What is a 2:1 degree UK —
and how do you achieve one?

Upper Second Class Honours is the grade most UK employers ask for and most students are aiming at. Here's exactly what it means, how it's calculated, and what separates a 2:1 essay from a 2:2 one.

In this article
  1. What a 2:1 actually means
  2. How employers view degree classifications
  3. How your classification is calculated
  4. What separates a 2:1 essay from a 2:2
  5. How to push your essays into 2:1 territory

Most UK universities award one of four undergraduate honours classifications. If you're aiming for a 2:1 — which the majority of students are — it helps to understand exactly what the grade means, how it's calculated across your modules, and what specifically markers are looking for to award it.

What a 2:1 actually means

70%+
First Class Honours
Strong critical analysis, original thinking, excellent academic writing throughout
60–69%
Upper Second Class (2:1) ← You're aiming here
Good critical engagement, clear argument, sound referencing, some independent analysis
50–59%
Lower Second Class (2:2)
Adequate coverage, limited critical depth, mostly descriptive, some referencing errors
40–49%
Third Class Honours
Meets the basic requirements but with significant gaps in argument and evidence

A 2:1 means your overall average falls between 60% and 69%. In practice, this means consistently performing well across your modules — not necessarily getting high marks in every single assessment, but maintaining a solid average across the board.

How employers view degree classifications

The 2:1 threshold is important because many UK graduate employers use it as a filter. Law firms, accountancy practices, investment banks, the Civil Service Fast Stream, and most large graduate schemes explicitly require a 2:1 as a minimum. This has been standard practice for decades and shows no sign of changing.

That said, context matters. A 2:2 from a strong university in a demanding subject, combined with excellent work experience, will often beat a 2:1 from a weaker programme. Increasingly, employers are moving toward contextualised admissions that consider your performance relative to your circumstances. But the 2:1 filter is still the default on most online application systems.

The borderline problem

A student with a 59.4% average is in a different position to a student with a 60.1% average — even though the difference in actual ability is negligible. Most universities have borderline classification policies that allow candidates near the threshold to be considered for the higher classification based on final year performance or a specified number of marks at the higher level. Know your university's borderline policy if you're close to a boundary.

How your classification is calculated

Classification methods vary between institutions, but the most common approaches in UK universities are:

The practical implication: your final year essays matter significantly more than your first year ones. A student who struggled in first year but improved dramatically in their final year can still achieve a 2:1. The reverse is also true — coasting in final year can drag down an otherwise strong record.

What separates a 2:1 essay from a 2:2

This is the most useful thing to understand, because the difference is almost never about knowing more — it's about doing more with what you know.

A 2:2 essay typically:

A 2:1 essay typically:

The single most common reason students miss a 2:1

Description instead of analysis. Writing "Bourdieu argued that social capital influences educational outcomes" is description. Writing "Bourdieu's framework usefully explains the mechanism — but underestimates individual agency, as Jenkins (2002) argues — which limits its application to non-Western contexts" is analysis. Markers award 2:1s for the second kind of writing.

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How to push your essays into 2:1 territory

If your essays are landing in the high 50s and you want to consistently reach the 60s, these are the specific things worth working on:

1. Make your thesis explicit

Every essay should have a central argument that you can state in one sentence. If you can't, your essay doesn't have one — and markers will notice. Write the thesis statement first, then structure the essay to prove it.

2. Evaluate every source you cite

Don't just report what Smith argues. Tell the marker what's valuable about it, what it fails to account for, and how it relates to your argument. Even one evaluative sentence per citation moves an essay from descriptive to analytical.

3. Address counterarguments

A 2:1 essay acknowledges that reasonable people might disagree with its position — and explains why the essay's argument is still more persuasive. A 2:2 essay tends to present one view as simply correct.

4. Check your conclusion says something new

The conclusion should demonstrate judgment — not just summarise what you've already said. The strongest point in your essay should land in the conclusion, not in the introduction.

5. Scan before you submit

SafeGrade's grade estimation is calibrated to UK grade boundaries and weighted for your subject area. Run it on your essay to see where it currently sits — and use the Improvement Suggestions to identify specific passages that are pulling the score down.

Find out where your essay
sits on the grade scale.
SafeGrade estimates your UK grade band, flags what's holding it back, and suggests specific improvements. Free to start — no account needed for the first scan.
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