Choosing between AQA, Edexcel, and OCR is one of the first decisions adults face when starting a GCSE online. The short answer is that the choice makes very little difference to the final certificate — all three awarding bodies produce the same legal qualification, regulated by Ofqual to the same framework. However, for practical reasons of exam centre access and exam window flexibility, most distance learning providers recommend Pearson Edexcel for adults studying independently.
AQA — the most widely used awarding body in state schools
AQA (Assessment and Qualifications Alliance) is the most common awarding body in state secondary schools in England. Many adults who originally sat GCSEs at school will have sat AQA papers. AQA is also the preferred board for many FE colleges running adult GCSE English Language resit programmes, particularly for post-16 resit learners on funded programmes.
For adults studying privately, AQA is a solid choice but exam centre access can be more limited than Edexcel. AQA does not offer a November GCSE sitting for most subjects, although a November Maths resit has been available in some years. Check availability with your chosen exam centre before deciding.
Pearson Edexcel — most accessible for private candidates
Pearson Edexcel is the most popular choice for adults studying online because it operates a wide network of approved exam centres that explicitly welcome private candidates — adults who are not enrolled in a school or FE college. Edexcel's centre finder tool allows you to search by postcode for local options.
Edexcel also offers an IGCSE (International GCSE) range which is particularly suitable for distance learning as some subjects have reduced or no coursework requirements, making self-study more straightforward. The November GCSE Maths resit sitting is available through Edexcel centres, giving adults an additional exam window each year beyond the main May/June series.
OCR — Cambridge-based, available through some distance learning providers
OCR (Oxford, Cambridge and RSA Examinations) is the Cambridge-based awarding body. OCR GCSEs are available through some online providers and are particularly well regarded for subjects like Computer Science and Geography. For English Language and Maths, AQA and Edexcel are generally more accessible for private adult candidates.
How the 9–1 grading scale works
The 9–1 grading scale replaced the old A*–G system and was introduced between 2017 and 2020 across all GCSE subjects. Grade 9 is the highest achievable grade, broadly equivalent to the old A* at the very top end. Grade 1 is the lowest grade awarded, equivalent to the old grade G.
The critical threshold for most employment, apprenticeship, and further education requirements is grade 4. Ofqual has confirmed that grade 4 is directly equivalent to the old grade C — the standard "pass" threshold. Grade 5, sometimes called the "strong pass", falls between the old grades B and C and is used by some employers and higher education providers as a higher benchmark.
- Grade 9 — exceptional performance; fewer than 3% of entries nationally
- Grade 8 — broadly equivalent to old A*
- Grade 7 — broadly equivalent to old A
- Grade 6 — broadly equivalent to old B
- Grade 5 — "strong pass"; straddles the old B/C boundary
- Grade 4 — "standard pass"; directly equivalent to old grade C
- Grade 3 — broadly equivalent to old grade D
- Grade 2 — broadly equivalent to old grade E
- Grade 1 — broadly equivalent to old grade F/G
- U — ungraded (did not reach grade 1 threshold)
How to register for a GCSE exam as a private candidate
As a private candidate, you register directly with an approved exam centre rather than through a school or college. Most online course providers maintain a list of recommended centres and some will help you with registration. The key steps are as follows.
- Confirm your awarding body and subject with your online provider
- Search for an approved exam centre on the awarding body's centre finder tool (Edexcel, AQA, or OCR)
- Contact the centre to check they accept private candidates and have spaces in the relevant exam series
- Complete the centre's registration paperwork and pay the exam entry fee (typically £50–£150 per subject)
- Sit the exam during the relevant series (May/June, or November for Maths)
- Receive results in August for the May/June series (or January for November sittings)
How does the exam certificate confirm the grade equivalence?
GCSE certificates issued since 2017 show the 9–1 grade only — no letter grade appears on the certificate. However, Ofqual publishes the official grade equivalence table, and the 9–1 to A*–G comparison is universally understood by employers, universities, and professional bodies. If you need to explain the equivalence to an employer who is more familiar with letter grades, pointing them to the Ofqual guidance is usually sufficient.