What this guide covers
Both sixth form and FE college are free. Travel and lunch can add up to £40–£100 a month. The 16–19 Bursary Fund (England) gives up to £1,200/yr for students who qualify. Scotland, Wales and NI run their own EMA schemes (~£30/week). Free school meals continue if you qualified at school.
The two environments — what to expect
School sixth form (attached to a secondary school). Often the natural next step if your school has one. Smaller class sizes, more pastoral support, you know the building and most of the staff, uniform may continue (varies by school). A-levels are the most common offering. Some sixth forms also offer BTECs and T-Levels.
Sixth form college (standalone, just for 16–19s). Larger than school sixth forms (often 1,000+ students), broader range of courses, more independence expected. You're treated more like an adult. Lots of A-level and BTEC options.
FE (Further Education) college. Mostly vocational and technical: BTECs, T-Levels, apprenticeships, evening courses, A-levels alongside. Mixes 16-19 students with adults. Real-world facilities (a working salon, a real building site, a commercial kitchen).
What it costs you (the hidden bits)
Tuition is free at all three. The costs that hit your family's budget are:
| Cost | Typical monthly amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Travel | £0-£90 | Free if walkable. Bus pass £15-50/month. Train £30-90/month. |
| Lunch | £40-90 | Packed lunch ~£10/wk, canteen ~£20/wk, town centre £25-40/wk. |
| Uniform / dress code | £0-£20 | Most colleges have no uniform. Some sixth forms keep school uniform or smart dress. |
| Books, kit, equipment | £0-£20 | Most textbooks lent free. Specialist BTECs may need own kit (chef whites, art materials, sports kit). |
| Trips and visits | £10-50 occasional | Geography fieldwork, theatre trips, university open days. |
| Total monthly | ~£50-£200 | Lower if local + packed lunch + no kit |
Over a 2-year course that's roughly £1,000–£4,000 of family money beyond what already happens at school. The "free" of education doesn't mean "no costs at all".
The 16–19 Bursary Fund (England)
If you live in England, are 16–19 on 31 August, and are in a recognised course, you may qualify for help from the 16–19 Bursary Fund. Two pots:
- Vulnerable Student Bursary — up to £1,200/yr if you're in care, a care leaver, claiming Universal Credit / Income Support in your own name, or claiming Disability Living Allowance / PIP in your own name.
- Discretionary Bursary — your school/college decides who gets what, based on need. Typical amount £100-£500/yr. Apply through your sixth form / college finance office.
The money usually pays for travel passes, lunches, equipment, exam fees and field trips. It comes via the college, not as cash you can spend on whatever you want.
EMA — Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland
England scrapped the Education Maintenance Allowance (EMA) in 2011. But the other three UK nations kept their own versions:
- Wales — Welsh EMA. £30/week paid directly to the learner during term-time, plus £100 bonus payments. Eligible if household income is under ~£20,800 (single parent) or ~£23,400 (couple).
- Scotland — Scottish EMA. £30/week term-time. Eligible if household income is under ~£24,400 (1 child) or ~£26,900 (2+ children).
- Northern Ireland — EMA NI. £30/week. Eligible if household income is under ~£20,500.
EMA payments are conditional on attendance. Missing too many classes loses you that week's £30.
Free transport and travel passes
Different councils, different rules — but worth checking each:
- Free buses for 16-19 students: some councils offer it (e.g. parts of London, Liverpool, Glasgow under-22 cards). Often dependent on distance from school.
- 16-25 Railcard: £30 for the year, saves 1/3 on rail tickets nationwide. Pays for itself in 2-3 train trips.
- Bus operator student passes: Stagecoach, Arriva, First all offer 16-19 deals at 30-40% off adult fares. Ask your college, not the bus driver.
- Mileage if a parent drives you: not reimbursable as a rule — petrol stays a family expense.
National Curriculum links
- England — PSHE Association KS4 L17 (financial responsibility), Careers KS4
- England — Citizenship KS4 (operation of public services)
- Wales — Curriculum for Wales Progression Step 5
- Scotland — Curriculum for Excellence HWB 4-19a
- NI — LLW KS4 Personal Finance
Full mapping in the curriculum map.
UK Tax Drag (2026). Sixth form vs college — what each costs and what each is like. Ages 14–16 deep guide. Available at: https://kids.uktaxdrag.co.uk/ages-14-16-sixth-form-vs-college.html
Curriculum mapping: see UK Financial Education Curriculum Map (Version 1.0).