King’s medical interviews for 2026 entry will take place from November 2025 to May 2026 and will be in the form of Multiple Mini Interviews (MMIs).
They shortlist candidates for interviews via consideration of GCSEs, A-Levels, UCAT, Personal Statement and references. All students must have sat the UCAT by October 2026.
King’s entry requirements for A-Levels are A*AA (including minimum Grade A Chemistry and Biology) and a minimum of Grade 6/B in GCSE English Language and Mathematics. There is currently no cut-off score for the UCAT; accepted scores depend on the performance and competition of the applicants applying that year.
All of these criteria must be met; the top-scoring candidates will be invited to an interview via the King’s Apply portal, starting from early November 2025.
Candidates will be asked to set up their King’s Apply portal prior to any interview offers, and will receive alerts and updates through this page.
King’s receive approximately 4500 applications for all Medicine courses every year. They aim to interview roughly 1200-1400 applicants. They have a total of 410 places across Medicine courses.
King’s has not confirmed whether they will hold their interviews for 2026 entry online.
The interview process will be the same for international students; be sure to read this information for country-specific grade requirements.
There is no up-to-date information regarding 2026 entry. Historically, the interview itself has been split into four short interviews, each with two questions on various topics. Candidates were sent a link via their portal prior to the interview and usually have 2-3 interviewers, with one potentially being a medical student.
A timer was set for each question and the interviewer will stop candidates after that time expires. Exact timings have not been released for 2026 entry, but were up to 40 minutes in previous years.
At King’s, interview topics could cover:
Typical questions could include:
King’s is known for testing candidates on current affairs, ethical scenarios and dilemmas. They want to ensure candidates have good insight into new topics in the scientific field, as well as in healthcare affairs.
You should therefore read up on issues that the NHS is facing, research different academic topics that interest you, and understand the core values needed in an ethical dilemma and how to resolve it.
King’s looks for honesty, integrity, enthusiasm and passion in its candidates – so be yourself, show them why you want to study Medicine and demonstrate why you’re an excellent candidate.
King’s scoring system has changed since COVID-19 and has not been released to candidates.
Before COVID-19, interviews had a mark-sheet and students were scored on a scale of 1 to 10, depending on the quality of their performance. Scoring in each station was independent of others. It is unclear if this is still the case.
Interview offers are decided based purely on interview performance, and decisions are expected to be released once the interview cycle is completed, sometime in May 2026.
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