1MA1

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics (1MA1) — 2024 Past Papers

The Edexcel GCSE Mathematics (1MA1) 2024 examination consisted of 1 exam session totalling 12 downloadable files (5.7 MB). Every session bundle includes question papers and official mark schemes for both Foundation (grades 1-5) and Higher (grades 4-9) tier papers. Use the session cards below to download individual papers, or jump to a different year at the bottom of the page.

Exam sessions
1
Papers / files
12
Download size
5.7 MB
Paper components
6

2024 Exam Sessions

June Series

June

2024

J
Files 12
Size 5.7 MB
Session 1MA1 / June
View papers

1MA1 Paper Components

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics is a tiered qualification — students sit either the Foundation or Higher tier (not both). Foundation tier targets grades 1-5; Higher tier targets grades 4-9.

Foundation tier (grades 1-5)
  • Paper 1F
    Paper 1 Foundation
    1.5 hours
  • Paper 2F
    Paper 2 Foundation
    2 hours
  • Paper 3F
    Paper 3 Foundation
    2 hours
Higher tier (grades 4-9)
  • Paper 1H
    Paper 1 Higher
    1.5 hours
  • Paper 2H
    Paper 2 Higher
    2 hours
  • Paper 3H
    Paper 3 Higher
    2 hours

Browse other 1MA1 years

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is each 1MA1 paper?

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics (1MA1) is made up of 6 paper components across Foundation and Higher tiers.

  • 1F
    Paper 1 Foundation
    1.5 hours Foundation (1-5)
  • 2F
    Paper 2 Foundation
    2 hours Foundation (1-5)
  • 3F
    Paper 3 Foundation
    2 hours Foundation (1-5)
  • 1H
    Paper 1 Higher
    1.5 hours Higher (4-9)
  • 2H
    Paper 2 Higher
    2 hours Higher (4-9)
  • 3H
    Paper 3 Higher
    2 hours Higher (4-9)

Note: Foundation and Higher tier papers cover the same overall syllabus but at different difficulty levels. You sit one tier only.

When are Edexcel GCSE Mathematics exams held?

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics (1MA1) is mainly examined in the June series each year. The 2024 papers on this page cover the one session that ran in 2024: June 2024. Pearson Edexcel publishes question papers and mark schemes after each session.

View the Cambridge / Edexcel exam timetables →

What's the difference between Foundation and Higher tier?
Edexcel GCSE Mathematics is a tiered qualification: every student sits either the Foundation-tier papers or the Higher-tier papers, never both. Foundation is set for the 1-5 grade range; Higher is set for the 4-9 grade range. Foundation papers focus on the more accessible content of the specification; Higher papers include the more demanding topics and questions. Both tiers cover the same overall syllabus, but Higher goes deeper and faster. Mark schemes and grade thresholds are set separately for each tier.
Should I sit Foundation or Higher tier for Mathematics?
Schools enter students for either Foundation or Higher tier, typically based on mock results and teacher judgment. Foundation tier is appropriate if a grade 5 would be a strong outcome and the Higher-tier content feels too unstable. Higher tier is appropriate if grade 6+ is realistic and the student is comfortable with the harder questions during practice. Sitting Higher and underperforming caps you at "unclassified" below grade 3 (so the safety-net argument matters in borderline cases). Practise past papers at both tiers if you're undecided, then talk to your teacher with that data in hand.
Edexcel GCSE vs Edexcel IGCSE — what's the difference?
Edexcel GCSE is the UK domestic GCSE used by schools in England and Wales, with subject codes like 1MA1 (typically starting with "1"). Edexcel International GCSE (IGCSE) is the international version used worldwide, with different subject codes (typically starting with "4", e.g. 4BI1 for Biology). Both are Pearson qualifications and both are tiered or untiered depending on the subject, but they have different specifications, exam dates and grade-boundary calibration. UK universities accept either. If you're at a UK state school you'll typically sit GCSE; international schools more often choose IGCSE.
Are mark schemes and examiner reports free to download?
Yes — and LumiExams makes them easy to find. Pearson Edexcel publishes 1MA1 question papers, mark schemes (and examiner reports where released) as free educational materials after each session. The PDFs are © Pearson Education Ltd; LumiExams does not own these documents, we organise the official Edexcel PDFs by year and session so you can study with the same materials your teachers reference, and we link directly to each file. For official specifications, registration and assessment policy, refer to qualifications.pearson.com.
How should I use the 2024 Mathematics papers for revision?

Work through one full paper under timed exam conditions, mark it against the official mark scheme, then read the examiner report for that session (where Pearson has published one). The examiner report calls out where students lost the most marks and why — that's the highest-leverage revision target. Sit the tier you've been entered for (Foundation or Higher), not the other one. Pearson updates the Edexcel specification every few years, so the 2024 papers reflect the specification active in 2024; before relying on these for the year you're sitting, check the current 1MA1 specification on the Pearson Edexcel website.

Pearson Edexcel official GCSE specifications →

When will Edexcel 2025 Mathematics papers be available?
Pearson Edexcel releases GCSE past papers a few months after each exam session, so 2025 papers appear gradually rather than all at once. Expected timeline: June 2025 papers around late August or early September 2025, after the results release. 2024 (shown above) currently has the most recent 1MA1 papers on LumiExams — new 2025 question papers, mark schemes and examiner reports will appear here as soon as Pearson publishes them.