GCSE Maths 2026: Complete Guide to Foundation, Higher, Topics & Revision
GCSE Maths 2026 guide: Foundation vs Higher tier, exam paper structure, all topics, grade boundaries, calculators and a 6-month revision plan.

GCSE Mathematics: The Complete 2026 Guide for Foundation and Higher Tier
GCSE mathematics is the single most important qualification a student in England, Wales or Northern Ireland will take at age sixteen. It is compulsory for every state-school pupil, sat by roughly 700,000 candidates each summer, and the gateway grade that sixth forms, colleges, apprenticeships and almost every employer will ask to see.
Score a grade 4 or higher and the door to A-Levels, T-Levels and most college courses swings open. Score below 4 and you will have to resit the qualification, usually in November of Year 12, until you either pass or turn eighteen. There is genuinely no other single exam result at age 16 that carries the same weight in British life.
This guide is the full picture. We cover both Foundation and Higher tier, the three-paper exam structure used by AQA, Edexcel and OCR, the complete topic list and the percentage of marks each area is worth, how grade boundaries actually work, which calculator to buy, the formulae now printed on the official sheet, and a tested six-month revision plan that takes a borderline grade 3 student up to a comfortable 5, or a grade 6 student up to a grade 8 or 9.
Whether you are a Year 10 student starting your two-year course, a Year 11 student in the final stretch, or a parent trying to work out how to help, every question is answered below. The article assumes no prior knowledge of the qualification or its structure — we explain everything from the difference between tiers to the colour of the calculator sticker.
Before we dive in, it helps to know where this qualification sits in the bigger picture. Read our overview of what is gcse if you are not yet sure how Key Stage 4 grades, tiers and the 9-1 scale all fit together. For exam-day logistics that apply across every subject, see our gcse exam guide.
And for actual revision material, the free downloads at our gcse past papers hub link straight to every official board paper plus mark schemes. Working through past papers under timed conditions is by some margin the highest-return revision activity for this qualification — more on that later in the six-month plan.
A short note on tiers, because it is the first decision your school will make for you. GCSE Maths is the only core subject that is still split into two tiers. Foundation tier covers grades 1 to 5 only. Higher tier covers grades 4 to 9 only. There is no overlap above 5 or below 4.
The decision is made by your Maths teacher during Year 10 and Year 11, usually based on mock-paper results and predicted grades, and it can be changed all the way up to Christmas of Year 11 if your performance shifts. Most schools default students to Higher because the ceiling is much higher, but if you are sitting consistently below 40% on Higher mocks you are almost certainly better off moving to Foundation, where a grade 5 sits at roughly 80% and represents a strong pass.
The single most damaging myth about tier choice is that Higher is automatically better. It is not. A scrappy Higher candidate who scrapes a 4 will be ranked lower by sixth-form admissions than a confident Foundation candidate who locks in a 5. The grade certificate does not record which tier you sat. Pick the tier where you can hit your target grade most reliably, not the tier with the higher ceiling.
Throughout the rest of this guide we will refer to the 2026 specifications used by AQA (8300), Pearson Edexcel (1MA1) and OCR (J560). The three boards have near-identical content and paper structures, which means almost everything below applies regardless of which board your school enters you for. The small differences — specific question wording, the exact split of marks across papers, the look of the formula sheet — are all covered where they matter.
Let us start with the headline numbers, then work through tier choice, paper structure, every topic on the specification, calculator rules, grade boundaries and finally a week-by-week revision plan you can lift and use immediately.
GCSE Maths 2026 by the Numbers
A grade 4 in GCSE Maths is the single most-asked-for qualification in the UK. Sixth forms require it for A-Level entry. Colleges require it for almost every Level 3 course. The vast majority of apprenticeships, the NHS, the police, the armed forces and even retail management schemes set it as a minimum. If you leave school without a grade 4 you will be required by law to keep resitting GCSE Maths (and English) in November and June every year until you either pass or turn 18. The good news: with the right revision plan, a grade 4 is reachable for almost every student. The rest of this guide shows exactly how.
Foundation Tier, Higher Tier and Paper Structure
Foundation tier covers grades 1 to 5 only. The maximum grade you can achieve is a 5, which is classed as a strong pass and is accepted as a grade C-equivalent by almost every employer and college. Foundation is the right choice for students whose mock-paper scores sit consistently below 40% on Higher tier. The questions are more procedural and there are more single-mark and two-mark items spread across each paper. Topics covered: number (arithmetic, fractions, percentages, ratio), basic algebra (linear equations, simple sequences, plotting graphs), geometry (perimeter, area, volume, basic angle rules, similar shapes), statistics (averages, range, basic probability, simple charts) and ratio/proportion (recipes, currency conversion, scale). Approximate mark split for Foundation: Number 25%, Algebra 20%, Ratio/Proportion 25%, Geometry/Measures 15%, Probability 7%, Statistics 8%. A grade 5 on Foundation typically requires around 80% of the available marks; a grade 4 sits at around 60%; a grade 3 around 40%. Because the ceiling is lower, ambitious revision on Foundation usually yields a higher grade than a stressed scrape on Higher.

Top 5 GCSE Maths Topic Areas to Master
Fractions, percentages, decimals, standard form, surds (Higher). The non-calc paper lives here — fluent mental arithmetic earns 20-25 marks before you reach the harder problems.
Linear equations, quadratics, simultaneous equations, factorising, functions, iteration, completing the square. Higher tier rewards algebra obsessively — 30% of all marks.
Best buy, recipes, currency, direct and inverse proportion, compound growth, speed-distance-time. Carries 20-25% on every paper.
Angle rules, Pythagoras, trigonometry (sine and cosine rules on Higher), circle theorems, area, volume, vectors and transformations.
Tree diagrams, Venn diagrams, conditional probability (Higher), averages, range, box plots, histograms with unequal class widths.
Foundation vs Higher Tier: How to Choose
Your teacher will make the formal entry decision in Year 11, but you can ask to switch right up to Christmas of Year 11 if mocks tell a different story. Use these prompts to think it through honestly.
- +You score consistently under 40% on Higher mock papers — you will earn a higher grade on Foundation
- +Grade 5 is the ceiling you actually need (most colleges and apprenticeships accept grade 4 or 5)
- +You panic on multi-step algebra and find quadratics confusing despite revision
- +You want every question to feel accessible — Foundation has fewer 5- and 6-mark items
- +A grade 5 on Foundation (~80% marks) is much more achievable than a grade 5 on Higher (~40% marks)
- +Your teacher recommends Foundation based on tracked classwork and mocks across Year 10 and 11
- −You want to keep grades 6, 7, 8 or 9 on the table (e.g. for grammar school sixth forms or competitive A-Levels)
- −Your mock-paper average is grade 4 or above on Higher — you will earn more marks here over time
- −You plan to take A-Level Maths, Further Maths, Physics, Engineering or Economics — grade 6 minimum often required
- −You enjoy algebra and want the chance to study quadratics, surds, trigonometry and vectors in depth
- −Top-tier universities and selective sixth forms increasingly ask for a grade 7 or higher in GCSE Maths
- −You are happy with steady revision — Higher rewards anyone who completes 20+ past papers with mark-scheme review
Grade Boundaries, Calculators and the Formula Sheet
Grade boundaries are the raw mark thresholds the exam boards publish on results day to convert your total out of 240 into a 9-1 grade. They are not fixed in advance. Ofqual uses a process called comparable outcomes to keep the percentage of students achieving each grade roughly stable year on year, which means that if the 2026 papers turn out harder than the 2025 ones, the boundaries will drop. This is also why you cannot reliably predict your grade from raw mark schemes alone — you only know with certainty on Thursday 21 August 2026.
Historical data is the best guide we have. Across AQA, Edexcel and OCR over the last five summer series, Higher-tier grade 9 has sat between 200 and 215 out of 240 (roughly 83-90%). Grade 7 has sat between 145 and 165 (60-69%). Grade 4 on Higher has sat as low as 50 marks out of 240 in some years (21%) and as high as 75 (31%). Foundation grade 5 has consistently sat between 175 and 200 out of 240 (73-83%), grade 4 between 130 and 155 (54-65%), and grade 3 between 90 and 115 (38-48%).
Knowing the boundary maths transforms how you sit the paper. If you are aiming at grade 4 on Higher and roughly half the questions on Paper 1 look unfamiliar, you are still on track — you only need to bank 25-30% of the available marks. Trying to answer every question instead of locking down the ones you can solve cleanly is the single most common mistake on Higher.
Foundation pacing is the opposite. Because grade 5 needs 75-80%, you cannot afford to leave any reachable mark behind. Every short-answer question needs to be attempted, every working step shown, every calculation double-checked. A clean Foundation paper hits the ceiling. A scrappy Higher paper still hits grade 5 if the algebra carries you.
Calculators are allowed on Papers 2 and 3 only. The exam-board approved list is short, and most centres expect a scientific calculator with fraction, square root, trigonometric and statistical functions. The Casio fx-83GTX (around £20) is the standard issue model recommended by almost every secondary school in the UK — it has every function the syllabus requires, is allowed by JCQ, and is available in every supermarket and stationery shop.
The Casio fx-991EX ClassWiz (around £30) is a higher-spec model with QR-code-linked graph display and is allowed on the exam too. Graphical calculators are not required for GCSE and most are not on the JCQ allowed list — if in doubt, stick with the fx-83GTX. Cases must be cleared off the desk, batteries should be fresh on exam morning, and you may not have any external memory or programming.
The formula sheet changed in 2022. From summer 2022 onwards every GCSE Maths paper has included a formula sheet at the front of the paper, printed by the exam board. This was a permanent post-pandemic change — not a temporary measure. The sheet includes the quadratic formula, the area of a triangle (½absinC), the cosine rule, the sine rule, the volume of a cone, sphere, pyramid and frustum, the compound interest formula and the kinematics SUVAT equations.
You no longer need to memorise these. You still need to know how to apply them, which means recognising when a non-right-angled triangle needs the sine rule vs the cosine rule, knowing which two sides and which angle you are working with, and substituting cleanly without arithmetic errors. The reduction in rote learning has freed up revision time for the trickier algebraic technique like completing the square and the iteration formula — which are not on the sheet.

Historical Higher Tier Grade Boundaries (% of 240 marks)
Exam Day, Top-Grade Topics and Common Mistakes
On exam day, bring two black pens, two HB pencils, a sharpener, a rubber, a 30 cm ruler, a protractor, a pair of compasses, your scientific calculator (Papers 2 and 3), and a transparent water bottle. Photo ID is not required for state-school candidates as the centre already knows you, but private candidates and home-schoolers should bring a passport or driving licence. Mobile phones must be left at the front of the hall or with the invigilator — a phone in your pocket, even switched off, can be flagged as malpractice.
Read every question twice. Show every step of working: examiners award method marks for correct working even when the final answer is wrong, so a six-mark question abandoned without working scores zero, but the same question with three lines of correct algebra and a wrong final number can score three or four. Mental check every answer for reasonableness — if the area of a kitchen comes out as 0.04 square metres, you have made a unit-conversion mistake.
If something goes wrong on the day there are formal routes. If you fall ill the morning of a paper, contact the school immediately so the invigilator can apply for special consideration — this can add up to 5% to your awarded mark in some cases, or allow a missed paper to be carried by your other two papers. Bereavement, accident or serious illness during the exam window all qualify. If you think a paper was marked unfairly, schools can request a clerical re-check (free) or a full re-mark (small fee).
For students aiming at top grades, the elite content lives in a handful of topics. Vectors with parallel and collinearity proofs (typical 6-mark question on Paper 3 Higher), iterative formulae of the form x_{n+1} = some expression (a guaranteed 3- or 4-mark item on Higher Paper 1 or 2), surds simplification including rationalising denominators with binomial surds, advanced trigonometry on non-right-angled triangles using the sine and cosine rules, calculus-style questions on gradient at a point and area under a curve estimated using trapezoids, and proof-style algebra questions requiring formal symbolic manipulation.
Mastering these six topic areas reliably converts a grade 7 into a grade 8 or 9. For Foundation tier, the equivalent grade-5-securing topics are best-buy ratio problems, percentage change and reverse percentages, simultaneous linear equations, area and volume with compound shapes, and probability tree diagrams. Spending an extra fortnight on these targeted topics is worth more grade points than another week of mixed past-paper revision spread across every chapter equally.
The Five Mistakes That Cost the Most Marks
Jumping to a final answer abandons method marks even when the answer is right. Examiners award marks for the steps, not the destination.
Mixing up degree and radian mode, trusting a decimal without converting back to a fraction, forgetting brackets around negative numbers.
Square metres vs square centimetres, km/h vs m/s. Compound-measure problems (density, pressure, speed) catch out the unwary every year.
Spending too long on hard questions and running out of time on easier items at the back. Fix: one-minute-per-mark rule with abandon-and-return.
A 6-mark item is not six times harder than a 1-mark item — it is the same maths broken into six steps. Treat each as a separate problem.

Mark-Scheme Revision Cycle and Resit Logistics
The single most effective revision activity, validated by years of teacher observation and student outcome data, is the mark-scheme cycle. Sit a past paper under timed conditions. Mark it yourself using the official mark scheme the same day. Make a list of every question that lost two or more marks. Re-do every wrong question the following day, this time with the textbook open if needed, until you can complete each one cleanly without referring to the scheme.
Re-do them again a week later, with no notes. This three-pass cycle hardwires the methods into long-term memory in a way that passive reading never can. Most students who follow this cycle religiously gain a full grade between January and the May exam, regardless of starting level. It also has the side benefit of training calm, controlled exam-room behaviour because by paper 20 the experience of sitting under the clock feels routine rather than threatening.
Resit logistics deserve their own paragraph because so many students panic about them unnecessarily. November resits are available for English Language and Maths only — the November 2026 series sits in early November with results in January 2027. There is no second-summer entry: if you miss June, you wait until November. The November exam covers identical content and follows the identical three-paper structure, with the same tier choice. You can switch tiers between summer and November.
Most students who resit Foundation in November after missing on Higher in summer end up with a comfortable grade 5. Private candidates pay £40-£200 per paper depending on the centre; state-funded post-16 students sit for free. For more cross-subject revision support, see our gcse hub or grab a printable gcse practice test for offline drilling.
One under-used route is the home-tutoring route for resit students. Tutors who specialise in GCSE Maths resit candidates report consistent grade jumps from 3 to 4 across a six-week intensive plan, typically two one-hour sessions a week focused exclusively on the mark-scheme cycle. The cost ranges from £25 to £45 per hour depending on region. If the household budget cannot stretch to a private tutor, the same plan can be self-delivered by a determined student working alongside the official mark schemes and the Maths Genie predicted papers — both completely free.
Parents often ask how much support is appropriate at home. The evidence-based answer is to focus on logistics and emotional support rather than maths content. Make sure there is a quiet study space, a printed timetable on the fridge, a calculator with fresh batteries waiting in the school bag the night before each paper. Avoid asking technical maths questions at the dinner table — these tend to trigger anxiety rather than recall. The six-month revision plan and exam-day checklist below tie everything in this guide into an actionable week-by-week schedule that students can run themselves with minimal parental intervention.
GCSE Maths Exam Day Checklist
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Best Free GCSE Maths Revision Resources
Topic-by-topic theory and short quizzes covering Foundation and Higher. Free, official, broken into bite-sized lessons. Best for first-pass learning of a new topic.
Daily 5-a-day worksheets at every grade level. Worked-example videos for every topic. Best for daily skill drilling and exam-style practice.
Past papers sorted by grade level and topic, with full solution videos. Predicted-paper revision packs. Best for grade-9 practice and structured topic revision.
Past paper questions sorted by topic with worked answers. Revision notes follow exam-board specification structure. Best for targeted topic revision week-by-week.
US-based but excellent for algebra, geometry and trigonometry foundations. Long-form video lessons with adaptive quizzes. Best for building maths confidence from the ground up.
Subscription platforms used by many UK schools. Algorithm assigns personalised homework based on weak topics. Best if your school already provides access — do not pay independently.
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About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.