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Aston repays £1.3 million after breaching apprenticeship rules

University found to have failed to check learners’ eligibility and prior attainment, alongside issues with collecting employer contributions and recording whether delivery had taken place

Published on
February 19, 2026
Last updated
February 20, 2026
Main building of Aston University in Birmingham.
Source: iStock/Iuliia Semeniuk

Aston University has repaid more than £1.3 million in funding after experiencing issues with its apprenticeships provision.

The Education & Skills Funding Agency (ESFA) said it began an investigation into the West Midlands-based university in October 2024 due to concerns related to the funding it had received from the agency.

Several breaches were identified connected to the validity of some of the funding claims and the accuracy of the data collected to support the claims.

An overpayment of funding of £1,385,504.81 was identified by the ESFA which it said Aston has already repaid.

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A into the investigation published by the Department for Education says Aston has also implemented changes to its apprenticeship management and delivery systems.

It lists 11 breaches related to apprenticeship provision between 2020 and 2024.

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The university was found to have failed to “check eligibility of all learners and to retain evidence of the individual’s eligibility” and failed to “submit accurate data in relation to start and end dates for some apprentices”.

Further breaches included a “failure to produce evidence that delivery has taken place, that it is relevant, new knowledge, skills and behaviours”.

Aston was also rebuked over not producing evidence that employer contributions were collected and prior learning and experience were assessed before a candidate started their apprenticeship.

It has been advised by the DfE on what further steps to take to prevent further breaches.

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This includes regularly auditing information collected to ensure it is up to date and frequent checks of its monitoring systems, ensuring any errors are identified and corrected.

An Aston spokesperson said the report “concerned legacy issues” and the university had, prior to the review, “commissioned an external audit firm to produce a report and action plan which has been wholly implemented”.

“The university through its own governance, audit and risk processes undertook to rectify all legacy issues by also engaging external expert oversight for transparency and accuracy,” they added.

The spokesperson said Aston was “committed to excellence in all aspects of our degree apprenticeship provision”, pointing to its “good” rating with Ofsted and how its digital and technology solutions degree apprenticeship had been awarded top-level industry accreditation “in recognition of its effectiveness in preparing learners for successful careers in the digital and technology sector”.

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tom.williams@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

My husband studied here under a programme paid for by his employer, and his experience was nothing short of abysmal. In the end he submitted a formal complaint which was still being reviewed 12 months later, and after that he never heard anything. I encouraged him to contact the OFS, but in the end he was so disheartened that he just wanted to finish his studies and never have anything to do with them ever again. His conclusion was that they were interested in the money but not actually delivering what the programme they were being paid for.

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