GCSE Science Exam Dates 2026: Complete Timetable
GCSE Science

GCSE Science Exam Dates 2026: Complete Timetable

By Jonas17 June 20269 min read

One thing that caught parents off guard more than anything else during my time at a tutoring company was the sheer number of science papers their child had to sit. A parent would book extra sessions “for the science exam” only to discover there were actually six separate papers spread across several weeks. Combined Science or Triple Science, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Paper 1 and Paper 2 for each. The GCSE science exam dates 2026 are not a single date. They are six papers for Combined Science students and six papers for Triple Science students, scattered across the May to June exam window.

This guide covers everything you need: which route your child is on, how many papers they sit, the exam board dates, how required practicals are tested, and what happens on results day. If you want to understand the content of each paper, see our GCSE Science paper structure guide.

Key Takeaways
Combined Science: 6 papers (2 Biology + 2 Chemistry + 2 Physics), each 1h 15m, 70 marks. Counts as 2 GCSEs.
Triple Science: 6 papers (2 per subject), each 1h 45m, 100 marks. Counts as 3 separate GCSEs.
All GCSE science exams fall within the May to June 2026 window.
Paper 1 covers the first half of the course; Paper 2 covers the second half.
Required practicals are tested in the written papers, not as separate assessments.
GCSE Results Day: Thursday 20 August 2026.

When Are GCSE Science Exams in 2026?

GCSE science exams run from May to June 2026. Your child will sit either six papers (Combined Science) or six papers (Triple Science) across this window. The papers are typically spread so that Biology, Chemistry, and Physics do not fall on consecutive days, giving students time to switch focus between subjects.

The exam window and structure are the same every year. What changes is the specific dates assigned to each paper. These are set by the exam boards (AQA, Edexcel, OCR) and coordinated by the Joint Council for Qualifications (JCQ) so that major subjects do not clash.

Combined vs Triple: The Key Difference

The first thing to establish is which route your child is on. Most students take Combined Science (Trilogy), which is by far the most popular option. In 2025, Combined Science had 925,606 entries, making it the single most-entered GCSE across all subjects. Triple Science entries are much lower: 183,539 for Biology, 174,088 for Chemistry, and 165,927 for Physics.

Combined Science (Trilogy)

  • Counts as 2 GCSEs
  • 6 papers: 2 Biology + 2 Chemistry + 2 Physics
  • Each paper: 1h 15m, 70 marks
  • Double grade (e.g. 7-6 or 5-5)
  • Foundation (1-1 to 5-5) or Higher (4-4 to 9-9)
  • 925,606 entries in 2025 (most popular GCSE)

Triple Science (Separate)

  • Counts as 3 separate GCSEs
  • 6 papers: 2 Biology + 2 Chemistry + 2 Physics
  • Each paper: 1h 45m, 100 marks
  • Individual grades per subject (e.g. Biology 8, Chemistry 7)
  • Foundation or Higher tier per subject
  • Self-selecting cohort: 40%+ graded 7-9 in 2025

If you are not sure which route your child is on, ask the school. It is usually decided in Year 9 or early Year 10, and the choice affects how many GCSEs your child receives. For a deeper comparison, see our Combined vs Triple Science guide.

Morning and Afternoon Sessions

Morning (AM) sessions typically start at 9:00 AM and afternoon (PM) sessions begin at 1:30 PM. Science papers can fall in either session. Your child's school may adjust start times slightly for students with access arrangements or exam clashes, but the standard times are set nationally by the JCQ.

925,606
Combined Science entries in 2025
The single most popular GCSE subject in England. Entries increased 2% from 2024.

Combined Science Paper Structure

AQA Combined Science: Trilogy (specification 8464) is the most common combined science qualification. It has six papers in total, two for each science discipline. Each paper is 1 hour 15 minutes and worth 70 marks, giving a total of 420 marks across all six papers.

Combined Science: Trilogy Six-Paper StructureSix paper cards arranged in a 3-by-2 grid showing Biology Paper 1 and 2, Chemistry Paper 1 and 2, and Physics Paper 1 and 2, each 70 marks and 1h 15m.BIOLOGYCHEMISTRYPHYSICSPaper 1Topics 1-470marks · 1h 15mPaper 2Topics 5-770marks · 1h 15mPaper 1Topics 1-570marks · 1h 15mPaper 2Topics 6-1070marks · 1h 15mPaper 1Topics 1-470marks · 1h 15mPaper 2Topics 5-870marks · 1h 15mTotal: 420 marks · 7h 30m · 6 Papers · 2 GCSEs
Combined Science has six papers: two per science subject. Each is 1h 15m and 70 marks, totalling 420 marks for the qualification.

Paper 1 and Paper 2 cover different topics in each subject. Paper 1 is typically the first half of the course content and Paper 2 the second half. This matters for revision: your child should not be trying to revise all of Biology the night before Biology Paper 2 if they only need the second half of the specification.

How the Double Grade Works

Combined Science awards a double gradesuch as 7-7, 6-5, or 4-3. The two numbers can differ by at most one grade. This double grade counts as 2 GCSEs on your child's certificate. It is calculated across all six papers combined, not per subject. A student could perform strongly in Biology and Physics but weaker in Chemistry, and the overall double grade reflects the average.

Combined Science Grading

Foundation tier covers grades 1-1 to 5-5. Higher tier covers grades 4-4 to 9-9. Your child sits the same tier across all six papers. The school decides the tier, usually confirmed by spring of Year 11.

Triple Science Paper Structure

Triple Science students study Biology, Chemistry, and Physics as three separate GCSEs. For AQA, each subject has two papers: Paper 1 (1h 45m, 100 marks) and Paper 2 (1h 45m, 100 marks). That gives 200 marks per subject and 600 marks across all three. The papers are longer and go into greater depth than Combined Science, covering additional topics unique to the separate qualifications.

SubjectBiology
Spec Code8461
Papers2 (Paper 1 + Paper 2)
Each Paper1h 45m, 100 marks
Total Marks200
SubjectChemistry
Spec Code8462
Papers2 (Paper 1 + Paper 2)
Each Paper1h 45m, 100 marks
Total Marks200
SubjectPhysics
Spec Code8463
Papers2 (Paper 1 + Paper 2)
Each Paper1h 45m, 100 marks
Total Marks200

AQA Triple Science specification codes and paper structure. Each subject is a standalone GCSE.

The total exam time for Triple Science is 10 hours 30 minutes across all six papers, compared to 7 hours 30 minutes for Combined Science. This is a significant commitment, and it is worth understanding before your child chooses this route. For the full topic breakdown, see our guides on GCSE Biology topics, Chemistry topics, and Physics topics.

Why Triple Science Grades Look Higher

In 2025, over 40% of Triple Science entries were graded 7-9 across all three subjects, with 27.1% achieving grade 7+ in Biology, 30.5% in Chemistry, and 29.8% in Physics. These rates look dramatically higher than most other GCSEs, but there is a straightforward explanation: Triple Science is a self-selecting cohort. Schools typically offer it only to their strongest science students. The high top-grade rates reflect the ability of the students taking it, not that the exams are easier.

40%+
Triple Science entries graded 7-9 in 2025
Self-selecting cohort: schools typically offer triple science only to stronger students.

GCSE Science Exam Dates by Board

All three major exam boards set their science papers within the May to June window, but exact dates differ. The GCSE science timetable 2026is published by each board individually. AQA is the most widely used board for GCSE Science in England. Edexcel uses different specification names (Combined Science is called “Combined Science” under code 1SC0; the separate sciences use codes 1BI0, 1CH0, 1PH0).

GCSE Science Exam Window: May to June 2026A horizontal timeline from May to late June showing how Biology, Chemistry, and Physics papers are distributed across the exam window with gaps between them.EARLY MAYLATE MAYJUNEBio P1Topics 1-470 marksChem P1Topics 1-570 marksPhys P1Topics 1-470 marks···Bio P2Topics 5-770 marksChem P2Topics 6-1070 marksPhys P2Topics 5-870 marksBiology (2 papers)Chemistry (2 papers)Physics (2 papers)Paper 1 = first half of course · Paper 2 = second half
Science papers are spread across the full exam window. Paper 1 always covers the first half of the course content, Paper 2 the second half.

You can find the official AQA GCSE Science dates at the AQA Science subject page, and the Edexcel timetable at Pearson's exam timetables page.

How to Confirm Your Child's Dates

1

Check which route and board your child is on

Ask the school whether your child is doing Combined Science or Triple Science, and which exam board (AQA, Edexcel, or OCR). The specification code will be on past papers and school resources.

2

Check the official exam board timetable

AQA publishes dates at aqa.org.uk/subjects/science. Edexcel publishes timetables at qualifications.pearson.com. These contain exact dates for every paper.

3

Wait for the personalised school timetable

Schools issue individual timetables in the spring term. These include room numbers, seat allocations, and any access arrangements. This is the definitive document for your child.

Required Practicals in the Exam

One detail that surprises many parents is that required practicals are tested in the written exam papers, not as separate practical assessments. Your child will face questions about specific experiments they carried out during the course. These are not vague “describe an experiment” questions. They ask about specific equipment, specific variables, and specific results.

How Practicals Are Tested

AQA Combined Science has approximately 21 required practicals across the three subjects. AQA Triple Science has around 8 per subject (24 total). Questions on required practicals typically account for about 15% of each paper. They test whether your child can identify independent, dependent, and control variables, describe the method step by step, explain why specific equipment was chosen, and predict or interpret results.

Practicals Revision Strategy

Many students revise the theory but forget the practicals. For each required practical, your child should be able to draw and label the equipment setup from memory, list the variables, and describe what results to expect. Our required practicals guide covers every experiment they need to know.

Required Practicals by SubjectThree laboratory beaker icons labelled Biology, Chemistry, and Physics, each showing the number of required practicals students must know for their exam papers.Biology8practicalsChemistry8practicalsPhysics8practicals~15% of each paper tests required practical knowledge
Each Triple Science subject has approximately 8 required practicals. Combined Science covers about 21 across all three sciences. They are examined in the written papers, not as separate assessments.

Using the Gaps Between Science Papers

Because science papers are spread across the full exam window, there are gaps of days (sometimes a week or more) between papers. These gaps are some of the most productive revision time your child will have. After sitting Biology Paper 1, they know exactly which topics felt shaky, and they can target those before Biology Paper 2. The same applies to Chemistry and Physics.

Smart Gap Revision

  • Review topics from the paper just sat while they are fresh
  • Focus only on Paper 2 content for the next subject
  • Do one timed past paper for the upcoming exam
  • Revisit required practicals for the next paper

Common Mistakes

  • Trying to revise all three sciences at once
  • Ignoring the paper they just sat and moving on
  • Spending the gap on subjects they already feel confident in
  • Not practising under timed conditions

Having worked with hundreds of students preparing for science exams, the pattern was always clear: students who treated each gap as a focused sprint on the next paper saw measurable improvements between Paper 1 and Paper 2. The ones who continued with generic revision across all topics did not. The gap is not a break. It is a chance to be strategic. For more science-specific revision strategies, see our how to revise for GCSE Science guide.

Five Things Every Parent Should Know

1

Science exams are spread across the entire exam window

Your child may have Biology Paper 1 in early May and Physics Paper 2 in late June. This is normal. Check the personalised timetable from school so you know exactly which days are science days.

2

Paper 1 and Paper 2 cover different topics

Paper 1 covers the first half of the course, Paper 2 the second half. Your child should not be revising all of Biology for Paper 2. They need only the Paper 2 topics. This is true for Combined and Triple.

3

Required practicals appear in the written papers

There is no separate practical exam. Questions about specific experiments (method, equipment, variables, results) appear in the written papers and account for roughly 15% of the marks.

4

Combined Science entries increased while triple fell

In 2025, Combined Science entries rose 2% to 925,606. Triple Science entries fell 6% across all three subjects. The trend is toward combined, so if your child is on this route, they are in the majority.

5

The equations sheet matters for Physics

Physics papers provide some equations on a formula sheet but require students to memorise others. Your child must know which equations are given and which must be recalled from memory. This is a common source of lost marks.

Did You Know?

Combined Science had 925,606 entries in 2025, making it the most popular GCSE overall. That is more than Maths (831,556) and English Language (811,672). If your child is doing Combined Science, they are part of the largest GCSE cohort in the country.

Results Day: 20 August 2026

GCSE results day 2026 is Thursday 20 August. Students typically collect results from school from around 8:00 AM, though some exam boards offer online access from 6:00 AM. For a full guide on what to expect, see our GCSE results day parent guide.

What the Grades Mean

Combined Science results appear as a double grade on the certificate, such as 7-6 or 5-5. The two numbers can differ by at most one grade. This double grade counts as 2 GCSEs for sixth form entry and UCAS points. Triple Science students receive three separate grades, one for each subject.

RouteCombined
Example Grade7-6
GCSE Count2 GCSEs
What It MeansStrong performance, both grades above the "strong pass" threshold
RouteCombined
Example Grade4-3
GCSE Count2 GCSEs
What It MeansGrade 4 is a standard pass; grade 3 is below pass
RouteTriple
Example GradeBio 8, Chem 7, Phys 7
GCSE Count3 GCSEs
What It MeansThree separate strong grades, each counting individually
RouteTriple
Example GradeBio 5, Chem 6, Phys 5
GCSE Count3 GCSEs
What It MeansSolid performance across all three sciences

Combined Science awards a double grade counting as 2 GCSEs. Triple Science awards three individual grades.

If your child is considering A-Level sciences, most sixth forms require a minimum of grade 6 (or grade 6-6 in Combined) for entry. Some selective sixth forms require grade 7 or above. Check entry requirements early, particularly if your child is on Foundation tier, which caps at grade 5 (or 5-5 in Combined). For a broader understanding of the grading system, see our guide to what GCSEs are.

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