Here's what you will need to get a place on the Law course at Goldsmiths, University of London.
Select a qualification to see required grades
B,C,C
UCAS code: M100
Here's what Goldsmiths, University of London says about its Law course.
This is a qualifying law degree - your first step towards becoming a solicitor or barrister in England and Wales. You’ll gain all the skills you need to progress to the next stages.
Why study LLB Law at Goldsmiths
We’re one of the highest-rated courses in the country. We're number 1 in the UK for student satisfaction (Complete University Guide Law League Table 2024). In the National Student Survey 2022, our Department of Law was ranked number 1 in the UK for its intellectually stimulating curriculum and programme, and we were rated the best department in London for quality of teaching in law.
We have a rich heritage of social awareness and engagement. You'll be part of an environment that champions human rights, social justice and the international rule of law.
You’ll not only get a qualifying law degree, but the course has also been developed in anticipation of the new Solicitors Qualifying Examinations (SQE). Training for these is integrated throughout the degree, with the option to take an SQE module in your final year.
As a Goldsmiths student, you will also benefit from discounted access to SQE Prep with leading external provider BARBRI.
Future lawyers need a diverse range of skills. As well as grounding you in the fundamentals, you’ll also learn about subjects from big data to social media.
This degree is active, so you won't just be sitting and reading. You'll learn problem-solving, debating and advocating through a range of activities.
We're ahead of the curve, offering subjects like AI and disruptive technologies.
You'll benefit from our excellence in the fields of creative arts, humanities and social sciences, with optional modules in subjects like art, media, human rights and technology.
You'll visit the Supreme Court, Old Bailey, and leading commercial law sets. You’ll also attend Parliamentary committees and debates as well as relevant theatre productions, exhibitions and film screenings to enrich your studies.
You’ll work closely with eminent legal thinkers, internationally leading barristers and politicians. Our Visiting Professors are some of the greatest legal minds of our generation.
You’ll benefit from a variety of guest speakers who are experts in their fields. From practising legal professionals to solicitors from ‘Magic Circle’ law firms, and members of the Crown Prosecution Service to representatives from NGOs and the technologies sector.
In Goldsmiths’ Law and Policy Clinics, you'll get to confront challenging societal issues through supervised legal research and public engagement activity. Areas of research and public engagement activity covered by the Clinics include immigration, the law of financial wrongdoing, police interrogation, and counter-terrorism law.
You can choose a placement module as an option and are given access to summer internships with internationally leading faculty, as well as social welfare placements in law centres and legal advice clinics across London.
We’re the first law department in the UK to offer students free access to Harvard Law School’s pioneering Zero-L course.
Source: Goldsmiths, University of London
Qualification
Bachelor of Law (with Honours) - LLB (Hons)
Department
Law
Location
Main Site | London
Duration
3 Years
Study mode
Full-time
Subjects
• Law
Start date
21 September 2026
Application deadline
14 January 2026
You'll take compulsory modules in your first year of the LLB, and then you'll have the opportunity to focus on your interests in the second and third years by choosing from a range of law option modules.
A unique feature of the degree is that you'll also be able to study across a wide range of specialisms, drawing on globally leading expertise in the departments of Sociology, Anthropology, Psychology, Art, and Media, Communications and Cultural Studies.
Year 1 (credit level 4) In your first year, you'll study the following compulsory modules: 21st Century Legal Skills Contract Law Criminal Law: Theory and Practice Public Law and the Human Rights Act English Legal System in a Global Context
Year 2 (credit level 5) You'll study the following compulsory modules: EU Law and the UK Law of Tort Land Law Trusts International Law and Politics
Option modules You'll then select 2 option modules to the value of 30 credits. You can choose from the following:
Department of Law modules Immigration Law Intellectual Property Law The Goldsmiths Project The Goldsmiths Elective
We run an 'Immigration Law and Policy Clinic' that you can take for credit if you select The Goldsmiths Project module.
Modules in other departments and Connected Curriculum modules To broaden your studies you can choose to select modules from other departments such as Sociology and Politics. Exact lists of these modules will be available at the beginning of each academic year.
You can also select modules from the Connected Curriculum, if you're keen to extend your studies beyond law.
Intercollegiate module programme You could also choose to take advantage of our and study one module from a participating University of London Law School. This can further enrich your academic experience.
Year 3 (credit level 6) In your third year, you'll take 6-8 modules (90-120 credits) from the following modules: Dissertation AI, Disruptive Technologies and the Law Human Rights Law and Clinic Work Placement Commercial Law and International Trade Agreements Art Law Company Law SQE2: Practical Legal Skills in Context Criminal Evidence (with Advanced Mooting and Advocacy)
And, depending on the number of credits you select from the Department of Law modules, you can take 1 or 2 modules from the below interdisciplinary modules: Confronting climate crisis Media Law and Ethics Anthropology of Rights Crimes of the Powerful Psychology and Law
You could also choose to take advantage of our intercollegiate module programme and study one module from a participating University of London Law School.
Please note that due to staff research commitments not all of these modules may be available every year.
You’ll be assessed by a variety of methods, depending on your module choices. These include coursework, examinations, reports, case notes, statutory interpretation, critiques of articles, and research projects such as the dissertation.
As well as these traditional assessment methods, you'll also have the option in your second and third years to take modules that are wholly assessed in more innovative ways, such as:
a portfolio of mooting contributions
client interviewing, persuasive argumentation, written advice and legal drafting
voluntary and prepared contributions in the classroom
taking part in a human rights clinic and other experiential learning activities
Showing 30 reviews
1 year ago
Clubs and societies were not very varied and difficult to join. Otherwise the SU was good.
1 year ago
On the whole the area was good and had lots of events going on to attend, however the daytime campus life was not very exciting and at night the area sometimes felt dangerous with lots of fights happening on the streets.
1 year ago
Accommodation costs were extortionate in proportion to the quality of the halls.
1 year ago
My experience of support at university was terrible. I booked an appointment with a counselor when I was struggling with mental health and they never followed up after my appointment, didn't offer me any useful advice and wanted doctor's proof with I needed extenuating circumstances due to issues in...
1 year ago
On the whole the library and campus facilities were good, however the food was so expensive and my accommodation was not good. Even though I was given early acceptance I didn't get my first choice of halls, and the place I did live was run down and the fire alarm was set off by students every night ...
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I enjoyed a lot of the course content and lectures, however I found some of the seminars were not useful. I also felt that it was not very personalised, I don't think any lecturers or seminar leaders knew me by name and rarely gave detailed feedback on my work.
The NSS is an annual survey where final-year students are asked to rate different aspects of their course and university experience.
Here you can see ratings from Goldsmiths, University of London students who took the Law course - or another course in the same subject area.
Select an option to see a detailed breakdown
Teaching on my course
91%
high
How often does your course challenge you to achieve your best work?
86%
med
How good are teaching staff at explaining things?
98%
high
How often do teaching staff make the subject engaging?
84%
med
How often is the course intellectually stimulating?
95%
high
Learning opportunities
86%
med
To what extent have you had the chance to bring together information and ideas from different topics?
88%
high
How well does your course introduce subjects and skills in a way that builds on what you have already learned?
86%
med
How well has your course developed your knowledge and skills that you think you will need for your future?
88%
med
To what extent have you had the chance to explore ideas and concepts in depth?
86%
med
To what extent does your course have the right balance of directed and independent study?
81%
med
Assessment and feedback
82%
med
How well have assessments allowed you to demonstrate what you have learned?
79%
med
How fair has the marking and assessment been on your course?
86%
med
How often does feedback help you to improve your work?
81%
high
How often have you received assessment feedback on time?
79%
med
How clear were the marking criteria used to assess your work?
86%
high
Academic support
90%
med
How easy was it to contact teaching staff when you needed to?
86%
med
How well have teaching staff supported your learning?
93%
high
Organisation and management
80%
med
How well were any changes to teaching on your course communicated?
74%
med
How well organised is your course?
86%
med
Learning resources
88%
med
How well have the IT resources and facilities supported your learning?
85%
med
How well have the library resources (e.g., books, online services and learning spaces) supported your learning?
93%
med
How easy is it to access subject specific resources (e.g., equipment, facilities, software) when you need them?
85%
low
Student voice
81%
high
How clear is it that students' feedback on the course is acted on?
72%
med
To what extent do you get the right opportunities to give feedback on your course?
85%
med
To what extent are students' opinions about the course valued by staff?
85%
high
How well does the students' union (association or guild) represent students' academic interests?
84%
high
Other NSS questions
During your studies, how free did you feel to express your ideas, opinions, and beliefs?
88%
med
How well communicated was information about your university/college's mental wellbeing support services?
82%
med
See who's studying at Goldsmiths, University of London. These students are taking Law or another course from the same subject area.
| Most popular A-levels studied | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subject | Grade | |||||
| English Literature | C | |||||
| Sociology | C | |||||
| History | C | |||||
| Government and Politics | C | |||||
| Law | B | |||||
We have no information about graduates who took Law at Goldsmiths, University of London.
We have no information about future earnings from students that studied this course.
Note: this data only looks at employees (and not those who are self-employed or also studying) and covers a broad sample of graduates and the various paths they've taken, which might not always be a direct result of their degree
Students are talking about Goldsmiths, University of London on The Student Room.
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