What are V Levels and who are they for?
V Levels are the government’s new vocational qualifications for 16–19s in England, planned to sit alongside A levels and T Levels from 2027. They’re designed to simplify a confusing patchwork of courses and give students a clear, mix-and-match route if they want something practical but not as narrowly job-specific as a T Level.
The idea in one minute
- What they are: Level 3 (A-level standard) qualifications with strong vocational content, linked to employer-set standards – so students build real-world skills while keeping options open.
- How they fit: You can take more than one V Level, or combine them with A levels. Think “build your programme” rather than one giant course.
- Where they lead: Work, higher/degree apprenticeships, or university – just as with other Level 3 routes (universities will publish their entry rules as the qualifications are finalised).
How V Levels differ from A levels and T Levels
- A levels are academic and subject-pure (great if you love exam-based study and want broad university options).
- T Levels are large, single programmes tied to a specific occupation and come with a substantial industry placement (ideal if you already know your career area).
- V Levels sit in the middle: sector-based, practical, and modular/combinable – good for students who want hands-on learning without committing to one occupational route from day one.
Likely subjects
The government consultation’s indicative list spans areas such as Digital; Finance & Accounting; Engineering & Manufacturing; Business; Health & Care; Education & Early Years; Media & Production; Arts & Design; Animal Care; Protective Services; Sport; Travel & Tourism, and more. The final list will be confirmed after consultation.
Timeline
- Now: Government consultation has begun on the detailed design.
- From 2027: First V Levels expected to launch, with a phased roll-out over several years (so availability will grow each year).
What families should do next
- Ask local colleges/sixth forms which V Level subjects they plan to offer from 2027 and how these can pair with A levels.
- If you’re choosing for 2026: expect current options (A levels, T Levels, and selected vocational courses) to continue; defunding of older courses will align with the V Levels roll-out.
- Thinking about university? Keep an eye on individual course pages and UCAS updates – providers will set how they accept V Levels once specifications are final.
Bottom line: V Levels are meant to make choices simpler: academic (A), technical (T), and now vocational (V) – with room to mix and match. If your child learns best through applied projects and wants flexibility, V Levels are well worth a look.
References:
https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/post-16-level-3-and-below-pathways