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3rd September 2025

BTECs on the Rise

Are vocational qualifications increasing in appeal?

2025 results show a large percentage increase in BTEC completions

For years, A-levels have dominated the headlines on results day. They still do – but the quiet story running alongside them is just as significant. While A-level entries have barely shifted in recent years, vocational qualifications, and BTECs in particular, are starting to grow in ways that could change the balance of post-16 education.

In 2023, A-level entries totaled approximately 867,600. By 2025, the figure had increased to 882,500, a rise of less than two percent. The steady upward line shows that A-levels remain the academic standard, but it also underlines how little the landscape has shifted.

BTECs tell a different story. Since the reforms of 2016, Level 3 BTEC Nationals have been remarkably consistent, with around 220,000 to 227,000 completions every year. Pearson’s figures show 226,998 results issued in 2022, with 2023 and 2024 almost identical. This stability suggested BTECs had found their level against the main alternative to A-levels.

This seems to have changed in 2025. For the first time in years, the total moved clearly beyond this level, with more than 250,000 results issued. This marks a rise of roughly 12 per cent compared with A-levels, which grew by less than 2 per cent in the same period – a fairly significant difference.

Popular BTEC subject areas

The subject mix within BTECs has remained largely consistent:

  • Business

  • Health & Social Care

  • Applied Science

  • Sport

  • Information Technology

Business and Health & Social Care in particular continue to attract very large students, and Applied Science and IT reflect the strong demand for STEM-related vocational routes.

T-Levels

T-levels have also been growing, but on a much smaller scale. Around 6,000 students completed them in 2023, rising to nearly 12,000 in 2025. Although this represents rapid percentage growth, it is modest in absolute numbers and far below the 250,000 students completing BTECs.

The real significance of the 2025 uplift is less about the numbers themselves and more about what they reveal. A decade of stability had suggested that BTECs had reached their natural ceiling, but the sharp increase shows renewed momentum. Part of this is being driven by student demand for courses with clear career outcomes, especially in sectors such as healthcare and IT where skills shortages are acute. It also reflects a shift in how universities and employers treat vocational pathways: BTECs are no longer seen as second best, but as a reliable route into both higher education and the workplace.

And that’s where the opportunity lies for universities. If more applicants are arriving with BTECs, then it’s a chance to build on this –  show how their courses connect to careers, reassure BTEC students that they’ll be supported in the transition, and make entry routes feel accessible and transparent. Get this right, and universities will be recruiting more students who are motivated, practical, and already thinking about how their studies link to the world of work.

If you’re looking for help with your recruitment strategies, we’d love to help mailto: kim.mclellan@hunterlodge.co.uk

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