Distribution of parental education

Published: 11 September 2024
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Data on the highest qualification levels of parents in families with dependent children.

Summary main findings

The qualifications of young people’s parents have improved over time.

42% of adults in families with dependent children had a degree or above in 2022, up from 30% in 2014.

While more children are growing up in families educated to degree level, there is still a considerable percentage of families whose highest qualification is GCSE or below – 30% in 2022 (down from 33% in 2014).


By year

Visualisation

Percentage of adults in families with dependent children in different education levels, over time (UK, 2014 to 2022)

Click or tap on legend items to toggle visibility

Data

Percentage of adults in families with dependent children in different education levels, over time (UK, 2014 to 2022)
Year Lower level (below CSE grade 1) (%) O level, GCSE and equivalent (%) A level and equivalent (%) Further education (%) Degree and above (%)
2022 13.5 17.3 19.1 8.1 42.1
2021 13.5 13.0 23.4 8.6 41.5
2020 13.4 13.3 24.8 9.3 39.3
2019 15.9 13.7 25.1 9.3 36.0
2018 15.8 14.8 25.1 9.2 35.1
2017 15.8 14.7 25.4 10.0 34.1
2016 16.4 15.0 25.3 10.0 33.3
2015 16.9 15.8 25.3 10.3 31.6
2014 17.2 16.3 26.5 10.3 29.7
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    By area

    Visualisation

    Percentage of adults in families with dependent children with a higher education qualification, by region (UK, 2014 to 2022 combined)

    41 regions in the UK are ranked from the lowest to highest values. They are then divided into 5 equally-sized groups (‘quintiles’), from 1 (lowest) to 5 (highest).

    The lines either side of the dots represent confidence intervals – the range of values that the 'true' value for each region is highly likely to be within. In many cases the confidence intervals overlap. This suggests differences between specific regions may not be statistically significant.

    The regional estimates have a large margin of error – do not rank or compare specific regions. See the composite indices for more precise estimates and to understand overall regional patterns.

    Q1 - Lowest 20%
    Q5 - Highest 20%

    Data

    Percentage of adults in families with dependent children with a higher education qualification, by region (UK, 2014 to 2022 combined)
    Region Percentage (%)
    Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire 39.5
    Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire 49.0
    Cheshire 41.5
    Cornwall and Isles of Scilly 27.5
    Cumbria 26.9
    Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire 30.1
    Devon 33.4
    Dorset and Somerset 32.6
    East Anglia 31.5
    East Wales 35.8
    East Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshire 24.9
    Eastern Scotland 39.2
    Essex 28.7
    Gloucestershire, Wiltshire and Bath/Bristol area 38.6
    Greater Manchester 33.5
    Hampshire and Isle of Wight 35.9
    Herefordshire, Worcestershire and Warwickshire 35.5
    Highlands and Islands 32.8
    Inner London - East 47.0
    Inner London - West 65.3
    Kent 32.4
    Lancashire 27.9
    Leicestershire, Rutland and Northamptonshire 30.1
    Lincolnshire 22.9
    Merseyside 32.2
    North Eastern Scotland 38.1
    North Yorkshire 36.4
    Northern Ireland 30.6
    Northumberland and Tyne and Wear 29.1
    Outer London - East and North East 41.1
    Outer London - South 49.0
    Outer London - West and North West 50.6
    Shropshire and Staffordshire 28.5
    South Yorkshire 22.5
    Southern Scotland 28.5
    Surrey, East and West Sussex 41.9
    Tees Valley and Durham 24.6
    West Central Scotland 32.1
    West Midlands 27.9
    West Wales and The Valleys 26.8
    West Yorkshire 29.5
  • Download the data (CSV, 1KB)
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    About the data

    Data source

    Labour Force Survey (LFS), Office for National Statistics.

    Time period

    • 2014 to 2022 (By year)
    • 2014 to 2022 combined (By area)

    Geographic area

    UK

    What the data measures

    The data shows the education levels of adults in families with dependent children. Dependent children are classed as all children aged 15 and under, and 16 to 18 year olds in full-time education. Adult respondents aged under 21 years old are not included.

    The education levels are:

    • lower level (below CSE grade 1)
    • O level, GCSE and equivalent
    • A level and equivalent
    • further education (below degree level)
    • degree level and above

    Things you need to know

    The data for people with below degree level qualifications in 2022 is not directly comparable to previous years. This is due to a change in the LFS methodology.

    The median age of survey respondents was 40 years old. The majority of respondents are likely to be the parents or carers of dependent children. Some could be adults living in homes with parents who have dependent children.

    Data is weighted using LFS person weights.

    The error bars show 95% confidence intervals. Read more about confidence intervals

    Type of data

    Survey data

    Full report

    Read more in State of the Nation 2024 on GOV.UK.


    Download the data

    Download full dataset (CSV, 74KB)

    This file contains the following variables:

    • Year
    • Indicator code
    • Indicator name
    • Area type
    • Area code
    • Area name
    • Time period
    • Socio-economic background
    • Age
    • Sex
    • Category type
    • Category
    • Category type2
    • Category2
    • Value
    • Sample size
    • Lower confidence interval
    • Upper confidence interval
    • Standard error
    • Unit

    Page history

    Publication release date:

    11 September 2024

    Editions of this page: