder of your award when you return, up until the end of academic year 2026/27.
If you have an outstanding university debt of £50 or more, you will not receive the bursary until the debt has been cleared.
If you do not enter your bank details onto e:Vision by the time of the bursary payment, the award will be withdrawn.
Bursaries can only be awarded if all tuition fees have been paid in full.
Income Assessed Bursaries
Income assessed bursaries will be based on the Student Loan Company’s definition and assessment ofhousehold income. Your declared household income will be checked and verified. Bursaries will only be offered to those students who have:
(1) a confirmed annual household income of £27,500 or less, or
(2) a confirmed annual household income of between £27,501 and £47,500.
As part of the admissions process, the University will verify various aspects of a UCAS or direct application’s status to determine that applicants fit the criteria of ‘Home’, ‘Asylum Seeker’, ‘Overseas Island’ or ‘EU Settled Status’. The following criteria will be verified:
- Declared nationality
- Country of birth
- Area of permanent residence
- Date of entry into the UK (if applicable)
- Location of previous education
Disclaimer
Every effort is made to ensure that all details included in these Guidance Notes are correct at the time of writing. They are intended to act as an information source only for potential scholarship applicants and in no way should they be considered to be legally binding or guarantee an award of a scholarship.
The University will not be deemed to be in breach of any legal or contractual obligations due to changes to eligibility criteria beyond the reasonable control of the University. It should therefore be noted that these Guidance Notes are regularly reviewed and are naturally subject to change from time to time sometimes without notice. The University’s decision is final.
Appendix 1
Evidencing Priority Criteria
| Under-represented Cohort |
Evidence |
| You are a Gypsy, Traveller, Roma, Showperson and Boaters. |
|
|
You are currently seeking asylum in the UK, or you are a dependant, spouse or civil partner of someone currentlyseeking asylum in the UK. (You will need to have an active asylum case).
or
You hold Discretionary or Limited Leave to Remain as a result of seeking asylum in the UK, or you are a dependant,spouse or civil partner of someone who has been granted Limited Leave to Remain as a result of seeking asylum in the UK or another form of temporary status.
and You are unable to access UK student finance (tuition fee loans and/or maintenance loans) by virtue of your immigration status. |
Currently attending a school, college, community or voluntary group where a teacher or advisor can provide a reference in support of your application or a letter from an immigration solicitor/legal advisor.
or
Evidence of eligible immigration status. This is either your own right or as dependent of someone with the status:
Recently granted humanitarian protection (as a result of an asylum application) and Evidence of UK residency |
| You are a mature, male student from an ethnic minority background |
Declare during your application and enrolment: you are aged 21 or over on 30thSeptember of the academic year of study.
and
you are male, as opposed to thegender with which you identify.
and
your declared ethnicity is listed on appendix 4. |
| You have sole or shared responsibility for the care of a relative who has a chronic or terminal illness, disability, mental health problem, alcohol or drug addiction. |
Verified by a teacher, adviser or GP that you are a Carer who has caring responsibilities for an average of 15 hours per week.
Or
You are a Carer who has caring responsibilities for average of 15 hours per week and you are able to provide proof of your current caring responsibilities.
Or You receive Carer’s Allowance |
| You have an annual household income of £27,500 or less** |
If you are a Home student who has applied for means-tested loans and grants from the Students Loans Company, the University will liaise with the Student Loans Company to verify your household income levels. |
|
You have an annual household income of between £27,5001 -£47,500 |
If you are a Home student who has applied for means-tested loans and grants from the Students Loans Company, theUniversity will liaise with the Student Loans Company to verify your household income levels. |
Appendix 2
Awarding criteria if bursary applications meeting the bursary criteria exceed the total amount of awards available.
| Under-represented Cohorts |
Awarding Priority Band |
Awarding Priorities |
| Gypsies, Travellers, Roma, Showpeople and Boaters | Priority One | Awards will be made as a high priority. |
| Asylum Seeker or Refugee | Priority One | Awards will be made as a high priority. |
| Mature, male, BAME | Priority Two | Awards will be made as a medium priority. |
| Carer | Priority Two | Awards will be made as a medium priority. |
|
Annual household income of £27,500 or less |
Priority Three | Awards will be made as a medium priority. |
| Annual household income of between £27,501 and £47,500 | Priority Four |
Awards will be made only when there is an ability to do so. Awards will be made on a sliding scale based on confirmed annual household income. Households with lower incomes will be prioritised over higher household incomes. In the event of any duplicated annual household income values, Polar4, Quintile 1 and 2 data will be used to rank recipients. |
Appendix 3
Bursary Payment Schedule
|
Under-represented cohort |
Total Value of Award |
Value of award Year 1 |
Value of award Year 2 |
Value of award Year 3 |
|
Gypsies, Travellers, Roma, Showpeople and Boaters Asylum Seeker, Refugee or Humanitarian Protection |
£3,000 | £1,500 | £750 | £750 |
| Mature, male, BAME student |
£2,000 |
£1000 |
£500 |
£500 |
|
Carer |
£2,000 |
£1000 |
£500 |
£500 |
|
Annual household income of £27,500 or less |
£1,000: |
£500 |
£250 |
£250 |
|
Annual household income of between £27,501 to £47,500 |
£500: |
£250 |
£125 |
£125 |
Appendix 4 Ethnicity
- Black or Black British - Caribbean
- Black or Black British – African
- Other Black background
- Asian or Asian British – Indian
- Asian or Asian British – Pakistani
- Asian or Asian British – Bangladeshi
- Chinese
- Other Asian background
- Mixed - White and Black Caribbean
- Mixed - White and Black African
- Mixed - White and Asian
- Other mixed background
- Arab
|
Full-Time Undergraduate Course |
UCAS Code |
|
Education and Society |
|
|
BSc (Hons) Health and Social Care (Top Up) |
L510 |
|
FdSc Health and Social Care |
BL95 |
|
Health Sciences and Wellbeing |
|
|
BSc (Hons) Nursing Top-up |
B700 |
|
BSc (Hons) Nursing Practice |
NPT1 |
|
Business and Tourism |
|
|
BA (Hons) Accounting and Financial Management (Top-Up) |
NN43 |
| BA (Hons) Business and Management with Integrated Foundation Year | N101 |
| BSc (Hons) International Tourism and Hospitality Management | NN28 |
| BSc (Hons) International Tourism and Hospitality Management with Integrated Foundation Year | N830 |
| BA (Hons) Events Management | N820 |
| BA (Hons) International Tourism and Hospitality Management (Top- Up) | NN82 |
| BA (Hons) Events Management with Integrated Foundation Year | N821 |
| BA (Hons) Accounting and Finance | NN41 |
|
BA (Hons) Business & Management |
NN2C |
| BA (Hons) Accounting and Financial Management (Top-Up) | NN43 |
| BA (Hons) Business Management and Entrepreneurship (Top-Up) | BEM1 |
| BA (Hons) Events and Entertainment Management | MEE1 |
| FdA Business and Management | FDB1 |
| FdA Tourism and Events Management | FTE1 |
| BSc (Hons) Accounting and Financial Systems | |
| BSc (Hons) Nursing Practice | |
Overview
In addition to the bespoke support offered by the We Care team, we offer the We Care Postgraduate Bursary which awards £2,500 cash to eligible postgraduate students. This award is typically made for one academic year and is valued at a total of £2,500. The bursary is paid in four instalments of £625 and is intended to financially support eligible students while they study at postgraduate level.
Who is eligible?
1. You must be a ‘Home’ or 'Overseas Island' student on an eligible course.
The Government classes all students as ‘Home’ or ‘International’. This status determines which tuition fees you pay, and which scholarships and bursaries you may be eligible to receive. Overseas Island; Isle of Man and the Channel Islands students are eligible. International students are not eligible.
If your course is funded by the Enhanced Learning Credits Administration Service (ELCAS), you are not eligible.
2. You must apply for and meet the conditions of your offer, then successfully enrol onto an eligible course.
You must be a full-time postgraduate student on a taught course, paying full tuition fees. The bursary is for eligible students based at City Campus, Sir Tom Cowie at St Peter’s Campus, or the Northern Academy of Music Education (NAME).
You must be studying a full-time taught postgraduate course which starts in academic year 2026/27.
The following University of Sunderland courses aren't eligible for this bursary:
- Continuous Professional Development (CPD) courses
- Apprenticeship courses
- English for Academic Purposes (EAP) language courses
- PhD Doctor of Philosophy courses
- Sunderland Online courses (except for BSc (Hons) Adult Nursing (Blended))
- Corporate and Professional Education Team (CaPE) courses
3. You must meet the University’s definition of being care-experienced or estrangement
Care-experienced students
You must have been care-experienced in the UK at some stage in your life, and for any length of time, or been in care, for example, looked after by the local authority. This includes the following:
- Spent time in the care of the local authority (e.g. foster care or children’s home)
- Privately fostered
- ‘Looked after at home’ under a supervision order
- In kinship foster care (where a friend or family member becomes the foster carer). Kinship care through a formal arrangement, recognised by a Local Authority, and could be prior to a Special Guardianship Order
If you are care-experienced but your personal circumstances do not match any of the criteria outlined above, please contact the We Care team, Pamela Afra-Dicko, Student Wellbeing Advisor at londonhealth@sunderland.ac.uk for further guidance.
Estranged students
The term ‘estranged student’ is used to refer to students who are studying without the support of a family network. You must be irreconcilably estranged from both parents/carers. This means:
- You've had no contact with your parents/carers for at least 12 months and this is unlikely to change or;
- You can demonstrate on other grounds that you are irreconcilably estranged from your parents/carers (e.g. exceptional circumstances or assessed as independent by Student Finance England (SFE) or by a Local Authority because you are estranged from both parents/carers).
You must be under the age of 25 on 1 September 2026.
Should your circumstances change during your studies, you'll be required to advise the We Care team.
For estrangement cases that cannot be confirmed by SFE, proof of evidence of ‘genuine estrangement’ would need to be provided from another professional body or person. All applications from estranged students are assessed on an individual basis.
You'll not be considered estranged on the basis that you (i) live separately from your parents/carers, (ii) have recently fallen out with your parents/carers, or (iii) you parents/carers are unwilling to complete income assessment forms or support you financially.
If you are care-experienced but your personal circumstances do not match any of the criteria outlined above, please contact the We Care team, Pamela Afra-Dicko, Student Wellbeing Advisor at londonhealth@sunderland.ac.uk for further guidance.
If you choose not to disclose your care-experienced or estranged status at application or enrolment stage, you can inform the We Care team directly using the information above. All correspondence is treated as strictly confidential. The information you give will only be used within this team to assess your eligibility for the bursary and associated support.
How to apply
If you've applied for an eligible course in autumn 2026 and shared that you are care experienced or estranged as part of your application, you don't need to apply for this bursary. You'll be contacted by the We Care team with details of the support on offer, including the We Care Postgraduate Bursary. You'll be asked to provide evidence of your care experience or estrangement. Once this is received, a provisional award offer can be made.
Payments will only be made when your evidence has been supplied and verified. Payments cannot be backdated. The deadline for evidence to be sent to, and verified by, the We Care team is 10 December 2026. We're unable to process any evidence received after this date but instead can provide details of the Student Support Fund.
You may apply for this bursary at any point throughout your course; however, payments will only be made once an application has been received, and your evidence has been supplied and verified. Please note, payments will not be backdated.
If you're eligible for the We Care Bursary, you'll also be offered an additional pastoral support package.
Assessment and awarding process
After you have applied for your course, the We Care team will contact you with details of the We Care Postgraduate Bursary. We'll request evidence to verify your status so that a provisional bursary offer can be made. You'll need to provide confirmation from your Local Authority or Student Finance England of your eligibility for this bursary.
Once your care-experienced or estranged status has been verified, you'll be provisionally awarded the bursary and invited to a welcome meeting at the start of the academic year. The We Care team will finalise bursary payments and outline the additional support package at the welcome meeting.
Students applying to study a subsequent postgraduate course, after the completion of their first, will not be eligible for this bursary.
Receiving the bursary
The We Care Postgraduate Bursary awards £2,500 cash to eligible students for each year of full-time study, based on academic progression. This bursary is typically received for one year of postgraduate study. The bursary is paid in four instalments of £625 on the fifth working day of November 2026, January 2027, April 2027 and July 2027.
The award of this bursary is subject to the following:
- You commence your course in academic year 2026/27
- You enrol as a full-time taught postgraduate student
- You attend a welcome meeting with the We Care team
- Your academic progression i.e. attendance and engagement with your course
Students who are paying their tuition fees through a university-approved payment plan will only receive the We Care Postgraduate Bursary if the total amount they have paid in tuition fees is equal to or greater than the total amount of bursary received. Bursary payments will be paused if a student owes more in tuition fees than the value of the bursary instalment due. Payments may resume once tuition fee payments have reached the required level.
Students with a Tuition Fee Payment Plan
If you're paying your tuition fees through a University-approved payment plan, you will only receive We Care Bursary instalments if the total amount you have paid in tuition fees is equal to or greater than the total amount of bursary received. Bursary payments will be paused if you owe more in tuition fees than the value of the bursary instalment due. Payments may resume once tuition fee payments have reached the required level.
Additional information
If you've not registered on your course within three weeks of the course start date, the bursary offer will be withdrawn.
If you don't supply us with the required information to verify your eligibility by 10 December 2026, the scholarship or bursary provisional award will be withdrawn.
If you withdraw from your course before receiving a bursary payment, the award will be withdrawn. If you withdraw after a payment is made, the University will not seek reimbursement however, you'll not receive any further instalments.
The award is conditional on you maintaining satisfactory engagement and making academic progress on your course in the reasonable opinion of the Programme Team.
The University agrees to pay you, the student, all awards, and payments that are due to you whilst you are on your course of study. If a bursary payment is made to you in error, the University reserves the right to recover any awards or overpayments from you. This may result in you being asked to repay an award if it was paid to you in error. It's also your responsibility to ensure all awards and payments you receive are accurate. Any payment discrepancies will be rectified by the University of the student.
If you repeat a year of the same course, the award will not be paid in the repeated year.
If you transfer to another course and repeat a year, the award will not be paid in the repeated year.
If you're on a placement year or studying for a year and not paying full fees, the award will not be paid during that year.
If you take a leave of absence (LOAB), your bursary payments will be paused until you return and progress academically.
If you're in debt to the University to the value of £50 or more, you'll not receive payment until the debt has been cleared.
All payments will be made into your UK bank account. It's your responsibility to enter your bank details and ensure these are kept up to date. If you fail to enter your bank details to enable payments to be made to you before your course end date (or the date of leaving your course if earlier), all scholarships, bursaries, and payments will be withdrawn.
As part of the admissions process, the University will verify various aspects of a UCAS or direct application to determine that you should be classed as ‘Home’. The following criteria will be verified:
- Declared nationality
- Country of birth
- Area of permanent residence
- Date of entry into the UK (if applicable)
- Location of previous education provider
Disclaimer
Every effort is made to ensure that all details included in these guidance notes are correct at the time of writing. They're intended to act as an information source only, and in no way should they be considered legally binding or guarantee an award.
The University will not be deemed to be in breach of any legal or contractual obligations due to changes to eligibility criteria beyond the reasonable control of the University. It should therefore be noted that these guidance notes are regularly reviewed and are naturally subject to change, sometimes without notice. The University’s decision is final.


