Skip to content
Studyabroad.wiki
Go back

Deferral

A deferral (or deferred entry) is a formal request to postpone your admission to a university by one year after receiving an offer. Rather than enrolling in the autumn of your acceptance, you defer to the following year, allowing you to take a gap year. Deferral is distinct from rejection; if your deferral request is approved, your place is held and guaranteed for one year.

Deferral policies vary significantly by institution and country. Some universities encourage gap years and approve deferrals liberally; others are restrictive or require specific justifications. The practice is most common in the UK, Australia, and Canada; less common in the US, though some selective colleges permit it.

Key facts

AttributeDetail
Typical policyMost universities allow deferral of one year; some permit two years with additional justification
Application timingRequest deferral at the time you receive your offer, or shortly after; submitting a deferral request after enrolling (even informally) may not be permitted
UK practiceCommon; many universities encourage gap years; deferral requests are typically approved without extensive justification
Australian practiceCommon; UAC system allows formal deferral within the admissions process
Canadian practicePermitted by most universities; request process varies; some require justification
US practiceLess standard; some selective colleges allow it; others do not. Some allow a “leave of absence” but not deferred entry
Approval rateTypically 80–95% of requests are approved unless university has concerns about the plan or justification
Conditional offersDeferral does not affect conditional offers; you must still meet entry requirements (grades, test scores) by the time you enrol
Fees and depositsMost universities waive tuition until your deferred year; deposits may be held or refunded depending on university policy
Gap year activitiesWork, volunteer, travel, or further study are all acceptable uses of gap year; universities do not restrict what you do

How it works

Request deferral:

  1. Contact admissions — Email the university’s admissions office indicating you wish to defer entry by one year.
  2. Provide brief justification — Most universities request a short explanation (a few sentences) of your gap year plans. Examples include travel, work experience, volunteer service, personal growth, or family circumstances.
  3. Submit formal deferral request — Some universities have a formal deferral request form on their admissions portal or website.
  4. Receive confirmation — University approves (typical) or denies. If approved, your place is held for the following year.
  5. Confirm re-entry — Shortly before your deferred entry date, the university may ask you to re-confirm your intention to enrol. Respond promptly.
  6. Provide updated information — If your contact details have changed, update them with the university. Some universities may request brief updates on your gap year activities.
  7. Enrol — Complete normal enrolment procedures for your deferred year.

Timeline of deferral process:

What universities consider

Justification for deferral

Concerns that might lead to denial

Common mistakes

Typical timeline

TimelineAction
March–May (offer receipt)Receive offer of admission (typically mid-March in UK/Australia)
Shortly after offerRequest deferral while offer is “hot”; university will be most receptive
May–JuneReceive confirmation of deferral approval; note your deferred entry date
June–12 months laterTake gap year; engage in work, volunteer, travel, or other development
12 months after deferral approvalUniversity sends pre-enrolment communication; respond with updated information
Following SeptemberEnrol and begin your degree on your deferred entry date

Sub-variants or sibling concepts

Primary sources

Last updated: 2026-04-17.


Share this entry: Link copied

Related entries


Previous
CV / Résumé for University Applications
Next
Early Decision and Early Action