GCSE results day falls on the fourth Thursday of August in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. You collect a results slip from your school from early morning, find out your grades across all subjects, and then decide what happens next — whether that is joining a sixth form, starting a college course, or considering a resit.
When exactly is GCSE results day?
GCSE results are always released on the fourth Thursday of August, one week after A-Level results day. In 2025 this was 21 August; the date shifts slightly each year but remains in the same window. Your school will tell you the specific time to arrive — typically from 8 am or 9 am — and most students collect in person. If you cannot attend, a parent or guardian can usually collect on your behalf, or your school may post results by first-class post on results day morning.
What does the results slip show?
The results slip lists every GCSE subject you were entered for, the awarding body (AQA, OCR, Pearson Edexcel, or WJEC Eduqas), and your grade on the 9–1 scale (or A*–G in legacy subjects still working through the system). A grade of 4 is widely considered a standard pass; a grade of 5 is a strong pass. English Language and Mathematics are the two qualifications most universities, employers, and colleges focus on, as they are typically required at grade 4 or above for Level 3 progression.
What is a GCSE certificate and when do you receive it?
Your results slip is not your official certificate. The actual GCSE certificate is a formal document issued by the awarding body — not the school — and it typically arrives at school a few months after results day, usually in the autumn term. You collect it from your school (or it is posted to you if you have moved on). Some schools hold certificates for students who do not collect them; others send uncollected certificates to the awarding body's secure storage after a set period.
Keep your certificate somewhere safe — it is a permanent record of your qualifications. If you lose it, you can apply for a replacement certificate or certified results statement directly from the awarding body. There is usually a small fee and a wait of several weeks.
What are your options if grades are lower than expected?
Disappointing grades feel devastating in the moment, but there are several practical routes forward. The table below sets out the main options:
| Option | What it means | Best suited to |
|---|---|---|
| Accept the results and progress | Join sixth form, college, or employment with the grades you have | Students whose grades still meet the requirements of their next step |
| Resit in November | Re-sit English Language and/or Mathematics in November of Year 12 | Students who narrowly missed grade 4 in English Language or Maths (most common resit) |
| Resit in the following summer | Retake one or more subjects the next May–June series | Students who want to improve grades before university or Level 3 applications |
| Switch to a different Level 3 course | Change from A-Levels to a BTEC or T-Level that accepts lower entry grades | Students whose grades don't meet sixth-form entry requirements but who want to continue studying |
| Consider a different college or sixth form | Some colleges have broader entry requirements than school sixth forms | Students whose grades fall just below their first-choice sixth form's threshold |
| Take a foundation or bridging year | Some colleges and private providers offer Level 2 courses to bridge to Level 3 | Students with significant grade shortfalls who need to build subject knowledge |
How do you query or appeal a grade?
If you believe a mark or grade is wrong, you can ask your school to submit a clerical check (ensuring marks were added up correctly) or request a post-results review (where an examiner re-marks your paper). The formal terms vary by awarding body:
- AQA calls the process EAR (Enquiry About Results)
- OCR uses post-results services (priority review of marking)
- Pearson Edexcel offers reviews of marking at standard or priority speed
There are strict deadlines — typically within a few weeks of results day — and fees apply (which are refunded if the grade changes). Your school coordinates the process on your behalf; you cannot contact the exam board directly as an individual student. If a review leads to a grade change, the new grade replaces the original on your certificate.
How do you collect your GCSE certificate later?
Certificates arrive at school in the autumn, usually October or November. Your school will write to you or email you to arrange collection. You will typically need to bring identification (a passport, driving licence, or the original results slip). If you have started at a different school or college by then, your old school still holds the certificate — you will need to go back to collect it in person or authorise someone else to do so in writing.
If you do not collect within a certain period (often one to two academic years), uncollected certificates may be transferred to the awarding body's certificate storage service, from which you can request them directly, or destroyed according to the school's policy. Always chase your certificate within the first term after results day to avoid complications.
What support is available on results day itself?
Schools and colleges are required to have staff available on results day to offer guidance. Many also arrange for sixth-form or pastoral staff to speak with students whose results are significantly below expectations. Externally, exam boards maintain helplines on results day, and organisations such as the National Careers Service (0800 100 900) offer free impartial advice on next steps. If the emotional pressure feels overwhelming, speaking to a trusted adult — a parent, teacher, or the Childline helpline (0800 1111) — is always a sensible first step.
Frequently asked questions
Can I still go to sixth form if I missed the entry grades?
It depends on the school or sixth form's policy. Many sixth forms have a fixed grade requirement (commonly grade 5 or 6 in the subjects you wish to study at A-Level) and will not make exceptions. However, some schools have a re-interview or appeal process for borderline cases, and many further education colleges have more flexible entry requirements than school sixth forms. Contact the institution directly on results day or the day after — do not wait.
Is grade 4 or grade 5 the pass at GCSE?
Both grades are described as passes, but with different labels. Grade 4 is a standard pass and is the minimum required for many Level 3 courses and employer requirements. Grade 5 is a strong pass and is the threshold used in government school performance measures (Progress 8 and Attainment 8). For English and Maths specifically, many universities and employers require grade 4 as a minimum and some require grade 5.
What happens if I lost my GCSE certificate?
Contact the awarding body directly — AQA, OCR, or Pearson Edexcel — using the details on their website. You will need to provide proof of identity and the approximate year of the examination. Replacement certificates are not always available (some boards issue a certified results statement instead), there is a fee, and processing can take several weeks. Employers and universities increasingly accept a certified results statement in place of the original certificate, so a lost certificate is not a permanent barrier.
Do GCSE grades expire?
No. GCSE grades do not have an expiry date and remain permanently valid. A grade achieved in 2015 and a grade achieved in 2025 are both recognised by universities and employers. Some institutions may note the year of qualification for context (for instance, if re-entering education after many years), but there is no mechanism by which a GCSE grade becomes invalid over time.
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