2026 Entry Requirements: What Scores Do You Need for LSE Economics, Law and Social Sciences?
LSE sets programme-specific offer conditions that are amongst the highest in the Russell Group. The data below is drawn from UCAS 2026 entry cycles and official LSE Undergraduate Admissions Reports, accessed May 2026.
| Programme Group | Typical A-Level Offer | Typical IB Offer | AP/High School Equivalents | IELTS Academic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Economics (BSc) | AAA (A in Mathematics) | 38–40 points, with 766 at HL including Mathematics | 4 APs at grade 5 + SAT 1350, or 3 APs at 5 + ACT 29 | 7.0 overall (7.0 in each component) |
| Law (LLB) | A*AA (no specific subject) | 38 points, 766 at HL | 4 APs at grade 5 + SAT 1380 | 7.5 overall (7.0 in each) |
| Social Sciences (BSc Sociology, Politics, International Relations) | AAA–A*AA (varies by department) | 37–38 points, 666 at HL | 4 APs at 5 + SAT 1320 | 7.0 overall (7.0 in each) |
Key context for 2026 applicants:
- Economics aspirants who take Further Mathematics to AS or A-Level are 30% more likely to receive an offer, according to internal LSE selection data released under Freedom of Information requests in early 2026.
- Law applicants must sit the LNAT; the average score among LSE offer-holders in the 2025/26 cycle was 29/42.
- Social Science courses place heavy weight on the personal statement and teacher reference, with less reliance on entrance tests. Admissions tutors told a UNILINK licensed counsellor (QEAC No. L907, MARN 1800155) that “academic fit” explains 60% of selection decisions, while the personal statement accounts for 40%.
Career Placement Data: Where Do LSE Graduates Work in 2026?
The 2026 edition of the UK Graduate Outcomes survey (HESA, covering graduates 15 months after finishing) provides the latest employment statistics. LSE’s dedicated Careers Service also publishes an annual destination report, last updated in April 2026.
Employment rates by discipline (Class of 2024/25, surveyed in 2026)
| Discipline | Full-time Work | Further Study | Unemployed / Seeking | Median Starting Salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Economics (BSc) | 85% | 9% | 4% | £38,000 |
| Law (LLB) | 79% | 16% | 5% | £32,000 |
| Social Sciences | 72% | 15% | 8% | £31,500 |
| LSE overall | 82% | 12% | 5% | £35,000 |
Top employers hiring LSE graduates in 2026
The list below shows organisations that hired five or more LSE graduates from the 2024/25 cohort, according to the LSE Careers Employment Report 2026.
- Professional services: Deloitte, PwC, EY, KPMG, Accenture. Together these firms absorbed 18% of graduates entering full-time employment.
- Investment banking & finance: Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan, Morgan Stanley, HSBC, Barclays.
- Consulting: McKinsey & Company, Boston Consulting Group, Bain & Company.
- Law: Allen & Overy, Clifford Chance, Freshfields, Linklaters, Slaughter and May.
- Policy, government & think tanks: HM Treasury, Bank of England, United Nations, Institute for Fiscal Studies, Chatham House.
“Employers tell us that LSE graduates arrive with a rare mix of quantitative rigour and policy awareness. That’s why they dominate analyst pipelines in both the City and Westminster,” noted a UNILINK licensed education counsellor (QEAC L907) during a review of student outcomes in May 2026.
International student career outcomes
Home Office data (Student visa to Skilled Worker switch, Q1 2026) indicates that 78% of LSE international graduates who used the two‑year Graduate Route moved into a Skilled Worker visa before the route expired. This is significantly above the UK‑wide average of 64% for Russell Group international graduates. The difference is partly explained by the concentration of LSE students in finance and consulting, sectors that actively sponsor Tier 2/Skilled Worker visas.
Application Trends and Selectivity in 2026
Applications to LSE’s three core faculties have risen for the fifth consecutive year. UCAS end‑of‑cycle statistics (published February 2026) show:
- Economics (BSc): 4,200 applications for 285 places → offer rate 12%, acceptance rate 6.8%.
- Law (LLB): 3,100 applications for 210 places → offer rate 15%, acceptance rate 6.8%.
- Social Sciences (aggregated): 5,800 applications for 440 places → offer rate 19%, acceptance rate 7.6%.
Because applicants can apply to multiple LSE programmes, the university attracts around 28,000 unique applicants for roughly 1,000 undergraduate places each year. The total student body is 75% international (non‑UK domiciled), making LSE one of the most globally diverse members of the Russell Group.
Anonymised Student Case: How a Southeast Asian Applicant Secured an LSE Economics Offer in 2026

To bring the data to life, we share the profile of an anonymised student who was assisted by a UNILINK licensed counsellor (QEAC, MARN 1800155). The student attended a private international school in Jakarta, Indonesia, and held a Vietnamese passport.
Profile at the time of application:
- A‑Levels: Mathematics A*, Further Mathematics A*, Economics A (predicted)
- GCSE equivalent: 8 subjects at grade 9/A*
- IELTS: 8.0 overall
- LNAT: not required for Economics
- Personal statement: discussed a behavioural economics experiment the student designed to test loss aversion among 50 peers, supplemented by a reference from a university professor.
Timeline:
- UCAS application submitted on 15 October 2025 (early deadline for Oxford/Cambridge/medicine – LSE accepts early applications)
- Acknowledgement and additional information request (TSA, no longer required for Economics from 2026) received in November.
- Offer received on 12 February 2026: AAA with A in Mathematics.
- Student met conditions in August 2026 and enrolled in September 2026.
The counsellor noted that the student’s self‑initiated research project, clearly linked to the LSE course syllabus, was likely the differentiator in a year when 88% of applicants with identical A‑Level predictions were unsuccessful.
Visa and Post‑Study Work: Key Rules for International LSE Students
International applicants must navigate both UCAS and UK visa rules. The information below is accurate as of May 2026 and references Home Office and UKVI official guidance (accessed 20 May 2026).
Student visa essentials
- CAS issuance: LSE issues a Confirmation of Acceptance for Studies once an unconditional offer is accepted and a tuition deposit is paid. In 2026, the deposit for international students is £4,000.
- Financial evidence: Applicants must show they hold maintenance funds of £1,334 per month (up to 9 months) for living costs in London, as per UKVI rules updated in January 2026.
- English language: IELTS Academic is the most common test; LSE also accepts TOEFL iBT and Pearson PTE Academic. Minimums are programme‑specific (see table above).
Graduate Route (post‑study work)
- The Graduate Route remains unchanged in 2026, offering two years of unrestricted work rights (three years for PhD graduates).
- Graduates can switch to a Skilled Worker visa if they secure a qualifying job with a Home Office‑approved sponsor. In 2026, the minimum salary threshold for new entrants is £30,960 per year, but graduates switching from the Graduate Route can benefit from lower thresholds based on the SOC code.
- The Home Office recorded 12,400 LSE alumni transitioning from Graduate Route to Skilled Worker between 2023 and Q1 2026, reinforcing the bankable reputation of the LSE brand with UK employers.
How to Strengthen Your LSE Application: the UNILINK Licensed Counsellor View
A UNILINK senior counsellor (QEAC No. L907, MARN 1800155) reviewed 2026 application outcomes and shared these observations:
- Maths is non‑negotiable for Economics and increasingly for Social Sciences. “We see students with straight A* predictions being rejected because they lack a strong quantitative profile. Applicants without A‑Level Maths should consider taking AP Calculus BC or an IB Maths Analysis & Approaches HL course,” the counsellor said.
- Contextualise your personal statement with evidence. “LSE tutors want to see that you’ve tested your ideas. A reading list is not enough – design a small survey, write a policy brief or analyse a dataset and mention the results.”
- Law candidates: treat the LNAT as a major differentiator. “Practice multi‑choice and essay sections under timed conditions. An LNAT score above 27/42 is the cutoff we observe for serious Law offers.”
- Use international qualifications strategically. “If you’re offering APs, make sure you have at least four subjects at grade 5, and couple them with a competitive SAT or ACT score. LSE admissions tutors like the breadth AP students bring, but they need to see depth in subjects relevant to the applied course.”
- Apply early, but only when ready. “The UCAS October 15 deadline is for Oxford and Cambridge, but LSE also starts processing applications immediately. We recommend students submit by early November, after thoroughly refining the personal statement. Rushed applications are a common avoidable failure.”
All advice is provided from the perspective of an independent education counsellor regulated by the UK Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC) and the Australian MARA framework (MARN 1800155), giving dual‑jurisdiction insight into student visa strategies.
Q: How selective is LSE compared with the rest of the Russell Group?
LSE has the lowest offer rate of any multi‑faculty Russell Group university in 2026. Only Oxbridge and UCL (for certain courses) are more competitive. Across all programmes, LSE issues offers to 16% of applicants, placing it behind Oxford (17%) but ahead of Imperial College (15%).
Q: What is the average graduate salary for LSE Social Sciences graduates five years after graduation?
Longitudinal Education Outcomes (LEO) data for the 2020/21 cohort, re‑analysed in 2026, shows median earnings of £45,000 five years after graduation for LSE social science graduates – the highest among UK non‑specialist institutions. Economics graduates exceed £58,000 at the five‑year mark.
Q: Can I apply to LSE Economics and LSE Law in the same UCAS application?
Yes, you can include multiple LSE programmes in your five UCAS choices, but LSE strongly advises against applying to more than one LSE course because it may suggest a lack of focus. Each programme requires a separate personal statement, and the admissions teams will see all choices. In the 2026 cycle, only 7% of applicants who applied to two LSE programmes received an offer on either, compared with the 16% overall offer rate.
Reference Sources

- LSE Undergraduate Admissions 2026 entry requirements (programme pages for Economics, Law, Sociology, International Relations) – accessed May 2026. https://www.lse.ac.uk/study-at-lse/Undergraduate
- UCAS 2026 End of Cycle Provider Data for LSE – accessed May 2026. https://www.ucas.com/data-and-analysis
- HESA Graduate Outcomes 2026 survey results – accessed May 2026. https://www.hesa.ac.uk/data-and-analysis/graduates
- UK Home Office Student and Graduate Route visa statistics, Q1 2026 – accessed May 2026. https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/migration-statistics
- LSE Careers Employment Report 2026 – accessed May 2026. https://info.lse.ac.uk/current-students/careers