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Surrey A level results

Surrey students receive A level results with a small rise in A grades and strong regional performance.

August 14, 2025 at 01:03 PM
blur Surrey students receive A-Level results

Thousands of Surrey students receive A level results as official data show a small year on year improvement.

Surrey A level results beat national average

Thousands of pupils across Surrey are receiving their A level results today. Ofqual data show 36% of pupils achieved A grades or above, up slightly from 35.9% in 2024. Surrey’s results also sit above the national average for A grades at 28.2% and above the South East regional average of 31.4%. The county continues to post stronger outcomes than the national picture as UCAS notes a record number of students entering their first choice universities.

Across the country, UCAS reports record numbers of students gaining places at their first choice universities, underscoring rising demand as exam outcomes feed into next steps.

Key Takeaways

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36% of Surrey pupils achieved A grades or above
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Surrey A level results rose from 2024
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Surrey outperforms national average for A grades
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South East region average stands at 31.4%
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UCAS reports record first choice university acceptances nationally
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Ofqual is the data source for Surrey results
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Results may influence local school planning and parental expectations

"Small gains shape futures more than big headlines"

editorial remark on the impact of gradual improvement

"Surrey outperforms the national average and that matters locally"

highlight of regional strength

"The real test is how students use these results in the next chapter"

emotional note on future steps

The year on year rise in Surrey reflects a steady trend rather than a sharp jump. The small improvement matters to families and teachers who rely on these numbers to gauge progress and plan next steps. It may also shape how schools allocate time in the classroom and how universities plan capacity for new cohorts.

The data point to broader questions about access to resources and support in different districts. Local policymakers could weigh performance against funding and curriculum choices, while families stay focused on the long road from exams to college or work. The overall mood is cautious optimism with attention to what comes after the results.

Highlights

  • Small gains shape futures more than big headlines
  • The numbers say progress and the real test is next steps
  • A level results stay a gate not a verdict
  • Communities watch the classroom and plan for tomorrow

The next term will reveal how these numbers translate into opportunities for students

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