UCAS
The Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS) is an independent charity that operates the centralized admissions system for full-time undergraduate higher education courses at universities and colleges throughout the United Kingdom.[1] It processes applications from prospective students, coordinates offers and decisions from over 380 higher education providers, and facilitates additional services such as Clearing for unfilled places and Adjustment for upgraded offers.[2] UCAS was formed through the merger of the Universities Central Council on Admissions (UCCA), which handled university applications, and the Polytechnics Central Admissions System (PCAS), which managed polytechnic admissions, creating a unified platform to streamline the process amid the expansion of higher education in the early 1990s.[3] In addition to application handling, UCAS provides resources including course search tools, career guidance, and events to assist applicants in making informed choices, while also offering data insights to institutions on trends in admissions and participation.[4] The organization supports a diverse applicant base, including international students, and maintains a commercial arm to fund its charitable activities without reliance on public subsidies.[5]Organizational Background
Founding and Early Development
UCAS was incorporated on 27 July 1993 as a private company limited by guarantee, established through the merger of the Universities Central Council on Admissions (UCCA) and the Polytechnics Central Admissions System (PCAS).[6] This merger created a unified admissions service for undergraduate higher education in the United Kingdom, addressing the need for a single system following the Further and Higher Education Act 1992, which abolished the binary divide between universities and polytechnics by granting polytechnics the ability to award their own degrees and adopt university status.[7] UCCA, operational since 1961, had centralized paper-based applications for university places, initially processing them manually before adopting computerization in the 1970s and 1980s; PCAS, introduced in 1985, similarly managed admissions for polytechnics and certain colleges, handling approximately 140,000 applications in its debut year.[8] The formation of UCAS aimed to streamline the application process amid expanding higher education access, eliminating parallel systems that had fragmented admissions along institutional lines.[9] Initial operations involved integrating the predecessor organizations' infrastructure, with the first joint UCCA/PCAS application forms used for 1993 submissions targeting 1994 entry; by 1994, UCAS had officially rebranded and processed just over 400,000 applications, marking the start of centralized handling for both former university and polytechnic institutions.[10] This period saw a shift toward greater efficiency, including enhanced computer-based processing inherited from UCCA's earlier innovations, though applications remained largely postal until broader digital adoption in subsequent years.[8] Early development focused on consolidating governance and operations under a single entity, with UCAS headquartered in Cheltenham and governed by representatives from universities, colleges, and schools. Applicant volumes grew steadily from the mid-1990s, reflecting policy-driven expansions in higher education participation, though the system retained core elements like centralized offer coordination and clearing mechanisms from its predecessors.[10] By the late 1990s, UCAS had established itself as the primary gateway for UK undergraduate admissions, adapting to increasing demand without major structural overhauls until later reforms.[9]Governance, Location, and Operations
UCAS is an independent charity and the UK's shared admissions service for higher education, governed by a skills-based Board of Trustees comprising 13 members who provide strategic guidance, scrutiny, and accountability for the organization's strategy and performance.[11] The Board is supported by four standing committees—Audit and Risk, Finance, Nominations, and People and Remuneration—each including a majority of trustees alongside executive directors and external experts to oversee specific risk, financial, appointment, and personnel matters.[12] The UCAS Council, with around 35 members drawn from nominating bodies and open recruitment, offers advisory input on admissions policy, operational practices, and sector-wide issues.[11] Executive leadership is headed by Chief Executive Dr. Jo Saxton CBE, appointed in January 2024 following her tenure as Chief Regulator of Ofqual from September 2021.[13] The organization maintains its headquarters at Rosehill, New Barn Lane, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, GL52 3LZ, England, from which it coordinates national admissions activities.[14] In operations, UCAS functions through specialized business units that handle application processing, customer support, digital infrastructure, and compliance; key units include Customer Operations for aiding students, advisers, and providers; Digital Services for maintaining application platforms; Finance and Corporate Services; and Communications and Marketing for stakeholder engagement.[15] Legal and Governance supports these with expertise in regulatory compliance, information management, and corporate oversight.[15] UCAS processes applications to approximately 380 universities and colleges, delivers data analytics on admissions trends, and issues annual reports detailing strategic progress and financials.[2]Core Admissions Schemes
Undergraduate Main Scheme
The UCAS Undergraduate Main Scheme constitutes the principal centralized application system for full-time undergraduate degree programs at UK higher education providers, encompassing universities, colleges, and conservatoires. It facilitates applications from prospective students, primarily recent secondary school graduates or those with deferred entry, by consolidating submissions into a single online portal rather than requiring separate applications to each institution. This scheme processes the majority of undergraduate admissions, excluding certain specialist or part-time routes handled through alternative UCAS services or direct provider applications. Eligibility centers on individuals pursuing initial undergraduate qualifications, with no upper age limit but targeted mainly at those completing qualifications such as A-levels, International Baccalaureate, or equivalents. Applicants must register via the UCAS Hub, providing personal details, educational history, and up to five course choices—though limited to four for medicine, dentistry, or veterinary science, and with Oxford and Cambridge treated as distinct despite the cap. Each choice specifies a provider and course code, without the ability to select multiple courses at the same provider under the standard scheme. The application fee is £28.50 for up to five choices or £13.50 for a single choice, payable upon submission.[16] Core components include a personal statement of up to 4,000 characters (approximately 47 lines), detailing academic interests, relevant experiences, and extracurriculars to demonstrate fit for the chosen fields; an academic reference from a referee such as a teacher, attesting to predicted performance and personal attributes; and declared qualifications with predicted grades for pending exams. UCAS verifies the statement for plagiarism and ensures the reference's authenticity before forwarding the application to providers, typically within days of submission. Providers assess applications holistically, considering grades, statements, and sometimes additional tests or interviews, before issuing decisions: conditional offers (tied to achieving specified grades), unconditional offers, holds (pending further review), or rejections.[16][17] For 2026 entry, applications open on 1 September 2025, with submissions enabled from 4 September; the equal consideration deadline—ensuring applications receive standard review priority—is 29 January 2026 at 18:00 UK time for most courses. Specialized deadlines apply earlier: 15 October 2025 for medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, and Oxford/Cambridge applications. The final deadline is 30 June 2026, beyond which late entries depend on provider discretion and vacancy. Applicants track progress via UCAS Hub, replying to offers by specified dates—firm (preferred) and insurance (contingent) choices selected, with others automatically declined. Post-results, if A-level or equivalent grades match the firm offer, enrollment proceeds; shortfalls trigger the insurance or options like Adjustment (for exceeding grades) or Clearing (vacancy matching from July). In the 2023 cycle, this scheme handled 702,460 applicants, yielding 433,930 acceptances, with variations by subject and demographics reflecting provider selectivity.[18][19]Postgraduate and Specialized Schemes
UCAS does not administer a centralized application process for most postgraduate taught or research degrees in the UK, unlike its undergraduate scheme; instead, applicants submit applications directly to individual universities or providers, often via institutional portals or platforms like those for specific funding schemes such as the UK Research and Innovation's doctoral training partnerships.[20] UCAS supports postgraduate progression through its Postgraduate service, launched to provide course search functionality, eligibility guidance, and application advice, covering over 100,000 courses across various formats including master's degrees, PhDs, and professional qualifications.[21] This service emphasizes direct applications, with deadlines varying by program—typically between January and September for September starts—but recommends early submission to align with funding opportunities like postgraduate loans, available up to £12,167 for English residents in the 2025/26 academic year.[22] In specialized areas, UCAS operates dedicated application schemes that extend to postgraduate levels. The UCAS Conservatoires scheme manages admissions for performance-based higher education in music, dance, drama, screen, and production at nine UK conservatoires, accepting both undergraduate and postgraduate applications through a single portal where candidates can select up to six programs.[23] Auditions or portfolios form core entry requirements, with applications opening in September and closing on October 2 for the following year's entry, though late submissions may be considered until June.[24] This scheme processed applications for approximately 10,000 candidates annually as of recent cycles, facilitating access to institutions like the Royal Academy of Music and Trinity Laban.[25] UCAS Teacher Training handles applications for initial teacher training programs leading to Qualified Teacher Status (QTS), including postgraduate routes such as the Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE), School Direct, and SCITT pathways, primarily in England and Wales.[26] These programs, often one-year full-time, integrate academic study with school placements; for instance, salaried School Direct options provide a tax-free salary of around £21,000 while training.[27] The application cycle opens in late September, with equal consideration by mid-October for most courses starting the following September, and candidates can apply to up to four programs, though acceptance rates hover around 40-50% based on Department for Education data.[28] UCAS discontinued centralized processing for certain postgraduate teacher training elements in England post-2021 reforms shifting oversight to the Department for Education, but retains the platform for search, tracking, and undergraduate-level training facilitation.[29]Other Educational Pathways
UCAS supports exploration of apprenticeships as a primary alternative to traditional university degrees, encompassing intermediate, advanced, higher, and degree-level programs that integrate paid employment with training. Degree apprenticeships, for instance, enable participants to earn a bachelor's or master's degree while working, typically over three to six years, with employers covering tuition fees and providing salaries averaging £20,000 annually for starters in 2024.[30] Applications for these occur directly to employers via job portals or UCAS's apprenticeship search tool, which matches candidates to vacancies rather than processing centralized admissions.[31] In 2023, over 200,000 apprenticeship starts were recorded in England, with UCAS emphasizing their role in addressing skills gaps in sectors like engineering and healthcare.[32] Beyond apprenticeships, UCAS highlights vocational qualifications such as T Levels—two-year technical programs equivalent to three A-levels, introduced in 2020—as pathways to employment or higher education, with progression rates to apprenticeships or degrees exceeding 70% for completers in pilot phases.[33] BTEC Nationals and other applied general qualifications serve as non-traditional entry routes to university, accepted by over 90% of providers for relevant courses, often alongside or instead of A-levels.[33] Access to Higher Education Diplomas, designed for mature learners without standard qualifications, facilitate entry to undergraduate programs, with around 50,000 enrollments annually supporting diverse applicants.[33] Foundation and pathway programs offer preparatory routes for students needing to bridge academic gaps, particularly international or underqualified applicants, leading to direct university progression without full UCAS undergraduate applications in some cases.[34] Certain institutions, including private providers and specialist colleges, accept direct applications outside UCAS for foundation years or vocational higher education, bypassing the central scheme for flexibility, though this remains limited to under 10% of total admissions.[32] UCAS advises on these options through its Hub platform, promoting informed choices amid debates on whether such pathways dilute academic rigor or enhance equity, with data showing apprenticeship retention rates at 60% after 12 months compared to 85% for full-time degrees.[35]Application and Decision Processes
Key Components of Applications
The core evaluative components of a UCAS undergraduate application include the applicant's selected course choices, academic qualifications with predicted grades, personal statement, and academic reference, which collectively inform university admissions decisions.[36] Applicants may choose up to five courses, distributed across a maximum of five higher education institutions, specifying details such as course code, campus, and start date; this limit aims to encourage focused applications while allowing flexibility.[36] Academic qualifications form the foundational element, requiring applicants to detail all post-16 education history, including GCSEs, A-levels, or equivalent qualifications with achieved grades where applicable.[36] For pending qualifications, such as current A-level exams, predicted grades are supplied by the applicant's referee (typically a teacher or school official), representing the expected achievement under optimal conditions and influencing conditional offers.[37] These predictions must reflect realistic assessments based on performance trends, with referees responsible for accuracy via the UCAS adviser portal.[38] The personal statement, limited to 4,000 characters (approximately 500-600 words), allows applicants to articulate their motivation for the chosen course, relevant skills, and extracurricular preparation, serving as a key differentiator beyond grades.[39] For applications to 2026 entry onward, UCAS has restructured it into three targeted questions: (1) why the applicant wants to study the course or subject; (2) how their qualifications and studies have prepared them; and (3) additional experiences demonstrating readiness, such as independent study or work experience, to provide structured evidence of fit.[40] The academic reference, submitted by a non-family referee such as a teacher, evaluates the applicant's intellectual ability, work ethic, and potential for success in higher education, often contextualizing performance against peers.[41] Referees may also confirm or adjust predicted grades during submission, ensuring the reference complements rather than duplicates the personal statement by focusing on observed attributes like resilience or analytical skills.[41] Additional sections, such as employment history or diversity information, provide supplementary context but are not primary assessment factors.[36]Offer, Confirmation, and Post-Offer Mechanisms
Universities and colleges review UCAS applications, including predicted grades, personal statements, academic references, and sometimes additional assessments like admissions tests or interviews, before issuing offers.[42] Offers are typically communicated through the UCAS Hub and fall into two main types: conditional, which require applicants to meet specified criteria such as minimum exam grades (e.g., A-level requirements), or unconditional, which confirm a place without further academic conditions as the entry requirements are deemed already satisfied.[43] Conditional offers predominate for school-leaving applicants, with over 60% of offers being conditional based on achieving particular grades or other verifiable conditions.[44] Applicants must reply to offers via their UCAS Hub, selecting one firm choice (preferred option) and optionally one insurance choice (backup with typically lower entry requirements to mitigate risk of missing the firm conditions).[42] All other offers must be declined, limiting applicants to these two active choices; failure to reply by the personal deadline—set based on the date of the last decision received, such as 6 May for decisions by 31 March—may result in offers expiring or referral to services like Extra or Clearing.[42] For an unconditional firm choice, the place is immediately confirmed; a conditional firm choice remains pending until conditions are verified, while the insurance choice activates only if firm conditions are unmet.[42] Confirmation occurs primarily after qualification results are released, such as on A-level results day (typically the third Thursday in August), when universities access exam board data to verify if conditions are met.[45] The UCAS system updates the applicant's status accordingly: if firm conditions are met, the place is confirmed there and the insurance offer is automatically withdrawn; if unmet but insurance conditions are satisfied, confirmation shifts to the insurance choice; failure to meet either triggers a "not placed" status, entering the applicant into Clearing for alternative vacancies.[45] Applicants with conditional offers in "waiting for confirmation" status must ensure universities receive results, though most are transmitted directly from exam boards.[45] Post-offer mechanisms include limited options for adjustment if applicants exceed firm offer grades, allowing temporary exploration of higher-tariff choices before reverting, and course changes proposed by universities, which require replies within five days or risk withdrawal.[45] Declining a confirmed insurance place post-results releases the applicant to Clearing, but no swaps between firm and insurance are permitted after initial selection—if firm conditions are met, attendance there is obligatory unless declined.[46] Some courses impose additional post-offer requirements, such as occupational health checks or criminal record disclosures, but these are course-specific and verified by institutions rather than UCAS.[42]Reforms and Recent Developments
Major Reviews and Structural Changes
The Schwartz Review of 2004, chaired by Professor Steven Schwartz, examined the fairness and transparency of UK university admissions processes managed by UCAS. It concluded that predicted grades were unreliable, accurate in only about 50% of cases, and often disadvantaged state school applicants due to under-prediction by teachers. The review recommended shifting to post-qualification admissions (PQA), where offers would be based on actual A-level results rather than predictions, to enhance equity and reduce bias, though this was not implemented at the time; it also led to the establishment of Supporting Professionalism in Admissions (SPA) to promote best practices.[47] In 2011, an internal UCAS review acknowledged systemic advantages for privately educated students in the admissions process, attributing this to factors like better preparation for personal statements and interviews, and called for overhauls to address these disparities without specifying full structural shifts. Subsequent reviews in 2019-2020, including the Office for Students (OfS) inquiry launched in February 2020 and the Universities UK (UUK) Fair Admissions Review published in November 2020, reiterated concerns over predicted grades and the rise of unconditional offers—reaching 37.7% for 18-year-olds in 2019—while advocating PQA implementation by 2023 and greater transparency to mitigate advantages for privileged applicants. UCAS responded in November 2020 by mapping potential reforms, including PQA models or adjusted timetables, to better support underrepresented groups, though core pre-qualification structures remained intact amid ongoing debates.[47][48][49] More recent structural adjustments have focused on application components rather than wholesale system redesign. In 2023, UCAS introduced structured references replacing free-form letters, dividing them into three sections on context, academic ability, and extracurriculars to standardize referee inputs and reduce variability. For the 2026 entry cycle, announced on 18 July 2024, UCAS reformed the personal statement from a 4,000-character free essay to three targeted questions—"Why do you want to study this course or subject?"; "How have your qualifications and studies helped you prepare?"; and "What else have you done to prepare, and why are these experiences helpful?"—aiming to assist disadvantaged applicants by providing guidance and enabling comparability, with a planned rollout following consultations showing support for reducing the "blank page" intimidation. UCAS's "Next Chapter" corporate strategy, launched in spring 2025, commits to further flexibility in admissions, including potential PQA exploration, but emphasizes incremental changes over radical restructuring to balance access and institutional autonomy.[50][51][52]Updates to Application Formats and Deadlines
In response to feedback on application timing and student readiness, UCAS adjusted deadlines for the 2026 undergraduate entry cycle. The equal consideration deadline shifted to 14 January 2026 at 18:00 UK time, from the prior 31 January, to provide universities more processing time while encouraging earlier submissions.[53] A 31 March 2026 advisory deadline was reintroduced, after which institutions must decline applicants without offers from any choices unless exceptional circumstances apply, aiming to streamline decision-making and reduce late-cycle pressure.[53] The 15 October deadline for Oxford, Cambridge, medicine, dentistry, and veterinary courses remains unchanged, preserving priority access for competitive programs.[18] A key format update for 2026 entry eliminates the traditional open-ended personal statement of up to 4,000 characters, replacing it with responses to three targeted questions: why the applicant chose the course; how qualifications and studies have prepared them; and additional preparations beyond formal education.[50] This structured approach, developed following consultations with universities, teachers, and students, seeks to standardize content, highlight relevant motivations and skills, and mitigate disadvantages for applicants from non-traditional backgrounds who may struggle with unstructured writing.[40] The change applies uniformly, including to conservatoire applications for dance, drama, and music, with no extension of character limits but guidance on AI use for drafting.[54] UCAS also reformed referee submissions by introducing structured references for 2026 entry, shifting from free-text formats to fixed questions on the applicant's academic performance, potential, and mitigating circumstances.[50] This aims to enhance reliability and comparability across references, addressing inconsistencies identified in prior reviews. For the 2025 cycle, formats remained largely consistent with pre-2026 standards, though technical updates allowed earlier application starts from 30 April 2024.[55] These modifications reflect ongoing efforts to balance accessibility, equity, and institutional efficiency without altering core eligibility criteria.Criticisms and Controversies
Allegations of Bias and Unfair Practices
UCAS has faced allegations of facilitating systemic biases in university admissions, particularly through mechanisms that disadvantage certain socioeconomic or ethnic groups while potentially advantaging others via widening participation policies. Critics argue that the personal statement component, requiring applicants to detail extracurricular experiences and motivations, disproportionately benefits students from private schools, who often have access to specialized coaching, structured activities, and guidance unavailable to state school peers. A 2022 Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) analysis of over 4,000 personal statements found that private school applicants were more likely to reference advantaged experiences, such as international trips or niche societies, contributing to access inequalities despite similar academic tariffs.[56] This has prompted UCAS to phase out unstructured personal statements in favor of structured questions starting in 2026, amid claims that the original format imposed an unnecessary burden on disadvantaged applicants and exacerbated class-based disparities.[57] Racial bias allegations have centered on unconscious prejudices in application reviews and higher scrutiny of certain groups. In 2018, UCAS commissioned an independent inquiry after data revealed that applications from black students were flagged for fraud checks at rates up to four times higher than white applicants, even after controlling for other factors, raising concerns of racial profiling in verification processes.[58] Broader analyses have highlighted ethnic offer rate disparities; for instance, a 2016 study of Russell Group admissions using UCAS data showed ethnic minority applicants receiving lower offer probabilities than white counterparts with equivalent qualifications, attributing this partly to non-academic biases rather than tariffs alone.[59] In response, UCAS trialed name-blind recruitment from 2015 to mitigate potential ethnic signaling via surnames, though aggregate UCAS equalities data from 2017 indicated no overall evidence of systemic bias in offer rates when adjusted for qualifications.[60][61] Widening participation initiatives, including contextual flagging of disadvantaged applicants for lower grade offers, have drawn criticism for introducing reverse discrimination against high-achieving students from non-deprived backgrounds. A 2022 UCAS analysis of offer rates showed well-off applicants experiencing steeper declines in offers compared to deprived peers during high-demand cycles, with critics contending this prioritizes group demographics over individual merit, potentially violating equality principles under the Equality Act 2010.[62] Recent 2025 reports have accused select universities of extending lower conditional offers to non-white students from affluent or high-performing schools, irrespective of socioeconomic need, framing this as arbitrary positive discrimination that undermines meritocracy.[63] UCAS maintains these practices aim to address historical underrepresentation, supported by data showing persistent gaps—e.g., only 18% of UK-domiciled students at top universities from the lowest socioeconomic quintile in 2022—but acknowledges risks of perceived unfairness without transparent tariffs.[64] Such allegations underscore tensions between equity goals and claims of procedural impartiality, with empirical reviews like UCAS's 2016 transparency data finding no aggregate bias but highlighting institution-specific variances.[65]Debates on Meritocracy Versus Widening Access
UCAS facilitates widening access initiatives by providing universities with contextual data flags on applicants' socioeconomic backgrounds, school performance, and other disadvantage indicators, enabling institutions to make adjusted offers such as reduced A-level grade requirements.[66] These contextual offers, often one or two grades lower than standard entry tariffs, aim to recognize that academic attainment can be influenced by external factors like deprivation or underperforming schools, thereby promoting a broader definition of merit that includes potential rather than solely past performance.[67] Proponents, including the Office for Students, argue this approach addresses systemic inequalities in opportunity, with some evidence of increased enrollment from underrepresented groups at selective institutions following implementation.[67] Critics of these policies contend that they erode meritocracy by subordinating objective academic qualifications to subjective background adjustments, potentially admitting students unprepared for degree-level demands and compromising institutional standards.[68] For instance, a 2025 analysis revealed leading universities issuing lower offers to non-white applicants from affluent backgrounds or high-performing schools, raising concerns over arbitrary criteria that extend beyond socioeconomic need to include ethnicity, thus questioning the fairness and academic rationale of such decisions.[63] This practice, facilitated through UCAS data, has been criticized for inverting merit-based selection without robust evidence that adjusted entrants achieve equivalent outcomes, as traditional meritocracy—emphasizing background-blind evaluation of demonstrated ability—better ensures universities select candidates capable of succeeding on rigorous courses.[68] Empirical data underscores tensions in the debate, with institutions enrolling higher proportions of widening participation students exhibiting elevated non-continuation rates, suggesting possible mismatches between lowered entry thresholds and course rigors.[69] A Higher Education Policy Institute report from 2024 noted that dropout rates rise in universities prioritizing access expansion, with disadvantaged and ethnic minority entrants facing non-continuation rates up to 10-15% higher than peers, attributing this partly to expanded recruitment without commensurate preparation support.[69] [70] While overall higher education participation has increased—reaching 42.4% for disadvantaged pupils in England by 2023/24—gaps in progression to elite universities and completion persist, indicating that widening access via contextual mechanisms has not fully resolved inequities and may inadvertently signal diluted standards to maintain enrollment targets.[71] Critics from independent think tanks argue this reflects a policy bias toward access metrics over outcomes, where academic institutions, influenced by regulatory pressures, prioritize diversity targets that overlook causal links between entry preparedness and long-term success.[69]Empirical Impact and Data Analysis
Application Trends and Acceptance Rates
In the 2024 application cycle, UCAS recorded 564,940 accepted applicants across all ages and domiciles, marking a 1.9% increase from 554,465 in 2023.[72] This figure represents approximately 75.1% of total applicants receiving a place, compared to 73.7% in the prior cycle, reflecting sustained high placement rates amid stable demand.[73] UK 18-year-old acceptances hit a record high, driven by increased applications from this group, with their application rate holding at 41.3%—a slight dip from 41.5% in 2023 but above pre-pandemic levels of 38.2% in 2019.[74] In contrast, acceptances for mature UK applicants (aged 21 and over) declined by 3.3% to 64,180, indicating weakening participation from older domestic cohorts.[75] International applicant trends have shown volatility, with non-EU acceptances dipping 0.9% to around 50,860 in recent cycles before stabilizing.[76] Early 2025 data as of June 30 revealed 665,070 total applicants, a 1.3% rise from the same point in 2024, fueled partly by international growth projections of 46% to 208,500 by 2026, though country-specific variations persist—such as a 9.8% increase from China offset by an 11.3% drop from India.[77][78][79] Acceptance rates for international students have hovered around 3% growth in placements year-over-year as of mid-2025, but policy shifts like visa restrictions have tempered overall expansion.[79]| Cycle Year | Accepted Applicants (All) | % Change from Prior Year | UK 18-Year-Old Acceptance Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | 554,465 | - | 37% (record proportion) |
| 2024 | 564,940 | +1.9% | Record high absolute number |