University of Oxford 2026
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Part of our Russell Group Series: This blog is part of our complete Russell Group Universities guide covering all 24 UK research universities. Read the full guide → [Russell Group Universities — Complete 2025 Guide]
University of Oxford — Quick Snapshot
The following table provides a complete at-a-glance reference for Indian students considering the University of Oxford.
| University Snapshot | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | University of Oxford |
| Established | c. 1096 — oldest English-speaking university in the world |
| Location | Oxford, Oxfordshire, England (90 km from London) |
| QS World Ranking 2026 | #4 in the World |
| THE World Ranking 2025 | #1 in the World (9 consecutive years) |
| ARWU Ranking 2024 | #7 in the World |
| Total Students | 26,000+ (12,470 UG + 13,920 PG) |
| International Students | 46% of total student body (160+ nationalities) |
| Indian Students | ~550 (India = Top 5 international cohort) |
| Number of Colleges | 39 colleges + 6 permanent private halls |
| UG Fees (Indian Students) | £35,260–£59,260/year (approx. ₹37L–₹62L) |
| PG Fees (Indian Students) | £26,000–£48,000/year (approx. ₹27L–₹50L) |
| Living Costs | £1,425–£2,035/month (approx. ₹1.5L–₹2.1L/month) |
| UG Application Deadline | 15 October (UCAS) — all courses |
| PG Application Deadline | December–March (varies by course) |
| Overall Acceptance Rate | ~17% (UG); 7–9% for international students |
| Indian Student Acceptance Rate | ~3.9% (highly competitive) |
| IELTS Requirement | 7.0 overall (no band below 6.5) — standard; 7.5 for some courses |
| Graduate Employment Rate | 87% of graduates employed within 6 months |
| Notable Indian Alumni | Indira Gandhi, Manmohan Singh, Amartya Sen, Raghuram Rajan |
| Official Website | www.ox.ac.uk |
About the University of Oxford
The University of Oxford is the oldest university in the English-speaking world and one of the most consistently top-ranked institutions on the planet. Teaching is believed to have taken place in Oxford as early as 1096 AD, making it not just a world-class university but a living piece of intellectual history spanning nearly a thousand years.
Unlike most universities worldwide, Oxford has no single campus. Its 39 colleges, 6 permanent private halls, and hundreds of departments, libraries, and research centres are spread throughout the medieval city of Oxford, approximately 90 kilometres north-west of London. The city and the university are inseparable — a quarter of Oxford’s residents are students, giving it the youngest population of any city in the United Kingdom.
Oxford’s scale is extraordinary: over 26,000 students, 73 Nobel Prize laureates among its alumni and staff, 160 Olympic medal winners, 30 British Prime Ministers, and heads of state and government from across the world — including India’s own Indira Gandhi (Lady Margaret Hall) and Manmohan Singh (Nuffield College). Amartya Sen and Raghuram Rajan are among the distinguished Indian economists who have held positions at Oxford.
Oxford is structured around four academic divisions: Humanities; Mathematical, Physical and Life Sciences; Medical Sciences; and Social Sciences. Each division contains multiple departments and research centres. Students are simultaneously members of their academic department and of one of the 39 colleges — a dual identity that defines the Oxford experience.
Russell Group Membership
Oxford is a founding member of the Russell Group, the UK’s 24 most research-intensive universities. As the highest-ranked Russell Group institution, Oxford sets the benchmark by which all other Russell Group universities are measured. For a full comparison of all 24 Russell Group universities, read our Complete Russell Group Universities Guide.
University of Oxford World Rankings 2025–26
Oxford’s global rankings are the most consistent of any university in the world. It has held the #1 position in the Times Higher Education World Rankings for nine consecutive years from 2017 to 2025 — a record unmatched by any other institution. The table below provides a complete multi-system ranking overview.
| # | Ranking System | 2026 / Latest | Previous Year | Subject Strength | Rank Among RG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | QS World University Rankings | #4 | #3 | Sciences, Engineering | 2nd |
| 2 | Times Higher Education (THE) | #1 | #1 | All disciplines | 1st |
| 3 | ARWU (Shanghai Rankings) | #7 | #7 | Research output | 2nd |
| 4 | US News Global Rankings | #5 | #5 | STEM + Social Sciences | 2nd |
| 5 | QS Medicine Ranking | #1 | #1 | Medicine — Best globally | 1st |
| 6 | QS Law Ranking | #2 | #2 | Law — Best in UK | 1st |
| 7 | QS Geography Ranking | #1 | #1 | Geography | 1st |
| 8 | QS History Ranking | #2 | #2 | Humanities | 1st |
Subject-Level Excellence: Oxford is ranked #1 in the world for Medicine (QS Subject Rankings 2025), #1 for Geography, #2 for Law, #2 for History, and consistently top 5 globally in Computer Science, Mathematics, Physics, Biochemistry, and Economics. This breadth of excellence across both STEM and Humanities is what distinguishes Oxford from more narrowly focused institutions.
Popular Undergraduate Courses at Oxford for Indian Students
Oxford offers 48 undergraduate degree programmes covering sciences, humanities, law, languages, fine arts, and professional subjects. Each programme is heavily research-led and taught primarily through the Oxford tutorial system. The following table covers the most popular undergraduate courses among Indian students, with course fees for 2025–26.
| Course | Duration | Degree | Annual Fees (GBP) | Annual Fees (INR) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medicine (BM BCh) | 6 years | BM BCh | £35,260–£47,310 | ₹37L–₹50L |
| Law (Jurisprudence) | 3 years | BA | £35,260 | ₹37L |
| PPE (Politics, Philosophy, Economics) | 3 years | BA | £35,260 | ₹37L |
| Engineering Science | 4 years | MEng | £39,250 | ₹41L |
| Computer Science | 3 years | BA | £39,250 | ₹41L |
| Mathematics | 3–4 years | BA/MMath | £35,260 | ₹37L |
| Economics & Management | 3 years | BA | £35,260 | ₹37L |
| Biochemistry | 4 years | MBiochem | £39,250 | ₹41L |
| History | 3 years | BA | £35,260 | ₹37L |
| Physics | 4 years | MPhys | £39,250 | ₹41L |
| Fine Art | 3 years | BA | £30,000 | ₹31.5L |
| Geography | 3 years | BA | £35,260 | ₹37L |
Most Popular Among Indian Students
Based on admission data and Indian student community feedback, the five most popular Oxford undergraduate courses for Indian applicants are: (1) Law (Jurisprudence), (2) Computer Science, (3) Economics & Management, (4) PPE, and (5) Engineering Science. Medicine is also highly sought after but has the most stringent entry requirements and longest duration.
Popular Postgraduate Courses at Oxford for Indian Students
Oxford’s postgraduate offerings are among the most prestigious in the world. For Indian students, the most sought-after postgraduate programmes are the MBA, MSc in Computer Science, MSc in Financial Economics, BCL (postgraduate Law), and MSc in Data Science. The table below covers fees and durations for 2025–26.
| Postgraduate Course | Duration | Type | Fees (GBP/yr) | Fees (INR/yr) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MBA (Said Business School) | 1 year | MBA | £54,895 | ₹57.6L |
| MSc Financial Economics | 1 year | MSc | £33,750 | ₹35.4L |
| MSc Computer Science | 1 year | MSc | £33,342 | ₹35L |
| BCL (Bachelor of Civil Law) | 1 year | BCL | £31,630 | ₹33.2L |
| MSc Global Health Science | 1 year | MSc | £30,880 | ₹32.4L |
| MPhil Engineering Science | 1–2 years | MPhil | £29,343 | ₹30.8L |
| MSc Data Science | 1 year | MSc | £33,342 | ₹35L |
| DPhil (PhD) — All subjects | 3–4 years | DPhil | £26,000–£32,000 | ₹27.3L–₹33.6L |
Oxford MBA Note: The Oxford MBA (Said Business School) is one of the most selective MBA programmes in the world, with an average GMAT score above 680 and typically 5–7 years of work experience required. It consistently ranks in the global top 10 for MBA programmes and has a particularly strong alumni network in investment banking, strategy consulting, and technology. The average post-MBA salary for Oxford Said graduates is £71,940 per year, with over 80% receiving job offers within three months of graduation.
Oxford University Eligibility Requirements for Indian Students
Entry to Oxford is among the most competitive in the world, and the requirements for Indian students are specific and stringent. The table below outlines the key eligibility criteria by course category.
| Course Category | Class 12 Requirement | IELTS | TOEFL | Admissions Test |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medicine (BM BCh) | 95%+ CBSE/ISC; A*AA equivalent | 7.0–7.5 | 100–110 | UCAT |
| Law (Jurisprudence) | 90%+ in best 5 subjects | 7.5 | 110 | LNAT |
| PPE | 90%+ CBSE; A*AA equivalent | 7.5 | 110 | TSA |
| Engineering Science | 95%+ with Maths & Physics A1 | 7.0 | 100 | PAT |
| Computer Science | 90%+ with Maths A1 | 7.0 | 100 | MAT |
| Mathematics | 95%+ with Maths A1 | 7.0 | 100 | MAT |
| Economics & Management | 90%+ CBSE; A*AA equivalent | 7.0 | 100 | TSA |
| History / Humanities | 88%+ in relevant subjects | 7.0 | 100 | HAT/None |
Note for Indian Students
Oxford only accepts Class 12 qualifications from CBSE (All India SSC) and CISCE (ISC) boards for direct undergraduate admission. State board students are NOT eligible for direct entry and must complete A-Levels or an IB Diploma. Additionally, since your Class 12 results arrive AFTER the 15 October UCAS deadline, Oxford assesses you on predicted grades — your school must formally predict your scores, and getting 93%+ predicted is typically necessary for shortlisting.
Oxford Admissions Tests — Complete Guide for Indian Students
Oxford is one of the very few universities in the world that requires almost all undergraduate applicants to sit an admissions test specific to their subject. These tests are taken in October–November and are used to shortlist candidates for interviews. Performance on admissions tests can be more decisive than predicted grades alone.
| Test | Courses | Format | Duration | Preparation Tip |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MAT | Maths, CS, Stats | 5 questions, problem-solving | 2.5 hours | Oxford MAT past papers (2010–2024) |
| PAT | Physics, Engineering | Maths + Physics problems | 2 hours | Isaac Physics + PAT past papers |
| LNAT | Law | MCQ + Essay | 2.25 hours | LNAT practice tests + argument analysis |
| TSA | PPE, Economics, History | MCQ reasoning | 2 hours | TSA past papers (Cambridge & Oxford) |
| UCAT | Medicine | 5 aptitude sections | 2 hours | Medify or 300Hours UCAT prep |
| HAT | History | Document analysis essay | 1 hour | Read Oxford HAT specimen papers |
| ELAT | English Literature | Comparative essay | 1.5 hours | Close reading practice + past ELATs |
When to Register: Most Oxford admissions tests must be registered for separately from your UCAS application. Registration typically opens in September and closes in mid-October. Indian students must register via an authorised test centre in India — check the official test websites for approved centres in your city. Missing the registration deadline means you cannot sit the test, which means your Oxford application cannot proceed
How to Apply to Oxford from India Step-by-Step (2025–26)
- Step 1: Register on UCAS
Decide your course carefully — Oxford requires you to commit to a specific subject from day one. You cannot switch subjects in Year 1 as you might at other universities. Also decide whether to choose a specific college or make an open application. Research each college’s culture, accommodation, and subject strength.
- Step 2: Register for Your Admissions Test (September–October 2025)
Identify which admissions test your course requires (see table above). Register at an authorised test centre in India. Tests are typically held in late October or November. Begin preparation at least 3–4 months in advance — Oxford admissions tests are significantly harder than standard entrance exams.
- Step 3: Write Your Personal Statement (July–September 2025)
Your personal statement for Oxford must be almost entirely academic and subject-focused. Unlike US applications, Oxford tutors want to see intellectual passion for your subject — not a list of extracurricular achievements. Discuss specific books you have read, research questions that fascinate you, lectures or seminars you have attended, and how these have shaped your academic thinking. Avoid generic opening lines and never waste word count on activities unrelated to your subject.
- Step 4: Submit via UCAS by 15 October 2025
All Oxford undergraduate applications must be submitted through UCAS (ucas.com) by 15 October 2025, 18:00 UK time. This is a hard deadline — no exceptions. Include your predicted grades (your school provides these), personal statement, and academic reference. The UCAS application fee is £27.50 for multiple choices.
- Step 5: Admissions Test (October–November 2025)
Sit your subject-specific admissions test at your registered centre. Results are used by Oxford departments to decide who to invite for interview. The test is not pass/fail — it is a ranking tool. Top performers are invited to interview in December.
- Step 6: Oxford Interview (December 2025)
If shortlisted, you will be invited to an online interview (for international applicants including Indian students). Oxford interviews are academic in nature — tutors will give you unseen problems, texts, or questions and assess how you think through them in real time. You are not expected to know the answer immediately; you are expected to reason out loud. Preparation involves practicing thinking aloud and working through your subject’s core concepts under pressure.
- Step 7: Receive Offer and Respond (January 2026)
Offers from Oxford are released in January. Most offers are conditional — requiring you to achieve specific grades in your Class 12 or A-Level exams. Fulfill the conditions by the summer, and your place is confirmed. Then apply for your UK Student Visa (Student Route) using your CAS number from Oxford.
Application Timeline for 2026 Entry
May–June 2025: Research courses and colleges. July–Sep 2025: Write PS, register for admissions test, prepare for tests. 15 Oct 2025: UCAS deadline. Oct–Nov 2025: Sit admissions test. Dec 2025: Online interviews. Jan 2026: Receive offer decision. Mar–Jun 2026: Meet offer conditions. Jul 2026: Apply for UK Student Visa. Sep/Oct 2026: Arrive in Oxford.
University of Oxford Fees and Cost of Living for Indian Students (2025–26)
Oxford is one of the most expensive universities in the UK for indian students, particularly for science and professional programmes. However, it is important to note that a 3-year Oxford undergraduate degree still costs considerably less than a 4-year Ivy League degree, while offering comparable global prestige.
| Cost Item | Per Month (GBP) | Per Month (INR) | Annual (INR) |
|---|---|---|---|
| College Accommodation (on-campus) | £700–£900 | ₹73,500–₹94,500 | ₹8.8L–₹11.3L |
| Private Rent (off-campus) | £900–£1,400 | ₹94,500–₹1.47L | ₹11.3L–₹17.6L |
| Food & Groceries | £250–£350 | ₹26,250–₹36,750 | ₹3.15L–₹4.4L |
| Transport (Oxford city bus pass) | £50–£80 | ₹5,250–₹8,400 | ₹63K–₹1L |
| Books & Study Materials | £50–£100 | ₹5,250–₹10,500 | ₹63K–₹1.26L |
| Personal & Social Expenses | £150–£300 | ₹15,750–₹31,500 | ₹1.89L–₹3.78L |
| Health Insurance (IHS levy) | Approx. £776/year | — | ₹81,500 |
| Total Living Cost (estimate) | £1,425–£2,035 | ₹1.5L–₹2.1L | ₹18L–₹25.4L |
Total Annual Cost (Tuition + Living): ₹55L–₹87L per year depending on course and lifestyle. Over a 3-year undergraduate degree, the total investment is approximately ₹1.65Cr–₹2.6Cr. Over a 1-year postgraduate programme, total costs (tuition + living) range from ₹45L–₹83L depending on the course.
Education Loan Tip for Indian Students
Most leading Indian banks and NBFCs — including SBI, HDFC Credila, Axis Bank, Avanse, and Prodigy Finance — offer education loans specifically for Oxford University. Loan amounts of up to ₹1.5Cr–₹2Cr are available. Given Oxford’s acceptance into the Collateral-Free Loan schemes of several NBFCs, check your eligibility before you apply, as having funding clarity strengthens your visa application significantly.
Scholarships at Oxford University for Indian Students
Oxford offers some of the world’s most prestigious scholarships, several of which are specifically accessible to Indian students. The table below covers the key funding options available for the 2025–26 academic year.
| Scholarship | Value | Who Can Apply | Deadline | Indian Eligible? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clarendon Scholarship | Full tuition + living (£18,000+/yr) | All PG international applicants | Jan funding deadline | Yes |
| Rhodes Scholarship | Full tuition + living + flights | Age 19–25, exceptional all-rounder | August (India round) | Yes |
| Reach Oxford Scholarship | Full UG funding | Low-income countries (India eligible) | Varies | Yes |
| Weidenfeld-Hoffmann | Full PG funding | Leadership-focused, PG students | January | Yes |
| Chevening Scholarship | Full tuition + living + flights | 2+ yrs work experience, PG | November | Yes |
| Commonwealth Scholarship | Full PG funding | Commonwealth citizens (India) | December | Yes |
| Ertegun Graduate Scholarship | Full funding (Humanities/Social Sci) | Humanities & Social Sciences PG | January | Yes |
| Pershing Square Scholarship | Full MBA funding | MBA applicants, Said Business School | November | Yes |
| College-Specific Bursaries | Partial (£2,000–£8,000) | Varies by college | Various | Yes |
Important scholarship strategy: For postgraduate applicants, applying by Oxford’s January funding deadline (rather than a later deadline) is critical — the Clarendon Scholarship, which covers full tuition and living costs, automatically considers all applicants who apply by this date. You do not need a separate scholarship application. For the Rhodes, Chevening, and Commonwealth scholarships, separate applications are required well before your course application deadline.
The Oxford College System What Indian Students Need to Know
Oxford’s collegiate system is one of its most distinctive and, for Indian students, most confusing features. Understanding it is essential before you apply.
Oxford consists of 39 autonomous colleges (plus 6 private halls). Every student is a member of both their academic department (which teaches their subject) and a college (which provides accommodation, meals, pastoral support, financial aid, and tutorial teaching). Your college and your department work together, but they are governed separately.
When you apply to Oxford through UCAS, you must either choose a specific college or make an ‘open application’ (in which case Oxford assigns you to a college with vacancies). Approximately 25% of successful Oxford applicants make an open application. College choice has minimal impact on your admission chances — Oxford departments select students, not colleges. However, college choice significantly affects your day-to-day student experience, access to accommodation, and in some cases your eligibility for specific college scholarships.
| College | Best Known For | Acceptance Rate | Indian Students? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Balliol College | PPE, History, Law | Moderate | Strong community |
| Christ Church | Law, History, Sciences | Moderate | Active Indian society |
| Keble College | Sciences, Engineering | Moderate-High | Welcoming to internationals |
| Magdalen College | Sciences, Humanities | Selective | Small but active |
| New College | Law, PPE, Sciences | Moderate | Good international diversity |
| Wadham College | Inclusive, diverse culture | Moderate | Very welcoming to Indians |
| Somerville College | Sciences, Humanities, Politics | Moderate | Strong female Indian cohort |
| Open Application | Oxford allocates college | Same as average | Good option for Indians |
Advice for Indian Students on College Choice
For Indian students, Wadham College and Keble College are frequently cited as particularly welcoming and diverse. Christ Church and Balliol are academically prestigious and centrally located. If you are applying for an Oxford scholarship tied to a specific college, choose that college. Otherwise, an open application is a perfectly valid and frequently successful strategy.
Career Outcomes and Graduate Salaries for Oxford Graduates
Oxford’s graduate employment outcomes are among the strongest of any university in the world. 87% of Oxford graduates are in employment or further study within six months of graduating. The Oxford Careers Service, which runs year-round, provides interview coaching, employer networking events, and direct recruitment pipelines with some of the world’s most sought-after employers.
| Course | Starting Salary (UK) | Starting Salary (INR equiv.) | Top Recruiters |
|---|---|---|---|
| MBA (Said Business School) | £71,940/yr avg. | ₹75.5L/yr | McKinsey, Goldman Sachs, Amazon |
| Law | £45,000–£90,000/yr | ₹47L–₹94.5L/yr | Magic Circle firms, Barristers' chambers |
| Computer Science | £50,000–£75,000/yr | ₹52.5L–₹78.7L/yr | Google, Microsoft, DeepMind, Amazon |
| Medicine | £32,398 (FY1 doctor) | ₹34L/yr (rising rapidly) | NHS, Private Hospitals, Research |
| PPE | £35,000–£60,000/yr | ₹36.7L–₹63L/yr | Civil Service, Policy, Consulting |
| Engineering | £38,000–£60,000/yr | ₹39.9L–₹63L/yr | Rolls-Royce, BAE Systems, Atkins |
| Economics & Finance | £45,000–£70,000/yr | ₹47L–₹73.5L/yr | Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, BoE |
For Indian students returning to India: An Oxford degree carries exceptional value in the Indian job market. Top Indian employers — including Tata Consulting, McKinsey India, Goldman Sachs India, Kearney, BCG Delhi, and major Indian law firms — actively recruit Oxford graduates. In fields like management consulting, investment banking, policy, and academia, an Oxford degree is one of the strongest differentiators available.
Oxford vs Cambridge Which Should Indian Students Choose?
This is the most common question Indian students ask when considering Oxbridge, and the honest answer is: it depends almost entirely on your subject. Both universities are world-class and the difference in prestige is negligible. The practical differences are more meaningful.
| Factor | University of Oxford | University of Cambridge |
|---|---|---|
| QS Ranking 2026 | #4 | #5 |
| THE Ranking 2025 | #1 | #5 |
| Strongest Subjects | Medicine, Law, PPE, Humanities | Natural Sciences, Engineering, Maths |
| Teaching Style | Tutorial system (1-1 with tutor) | Supervision system (1-2 with supervisor) |
| City | Oxford (smaller, more 'university town') | Cambridge (similar, slightly smaller) |
| UCAS Deadline | 15 October | 15 October |
| UG Fees (International) | £35,260–£59,260/yr | £24,507–£58,038/yr |
| Indian Acceptance Rate | ~3.9% | ~4–5% |
| Best for Indian Students | Law, Medicine, PPE, CS | Engineering, Natural Sciences, Maths |
| Can you apply to both? | No — only one per UCAS cycle | No — only one per UCAS cycle |
Our recommendation: Choose Oxford if your goal is Law, Medicine, PPE, Economics & Management, or Humanities. Choose Cambridge if your goal is Natural Sciences, Engineering, Mathematics, or Computer Science. If your subject is equally strong at both, visit both cities virtually, read student experiences from Indian students at each, and choose the environment where you feel you will thrive personally.
Compare All Russell Group Universities
Oxford and Cambridge are just two of the 24 Russell Group universities. If your Class 12 percentage is below 90%, or if your target course has different strengths at other institutions, explore our guides to UCL, Imperial College London, LSE, and the University of Edinburgh all of which offer world-class programmes with less extreme entry requirements.
Life at Oxford for Indian Students
Life at Oxford is academically intense, intellectually stimulating, and socially rich. The tutorial system means you engage deeply with your subject every week — there is no hiding in a lecture hall. But Oxford also has one of the most vibrant student social scenes in the UK, built around its 39 colleges and 450+ student clubs and societies.
Indian Student Community
Oxford’s Indian student community of approximately 550 students is one of the most active international communities on campus. The Oxford Indian Society (Oksoc) organises Diwali celebrations, Holi events, Indian classical music concerts, cricket matches, Bollywood nights, and professional networking events with Indian alumni. The Indian community spans all subject areas and colleges, providing immediate social connection for new Indian students.
Academic Life
The Oxford week is structured around tutorials, lectures, and independent study. Most undergraduates have 1–2 tutorials per week, each requiring a submitted essay or problem set. Libraries are open late and the Bodleian Library system — with over 13 million volumes — is the largest university library system in the UK. The academic pressure is real, but Oxford’s student support services (including college welfare deans and the university counselling service) are robust.
Food and Practical Life
Oxford city has numerous Indian restaurants and South Asian grocery stores, making it relatively easy to find familiar food. Most college dining halls provide vegetarian options. Supermarkets including Tesco, Sainsbury’s, and Co-op are within walking distance of most colleges. Oxford is compact and extremely cycle-friendly — most students cycle between colleges, libraries, and the city centre.
Part-Time Work
Indian students on a UK Student Visa can work up to 20 hours per week during term and full-time during vacations. Common part-time roles for Oxford students include peer tutoring, library assistant roles, research assistance for academic departments, and hospitality work in Oxford’s many restaurants and cafes. Some students build tutoring businesses supporting A-Level and GCSE students — Oxford’s reputation makes this particularly lucrative.
Notable Indian Alumni of the University of Oxford
Oxford’s Indian alumni network is one of the most distinguished of any international cohort at any university in the world. The following Indian leaders and intellectuals studied at Oxford:
Indira Gandhi — Former Prime Minister of India (Lady Margaret Hall, 1937–1940; did not complete degree)
Manmohan Singh — Former Prime Minister of India; D.Phil. in Economics, Nuffield College (1957–1962)
Amartya Sen — Nobel Laureate in Economics; Drummond Professor of Political Economy, Oxford (1977–1988)
Raghuram Rajan — Former Governor of the Reserve Bank of India; studied at Oxford
P. Chidambaram — Former Finance Minister of India; Lincoln’s Inn (associated with Oxford Law)
Montek Singh Ahluwalia — Former Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission; DPhil, Oxford
Nandan Nilekani — Co-founder, Infosys; visited Oxford fellow
Shashi Tharoor — Author and politician; St. Anthony’s College, Oxford
This alumni network is actively accessible to current Oxford students through the Oxford Indian Society’s alumni events and the university’s formal alumni mentoring programmes.
Frequently Asked Questions — University of Oxford for Indian Students
The University of Oxford is ranked #4 in the world by QS World University Rankings 2026 and #1 in the world by the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2025 — a position it has held for nine consecutive years, making it the longest-running #1 university in THE history.
For Indian students (classified as international/overseas students), undergraduate tuition fees at Oxford range from £35,260 to £59,260 per year, which is approximately ₹37L–₹62L per year at current exchange rates (£1 = ₹105). Postgraduate taught fees range from approximately £26,000 to £48,000 per year (₹27.3L–₹50.4L). The Oxford MBA at Said Business School costs £54,895 (approx. ₹57.6L) for the full one-year programme. Living costs add an additional £17,100–£24,420 per year (₹18L–₹25.6L).
For most undergraduate courses at Oxford, Indian students need a minimum of 90% aggregate in Class 12 (CBSE or ISC boards only). For the most competitive courses — Medicine, Engineering, Mathematics, and Computer Science — the effective threshold is 93–95%+ in relevant subjects. Only CBSE (All India SSC) and CISCE (ISC) boards are fully accepted; most state boards are not recognised for direct UG admission to Oxford.
Oxford’s overall undergraduate acceptance rate is approximately 17%. However, for Indian students specifically, the acceptance rate is significantly lower — approximately 3.9% based on admissions data showing 74 Indian students admitted from 1,883 applicants over a recent two-year period. For international undergraduate students broadly, the acceptance rate is 7–9%. Despite this, approximately 550 Indian students currently study at Oxford, making India one of the top 5 countries of origin.
Oxford requires a minimum IELTS Academic score of 7.0 overall with no individual band below 6.5 for most standard undergraduate and postgraduate courses. For some courses with higher language demands — such as Law, PPE, and certain Humanities programmes — the requirement is IELTS 7.5 overall with no band below 7.0. TOEFL iBT equivalents are 100–110 depending on the course. Indian students who have completed 3+ years of education entirely in English may be exempt from submitting a language test in some cases.
No, Oxford does not generally accept state board qualifications (such as Maharashtra State Board, UP Board, Tamil Nadu State Board etc.) for direct undergraduate entry. Only Class 12 qualifications from CBSE (All India Secondary School Certificate) and CISCE (Indian School Certificate — ISC) boards are typically accepted. Students from other boards are usually advised to complete A-Levels or an International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma before applying. This is one of the most important planning considerations for Indian students aiming for Oxford.
For all undergraduate courses at Oxford — without exception — the UCAS application deadline is 15 October. This applies to all applicants worldwide, including Indian students. Applications submitted after this date will not be considered for the following academic year. For postgraduate (Master’s and DPhil) programmes, deadlines vary by course: most programmes have a primary deadline in December or January, and applying by this date is also required to be considered for scholarships such as the Clarendon Fund.
Oxford requires admissions tests for almost all undergraduate courses. The most common are: MAT (Mathematics Aptitude Test) for Maths, Statistics, and Computer Science; PAT (Physics Aptitude Test) for Physics and Engineering; LNAT (National Admissions Test for Law) for Jurisprudence; TSA (Thinking Skills Assessment) for PPE, Economics & Management; UCAT (University Clinical Aptitude Test) for Medicine; and HAT (History Aptitude Test) for History. Tests must be registered for separately from your UCAS application, typically by mid-October, and are usually sat in late October or November.
Yes, several fully-funded and partially-funded scholarships are available for Indian students at Oxford. The most prestigious fully-funded options are the Clarendon Scholarship (automatic consideration for postgraduate applicants), the Rhodes Scholarship (highly competitive, age 19–25), the Reach Oxford Scholarship (undergraduate, for students from low-income backgrounds in eligible countries including India), and the Chevening Scholarship (postgraduate, UK government-funded). All are highly competitive but genuinely accessible to Indian applicants with exceptional profiles.
Oxford is a collegiate university — it is divided into 39 autonomous colleges, and students are members of both their academic department and a specific college. The college provides accommodation, dining, social life, academic tutorials, and pastoral support. Indian students can either choose a specific college in their UCAS application or make an ‘open application’ and be assigned to a college with vacancies. The choice of college does not significantly affect your admission chances, but it does affect your social environment, access to accommodation, and in some cases scholarship eligibility.
For Indian students with a clear career goal in law, medicine, finance, consulting, technology, public policy, or academia, an Oxford degree offers transformative value. Oxford’s global brand opens doors that very few other degrees can match — from Magic Circle law firms to Oxford’s own direct-to-McKinsey recruitment pipeline. The total cost of an Oxford degree (3 years for most UG courses) is approximately ₹1.6Cr–₹2.6Cr including living costs, which is lower than an Ivy League equivalent despite comparable global prestige. Combined with the UK’s 2-year Graduate Route visa, the return on investment — financial and personal — is exceptional.
No. UCAS rules explicitly prohibit applicants from applying to both Oxford and Cambridge in the same admissions cycle. You must choose one. The October 15 deadline applies to both, and if Oxford or Cambridge is one of your UCAS choices, you must use that choice exclusively for that institution. Most admissions advisers suggest choosing based on your subject: Oxford is generally stronger for Law, Medicine, PPE, and Humanities; Cambridge is generally stronger for Natural Sciences, Engineering, and Mathematics. However, both offer world-class programmes in virtually every subject.
Oxford’s tutorial system is one of its most distinctive and celebrated features. In most undergraduate courses, students meet weekly (or fortnightly) with a specialist tutor — often a leading academic in their field — in groups of one to three students. Each tutorial is preceded by independent reading and the submission of a written essay or problem set, which the tutor then critiques in depth. This intensive, personalised academic engagement develops critical thinking, communication, and independent research skills at an extraordinary rate. For Indian students accustomed to large classroom environments, the tutorial system is both a challenge and one of the most valuable academic experiences available anywhere in the world.
Oxford has a vibrant Indian student community of approximately 550 students. The Oxford Indian Society (Oksoc) is one of the most active cultural societies on campus, organising Diwali celebrations, Indian classical music events, cricket tournaments, and career networking evenings. Most Indian students in their first year live in their college’s on-campus accommodation, with meals provided in the college dining hall (Hall). Oxford city is safe, compact (walkable and cycleable), and has a wide range of Indian restaurants and grocery stores. The student visa allows up to 20 hours of work per week during term, and many Oxford students take on part-time research assistant or tutoring roles.
Compare Oxford With Other Russell Group Universities
If you are considering Oxford but want to evaluate similar institutions before making your final decision, the following Russell Group University guides are most relevant:
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University of Cambridge — Oxford’s closest rival; stronger for Sciences and Engineering
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Imperial College London — Best Russell Group option for pure STEM; London-based
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London School of Economics (LSE) — Best for Economics, Finance, and Political Science
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University College London (UCL) — Strong for Architecture, Law, and Medical Sciences
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University of Edinburgh — Most affordable top-tier option for Sciences and Humanities
For a full comparison of all 24 Russell Group universities by fees, acceptance rates, rankings, and course strengths, read our Complete Russell Group Universities Guide →
Conclusion
The University of Oxford is, by almost any measure, one of the finest universities ever established. For Indian students with the academic ability, preparation, and drive to meet its exacting standards, an Oxford education is genuinely transformative — academically, professionally, and personally.
The path is demanding: 90–95% in Class 12, a rigorous admissions test, a challenging interview, and a highly competitive acceptance rate of approximately 3.9% for Indian applicants. But approximately 550 Indian students are currently there, thriving academically and building lifelong networks that reach across every field of human endeavour.
If Oxford is your goal, begin your preparation in Class 11. Choose your course with care. Get your IELTS score early. Prepare seriously for the admissions test. Write a personal statement that shows genuine intellectual passion. And apply with confidence — because Oxford admits students who love learning, not just students who have learned a lot.
Ready to Apply to Oxford?
Check your education loan eligibility for Oxford University, explore our UCAS Application Guide for step-by-step help, and read our complete Russell Group Universities guide to compare Oxford against all 23 other member universities before making your final decision.
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