Studying Physics in the UK as a CIE student
The complete guide for Cambridge International A-Level students applying to UK Physics degrees. Cambridge Natural Sciences vs Oxford vs Imperial trade-offs, ESAT requirements, CIE subject strategy, and the things CIE candidates specifically get wrong.
What a UK Physics degree looks like
Most UK Physics degrees run for three years (BSc) with a strongly-recommended fourth year (MPhys / MSci) that is required for a research career. Cambridge is the exception: you apply for Natural Sciences and branch into Physics in Year 2. The first year of any UK Physics degree is heavily mathematical and typically covers Newtonian mechanics, electromagnetism, thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, and the maths that supports them.
Top UK universities for Physics
Typical offers shown are for 2026 entry. Always verify the exact requirement on each university's admissions page.
Cambridge
Natural Sciences (Physical) — choose Physics specialisation from Year 2Cambridge does not offer a direct Physics degree from Year 1 — you enter via Natural Sciences and select Physics in Year 2. The Natural Sciences first year covers Physics + two other sciences + Maths.
Oxford
Physics; Physics & PhilosophyOxford joined UAT-UK in 2026, so this is the first cycle using ESAT instead of the PAT. The 19 years of past PAT papers remain the best topic-specific practice.
Imperial
Physics; Physics with Theoretical Physics; Physics with Quantum InformationImperial Physics is heavily mathematical from Year 1. Strong London choice for students who want a theoretical-physics emphasis early.
UCL
Physics; Theoretical Physics; Astrophysics; Medical PhysicsNo admissions test. Broader range of Physics flavours than Imperial. Lower offer than Oxbridge / Imperial makes it a strong "match" choice.
Manchester
Physics; Physics with Astrophysics; Physics with Theoretical PhysicsLargest Physics department in the UK. Wide course flexibility and a strong condensed-matter group.
Edinburgh
Physics; Mathematical Physics; Astrophysics4-year MPhys is the standard route (Scottish system). Strong gravitational-wave + cosmology programmes.
Durham
Physics; Theoretical Physics; Physics & AstronomyNo test, no interview. Decided on UCAS application alone. Strong cosmology and high-energy physics.
CIE A-Level subject choices that matter for Physics
Year 12 and Year 13 are the UK names for the last two school years (ages 16-18) — Grade 11 and Grade 12 in many international systems. For CIE, Year 12 is the AS Level year and Year 13 is the A2 / full A-Level year.
Your Year 12 A-Level subject mix decides what is realistically open to you. The typical CIE combination for UK Physics:
Physics (9702)
RequiredEvery UK Physics course requires this. Aim for A* prediction.
Mathematics (9709)
RequiredUK Physics is heavily mathematical from day one — Year 1 includes vector calculus and ODEs that assume A-Level Maths fluency.
Further Mathematics (9231)
Strongly preferred for Cambridge / Oxford / ImperialWithout it, Imperial Physics is realistically out of reach. Cambridge and Oxford accept candidates without 9231 but it is a clear positive signal.
Third subject
Standard 3-subject mixChemistry (9701) is the most common third — strengthens a Natural Sciences application. Computer Science is a strong alternative for theoretical / computational physics interest.
The ESAT (pre-application test)
Required by Cambridge (for Natural Sciences with Physics specialisation), Oxford (for Physics from 2026 entry, replacing the PAT), and Imperial (for Physics and most Engineering / Science courses). The ESAT is sat in October of Year 13.
Format quick reference
- · 2 hours, 81 multiple-choice questions across 3 subtests
- · Mathematics 1 (compulsory) + 2 chosen subtests from Maths 2, Physics, Chemistry, Biology
- · 40 minutes per subtest, 27 questions each
- · Calculator not allowed, no negative marking
- · Each subtest scored 1 to 9 independently
For a UK Physics application, take Mathematics 1 + Mathematics 2 + Physics. Mathematics 2 covers content beyond CIE 9709 — it overlaps with Further Maths 9231 and TMUA Paper 1 material. The Physics subtest expects standard A-Level Physics topics with broader coverage than CIE 9702 (astronomy, dimensional analysis, more applied mechanics).
Open the ESAT past papers + subject guidesBest practice resources: 19 years of Oxford PAT past papers (2006 to 2024) — same content, slightly different format. The NSAA Section 1 archive (linked from the ESAT page) is the closest direct-format match.
What admissions tutors look for
Physics is a subject where genuine independent curiosity is hard to fake and easy to spot. After predicted grades and ESAT scores get you on the shortlist, what gets you an offer is:
- ●Self-built projects. Geiger counter, Arduino-controlled experiments, telescopes, simulations in Python — anything that shows you have done physics yourself, not just learned it.
- ●Olympiad / competition experience. BPhO, IPhO at international centres, or your national physics olympiad. Even modest scores are positive signals.
- ●A specific topic you have pursued. "I read Feynman Lectures Vol 2 on EM and what struck me was..." Reads as serious; "I love physics" reads as generic.
- ●Mathematical fluency. Demonstrated through TMUA / ESAT / Further Maths performance. Physics admissions weight this as much as physics content.
Interview preparation (Cambridge / Oxford)
Cambridge Natural Sciences interviews include physics problem-solving at the depth and style of the Tripos. Oxford Physics interviews are similar. Most CIE applicants interview online.
Typical interview topics
- ●Reasoning from first principles: "A ball is dropped on a planet with gravity g and atmosphere of density rho — what is its terminal speed?"
- ●Manipulating equations symbolically without plugging in numbers — interviewers prefer you to keep variables and answer symbolically until the very end.
- ●Quick estimation: "Roughly how many atoms in a glass of water?" Fermi-problem style.
- ●Geometric / kinematic problems with diagrams you draw on the spot.
- ●Limits and extremes: "What happens to this system when X is very small? Very large?".
Best preparation: work through the Cambridge / Oxford open-day "sample interview" videos, practise thinking-aloud with a tutor on PAT or ESAT problems, and get comfortable doing physics with variables rather than numbers.
Common mistakes CIE students make
Picking Cambridge Physics over Natural Sciences thinking they are interchangeable
There is no Cambridge "Physics" degree from Year 1 — you apply for Natural Sciences and choose Physics in Year 2. This means the first year covers Physics, two other sciences (often Chemistry + Materials), and Maths. Some pure-physics-minded students prefer Oxford or Imperial for that reason.
Treating ESAT Physics as "just A-Level Physics"
ESAT Physics is broader than the CIE 9702 syllabus and tested differently. Topics like astronomical motion and dimensional analysis carry more weight than in 9702. See the ESAT subject guides for the specific spec.
Not preparing for ESAT Mathematics 2
For Cambridge Engineering / Oxford Physics, ESAT Maths 2 (advanced) is required alongside the Maths 1 (compulsory) subtest. CIE Maths 9709 alone is not enough preparation — you need Further Maths content and TMUA-style practice.
Underweighting the personal statement
Physics admissions especially reward evidence of independent curiosity: a project you built, a paper you read, an Olympiad you participated in. "I love physics" is the default and disappears in the pile. "I built a Geiger counter from..." stands out.
Ignoring the PAT archive even though the test is retired
Oxford's PAT archive (2006 to 2024) has 19 years of past papers. The PAT is now retired — replaced by ESAT — but the topic content is nearly identical. PAT past papers remain the next-best practice after NSAA / ENGAA for ESAT Physics. See our PAT archive.
Where to invest prep time
- 1.Master CIE 9702 + 9709. ESAT Physics and Maths subtests assume fluent A-Level content. There is no shortcut.
- 2.PAT past papers for ESAT Physics. 19 years available, freely mirrored. The single largest pool of ESAT Physics-grade practice. See /admissions-tests/pat/.
- 3.NSAA / ENGAA past papers. The closest format match to ESAT. UAT-UK themselves recommend these. See /admissions-tests/esat/.
- 4.ESAT Mathematics 2 prep. Drawn from Further Maths content. TMUA past papers are good substitute practice. See /admissions-tests/tmua/.
- 5.Interview practice. Think-aloud sessions on PAT or ESAT problems. The how matters more than the what.
Frequently asked questions
Cambridge Natural Sciences or Oxford Physics?
You can only apply to one. Cambridge Natural Sciences gives you a broader first year (Physics + 2 other sciences + Maths) and the option to switch out of pure Physics if you find a different field. Oxford Physics is pure Physics from day one. If you are certain about Physics, Oxford. If you want optionality, Cambridge.
Is Further Maths essential for Oxford / Cambridge Physics?
Strongly preferred and effectively required at Imperial. Cambridge and Oxford accept applicants without 9231 but it is a clear positive signal — and the ESAT Mathematics 2 subtest covers Further Maths content. Self-studying 9231 as a private candidate is feasible if your school does not offer it.
Should I take Chemistry or Computer Science as my third A-Level?
Both work. Chemistry is more conventional and matches Cambridge Natural Sciences if you want the breadth option. Computer Science signals computational-physics interest and supports an ESAT Chemistry or Biology subtest if you take it. Either is fine — admissions tutors care more about your performance than the specific combination.
What if my ESAT Physics score is weak?
ESAT is one component, not the sole filter. Cambridge and Oxford weight it alongside predicted grades, personal statement, and interview. A weak score makes Cambridge / Oxford interview shortlisting unlikely but does not rule out Imperial, UCL, or other Russell Group physics departments. The January ESAT sitting helps if you missed the October one, but Cambridge / Oxford use only the October score.