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Published by at June 22nd, 2026 , Revised On June 22, 2026

The stages of a PhD in the UK run from registration and supervisor allocation, through the MPhil-to-PhD upgrade, fieldwork and data collection, the writing-up of your thesis, the viva voce examination, and finally corrections and the award of the degree — typically across three to four years of full-time study (up to seven or eight part-time). This guide walks through every stage in order, explains what examiners, supervisors and your graduate school expect at each milestone, and shows you how long each phase usually takes so you can plan a realistic timeline and avoid the bottlenecks that derail completion.

What are the stages of a PhD?

A UK doctorate is not one long stretch of writing; it is a sequence of formal stages, each with its own deliverables, deadlines and gatekeeping checks. Understanding the full arc early helps you budget your time, anticipate the upgrade and the viva, and keep your funding body and graduate school satisfied at every annual review. Although exact terminology varies between institutions (a “confirmation review” at one university is an “upgrade viva” at another), the underlying journey is remarkably consistent across the sector.

Broadly, every PhD moves through eight stages: (1) application and registration, (2) induction and supervisor allocation, (3) the literature review and research proposal, (4) the MPhil-to-PhD upgrade, (5) data collection and fieldwork, (6) analysis and writing up the thesis, (7) submission and the viva voce examination, and (8) corrections and the award. If you are still weighing up whether to start, our overview of what a PhD involves sets the scene before you commit three to four years to a single research question.

The Eight Stages of a UK PhDYear 1Year 2Year 3Year 41. Registration& supervisor2. Lit review& proposal3. MPhil-PhDupgrade4. Datacollection5. Analysis& results6. Writing upthe thesis7. Submission& viva voce8. Corrections& awardFull-time: 3–4 years • Part-time: 6–8 years • ResearchProspect
The eight stages of a UK PhD, mapped across a typical full-time timeline.

Stage 1: Application, registration and induction

The doctoral journey formally begins when you accept an offer and register with your graduate school. Registration sets your official start date, your mode of study (full-time or part-time), and the clock on your maximum submission period — usually four years full-time before a thesis-pending or writing-up status applies. During induction you will complete enrolment, agree a training needs analysis, and meet your supervisory team for the first time.

Most UK PhDs are supervised by a team rather than a single academic: a primary (first) supervisor who owns the day-to-day relationship, plus a second supervisor and often an independent adviser or chair. Your first job is to establish a working rhythm — how often you meet, how you record actions, and how feedback on writing is handled. Students who set these expectations early in stage one tend to progress far more smoothly through the later, higher-pressure stages.

  • Confirm your registration period and any funding council conditions (for example UKRI stipend terms).
  • Complete the research ethics induction — you cannot collect data until ethical approval is granted.
  • Agree a supervision schedule and a shared system for tracking actions and deadlines.
  • Book onto your doctoral training programme’s research-methods and transferable-skills modules.

Stage 2: The literature review and research proposal

The first six to nine months are dominated by reading. You will map the scholarly conversation around your topic, identify the gap your research will fill, and sharpen a vague idea into a precise, answerable research question. This work crystallises into two outputs: a substantial literature review and a formal research proposal that your department signs off before you proceed.

A strong proposal at this stage states the research question, justifies it against the existing literature, and sets out a feasible research methodology with a realistic timetable. If you are unsure how to structure this document, our guidance on how to write a research proposal covers the standard sections examiners and supervisors expect. The proposal is not a binding contract — research questions evolve — but it is the foundation the upgrade panel will scrutinise next.

Example: Priya, a full-time PhD student in environmental science, started in October. By March she had drafted a 9,000-word literature review identifying that no UK study had measured microplastic uptake in a specific freshwater mussel species. Her research question — “How does seasonal flow variation affect microplastic accumulation in Anodonta anatina in the River Thames catchment?” — was specific, answerable in three years, and clearly gap-filling. Her supervisor approved the proposal in April, putting her on track to upgrade by month 11. The lesson: a tightly scoped question early prevents an unmanageable scope later.

Stage 3: The MPhil-to-PhD upgrade (confirmation)

Almost every UK student is registered first for an MPhil and must pass an upgrade (also called confirmation or transfer) to become a full PhD candidate. This usually happens between months 9 and 18 full-time. You submit an upgrade report — commonly your literature review, methodology, a sample of early findings or a pilot study, and a plan for the remaining years — and then defend it in a mini-viva before a panel of academics who are not your supervisors.

The upgrade is a genuine checkpoint, not a formality. The panel decides whether your project is of doctoral standard and likely to be completed in time. Possible outcomes are: pass and upgrade to PhD; upgrade with minor revisions; resubmit the report; remain on MPhil; or, rarely, withdraw. Treat the upgrade as a rehearsal for the final viva — the questioning style, the defence of your methodology, and the focus on original contribution are all previews of stage seven.

Stage Typical timing (full-time) Key deliverable Gatekeeping check
1. Registration & induction Month 0–1 Enrolment, training plan Ethics induction signed
2. Literature review & proposal Months 1–9 Review + research proposal Departmental sign-off
3. MPhil-to-PhD upgrade Months 9–18 Upgrade report + mini-viva Upgrade panel approval
4. Data collection / fieldwork Months 12–30 Dataset, experiments, archives Annual progress review
5. Analysis & results Months 24–36 Analysed findings chapters Annual progress review
6. Writing up the thesis Months 30–42 Full draft thesis (70–100k words) Supervisor “ready to submit”
7. Submission & viva voce Months 36–48 Bound thesis + oral defence Examiners’ recommendation
8. Corrections & award +1–6 months Corrected, deposited thesis Award board confirmation

Stage 4: Data collection and fieldwork

Once upgraded, you move into the engine room of the PhD: generating the original data on which your contribution rests. What this looks like varies enormously by discipline — wet-lab experiments, longitudinal surveys, ethnographic fieldwork, archival research, interviews, modelling, or corpus building. This is typically the longest single stage, running from around month 12 to month 30, and it is where ethical approval, access negotiations and equipment availability can cause real delays.

Two risks dominate this stage. The first is scope creep — collecting more data than you can ever analyse. The second is fragility — a single dependency (a participant cohort, a synchrotron slot, a sensitive archive) failing and stalling the whole project. Build slack into your timetable, keep a meticulous data-management plan, and report progress honestly at your annual review so problems surface early rather than in year three.

“The biggest predictor of timely PhD completion is not raw ability but momentum — students who keep collecting, analysing and writing in parallel, rather than treating them as sequential phases, finish on time far more often.” — commonly observed guidance from UK doctoral training centres.

Stage 5: Analysis, results and your original contribution

Analysis usually overlaps with the tail of data collection. Here you turn raw material into findings: running statistical tests, coding qualitative data, interpreting experimental outputs, and — crucially — articulating what is genuinely new. The doctoral bar is “an original contribution to knowledge,” so this stage is where you must be able to say, in one or two sentences, exactly what the world now knows that it did not before your work.

If your project is quantitative and you are wrestling with the statistics, structured support such as professional data analysis services can help you choose and justify the right tests, though the interpretation and write-up must remain your own work. Keep returning to your research question: every results chapter should answer part of it, and anything that does not earns its place only as context.

Stage 6: Writing up the thesis

Writing the thesis is a stage in its own right, not an afterthought. A UK PhD thesis is typically 70,000–100,000 words (lower in some STEM fields, with a hard upper limit set by your regulations), structured as introduction, literature review, methodology, results, discussion and conclusion. Most students draft chapters throughout the project, then spend months 30–42 turning a pile of drafts into a single coherent argument that builds to the original contribution.

Referencing discipline matters here: a thesis with inconsistent citations signals carelessness to examiners. Settle on your required style early — our guides to academic referencing and specifically Harvard referencing explain how to keep citations consistent across a 90,000-word document. When the full draft is complete, your supervisor must agree it is of examinable standard before you submit; if you want a second pair of expert eyes on structure and argument, our PhD thesis help service supports students through this final push.

  • Draft each empirical chapter as soon as its analysis is done — do not leave all writing to the end.
  • Write the introduction and conclusion last, once you know what the thesis actually argues.
  • Run a consistency pass on referencing, figures, tables and terminology before submission.
  • Leave time for proofreading — examiners notice typos, and they erode confidence in your rigour.

Stage 7: Submission and the viva voce examination

You submit a soft-bound thesis to your graduate school, which appoints two examiners: an internal (from your university) and an external (a subject expert from another institution). After a few weeks of reading, they meet you for the viva voce — an oral defence, usually two to four hours long, in which you justify your methodology, defend your interpretations, and demonstrate that the thesis is genuinely your own original work. The viva is unique to the doctorate and is where the degree is truly earned.

Preparation matters: re-read your thesis, anticipate the obvious challenges to your methods and conclusions, and practise summarising your contribution out loud. Our bank of likely PhD viva questions shows the kinds of questions examiners ask — from “What is your original contribution?” to “Why did you choose this method over the alternatives?” A mock viva with your supervisor is one of the highest-value hours you can spend before the real thing.

Example: Tom submitted his history thesis in September and was given a viva date in late November. His external examiner opened with “Walk me through how your work changes the existing account of the 1926 General Strike.” Because Tom had rehearsed a 90-second answer to exactly that question in two mock vivas, he started confidently and set the agenda. After three hours he was awarded a PhD subject to minor corrections — a list of 14 typographical and citation fixes due within three months. The takeaway: examiners reward a candidate who can state their contribution crisply and defend their choices without becoming defensive.

Stage 8: Outcomes, corrections and the award

The viva ends with a recommendation. UK outcomes follow a standard ladder, and understanding them removes much of the dread surrounding the examination — a clean “pass with no corrections” is rare, and minor corrections are by far the most common result.

Viva outcome What it means Typical time to complete
Pass, no corrections Award the PhD as submitted (uncommon) Immediate
Minor corrections Small typographical / clarity fixes (most common) Up to 3 months
Major corrections Substantive revisions, no second viva usually Up to 6 months
Resubmit for the degree Significant rework, re-examination required Up to 12 months
Award of MPhil Work judged below doctoral standard n/a
Fail / no award Rare; usually after a resubmission n/a

Once you complete your corrections and your internal examiner signs them off, you deposit the final hard-bound and electronic copies of your thesis in the university repository. An award board (or research degrees committee) formally confers the degree, and only then are you entitled to use the title “Dr.” For many students the gap between viva and graduation ceremony is several months, but the substantive work is done at the moment your corrections are approved.

How long does each stage take?

A full-time UK PhD is funded and expected to complete in three to four years; UKRI studentships, for example, typically fund 3.5 years. Part-time students follow the same eight stages over roughly six to eight years. The single biggest threat to a timely finish is letting one stage — usually data collection or writing up — overrun and compress everything after it. Treat the upgrade and the submission deadline as fixed anchors and work backwards from them.

It is also worth remembering that the stages overlap in practice. You will still be reading new literature during writing up, still refining analysis during the viva preparation, and still drafting publications throughout. The linear diagram is a planning tool, not a rigid sequence — the best doctoral researchers keep several stages alive at once and never let the writing go cold.

Stuck on your thesis chapters or viva prep?

Get expert, confidential support from PhD-qualified academics in your field — from structuring your argument to mock-viva readiness.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many stages does a PhD have?

A UK PhD has eight core stages: registration and induction; the literature review and research proposal; the MPhil-to-PhD upgrade; data collection and fieldwork; analysis and results; writing up the thesis; submission and the viva voce; and finally corrections and the award. Institutions use slightly different names, but the underlying sequence is consistent across the sector.

Most students find either data collection or writing up the hardest. Data collection is where external dependencies — ethics approval, participant access, equipment — cause delays outside your control, while writing up demands you turn three years of work into a single coherent argument under time and motivation pressure. The viva feels stressful but is usually shorter and, with good preparation, very manageable.

Most UK doctoral students register for an MPhil first and must pass an upgrade (also called confirmation or transfer) to become a full PhD candidate, usually between months 9 and 18. You submit an upgrade report and defend it in a mini-viva before a panel who decide whether your project is of doctoral standard and can be completed in time. It is a genuine checkpoint and a useful rehearsal for the final viva.

A full-time UK PhD typically takes three to four years, with funders such as UKRI usually supporting 3.5 years. Part-time study follows the same eight stages over roughly six to eight years. Overruns most often come from data collection or writing up taking longer than planned, so treat the upgrade and submission deadlines as fixed anchors.

After you submit your thesis you sit a viva voce — an oral defence with an internal and an external examiner. They recommend an outcome ranging from pass with no corrections to resubmission. Minor corrections are the most common result; once you complete them and an examiner signs off, you deposit the final thesis and an award board confers the degree, after which you may use the title Dr.

Yes, and the best researchers ensure they do. While the timeline is usually drawn as a straight line, in practice you keep reading new literature during writing up, refine analysis while preparing for the viva, and draft chapters as soon as each analysis is complete. Keeping several stages alive at once maintains momentum, which is the strongest predictor of finishing on time.

About Olive Robin

Avatar for Olive RobinOlive Robin, a master of English literature, is an academic researcher and author at ResearchProspect. Passionate about words, she delves into literature nuances with scholarly depth and precision.

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