If you have applied to university or college through UCAS, and receive offers, you can then firmly accept, accept as an insurance, or decline the offers.
If you submit your UCAS application by the mid-January deadline, you will usually receive offers from your universities by the end of March, although for popular courses, you may not hear until May. The timetable for some art and design courses is different.
You can track the progress of your application through the Track service on the UCAS website. For this you need your application number, username and password. You can also use this service to check for any offers and reply to them.
Conditional offers are tied to you achieving certain grades in your exams, or a certain number of points in the UCAS Tariff. If you don't secure high enough grades or don't score enough UCAS points, you may not be accepted.
An unconditional offer means you have already satisfied entry requirements and can be accepted to study.
When you have received decisions from all your universities or colleges, UCAS will send you a letter which will list the decisions and your reply date. If you don't reply to your offers by the deadline, you may lose the offer.
The quickest and most efficient way of replying is through the UCAS website. For each offer, you can choose one of three options:
You can only accept two offers at the most - one firm acceptance, and one insurance acceptance. For their insurance acceptance, many people usually choose offers requiring lower grades than the firm acceptance.
For full guidance on replying to offers, see the UCAS website.
If you change your mind after you accept an offer, you may have to withdraw your application and will not be able to use Clearing to look for another course. Contact UCAS for advice.
If you don't get an offer from your initial application, you can use the UCAS Extra service from the end of February until the end of June.
If Extra does not produce a suitable offer, you can go through the Clearing system, where universities and colleges advertise - and fill - their last-minute places. Vacancies are advertised on the UCAS website and in the national press from mid-August.