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Law

Course details
  • 3 Study options
  • Undergraduate
Course location
University of Suffolk

Course summary

Law at the University of Suffolk provides a dynamic new degree programme for 2026, balancing academic study with opportunities for you to develop legal skills to enhance your employability prospects. A range of learning and teaching approaches are adopted to provide a flexible yet rigorous degree that maintains high academic standards whilst improving the student experience.

In particular, the development of new modules and enhanced use of technology to prepare you for legal practice and the employment market more generally are a central feature of the course. This programme will support you to develop over the course of your degree into an agile and independent learner who can apply your knowledge and skills to your future endeavours.

Why study law with us?
Focus on employability and development of advanced digital and technological skills, including ethical use of AI
Work experiences through our Legal Placement module and/or the Legal Advice Centre
Interdisciplinarity – opportunities to collaborate with and learn alongside students from cognate subjects such as criminology, sociology, business management, social work, and psychology.
Research-driven learning and teaching – each of our teaching staff design and teach two optional modules in their areas of research and expertise, not only capitalising on our wide range of fields of interest, but giving students phenomenal choice to learn in a research-driven environment
A commitment to sustainability through (where possible) a two-day teaching week, significantly cutting down on the environmental costs of commuting for students and staff, a pledge to use eBooks wherever possible and to facilitate second-hand book sales run by the Student Law Society, and introducing discussions of the responsibility of the legal profession to environmental sustainability where relevant.

Many of our graduates go on to have careers in legal practice. The Solicitors’ Qualifying Examination (SQE) has made the routes to becoming a solicitor more flexible. Although some students enrol on the Legal Practice Course, a greater number now enter employment as a paralegal upon completion of their law degree, often studying for the SQE at the same time. Our degree programme also includes all the foundational legal subjects to complete the academic stage of training to become a barrister.

Modules

Course Modules

Please see our website for module information.

https://www.uos.ac.uk/study/llb-law/#d.en.24202

How to apply

Application codes

Institution code:
S82

This course may be available at alternative locations, please check if other course options are available.

Course options

Open days

Entry requirements

Typical qualification requirements

A level
BBC

T Level
M

UCAS Tariff
Offer: 112

Access to HE Diploma
Merit: 30

30 credits at Merit, Level 3

GCSE/National 4/National 5

Applicants are expected to hold GCSE English and Mathematics at Grade 4/C or above.

Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma (first teaching from September 2016)
DMM

English language requirements

TestGradeAdditional details
IELTS (Academic)6IELTS 6.0 overall (minimum 5.5 in all components) where English is not the students' first language.

Contextual admissions

Universities and colleges consider more than grades when assessing applications and may make offers based on a range of criteria. Learn more about contextual offers.

At the University of Suffolk, we consider the full application as part of determining if you will succeed on our courses. We are therefore flexible where possible and might still be able to accept you if you do not meet your expected grades. As part of this, we make contextual offers, where we consider the factors that might have an impact on achievement. This means that some applicants will receive an offer of one grade below our published entry requirements. Please see our website.

Learn more on the University of Suffolk website

Historical entry grades data

This section shows the range of grades that students who received offers were previously accepted on to this course with (learn more).

It is designed to support your research but does not guarantee whether you will or won't get a place.

Admissions teams consider various factors, including interviews, subject requirements, and entrance tests. Check all course entry requirements for eligibility.

This course may have Historical entry grades data available, please select a course option to view.

Course options

Fees and funding

Tuition fees

Per year tuition fees

LocationFeeYear
England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland & Channel Islands£9790*
Republic of Ireland, EU & International£15900*

* This is a provisional fee and subject to change.

Tuition fee status depends on a number of criteria and varies according to where in the UK you will study. For further guidance on the criteria for home or overseas tuition fees, please refer to the UKCISA website.

Additional fee information

Please note, the University reserves the right to increase its fees in line with changes to legislation, regulation and any government guidance or decisions.

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