With more than 650,000 students now studying for UK qualifications outside these isles, TNE is no longer a niche part of international higher education. It has become a central tenet of the UK’s international education strategy, with TNE enrolments exceeding onshore international student numbers.
At a time when visa policy changes, geopolitical uncertainty and affordability pressures are reshaping student mobility, TNE is often discussed as a way for universities to diversify international activity and extend global reach. That is understandable but too narrow. TNE is not a substitute for welcoming international students to the UK. It has a value in its own right when built on purposeful partnership, local relevance and student outcomes.
Governments are moving from acknowledging to embracing and championing TNE. The international education strategy increasingly positions TNE as part of the country’s international influence, economic growth and diplomatic engagement.
At last month’s International Higher Education Forum (IHEF) in London, I spoke about embedding equity in TNE. I did so because the next phase cannot simply be about reproducing UK provision overseas at greater scale. It should be about partnerships that are genuinely co-created, locally relevant and designed around students’ needs from the outset.
Earlier models of TNE created significant opportunity. Through franchise provision, validation partnerships, branch campuses and distance learning, universities enabled students to access internationally recognised qualifications without the financial and personal costs of studying overseas. Host countries benefited from strengthened capacity, skills development and wider participation in higher education. That success should be recognised.
This approach is clearly delivering delivered significant success. UK institutions established deep partnerships across Asia, the Gulf, Africa and Europe, while host countries benefited from strengthened capacity, skills development and expanded participation in higher education.
However, the assumptions underpinning that approach are changing. Students are not simply seeking a UK degree closer to home. They are looking for employability, flexibility and education that makes sense in their own labour markets.
Employers want graduates who can work across borders, adapt to AI-enabled workplaces and contribute to local and regional economies. Governments are also scrutinising TNE partnerships through the lens of national development priorities, workforce planning and strategic autonomy.
This means the future success of TNE will depend less on how effectively universities export existing provision, and more on how well they co-create provision with partners; something new, contextualised to the market in which they are operating. A curriculum designed around UK assumptions will not automatically work in Jakarta, Riyadh or Nairobi. Employability strategies built around UK graduate outcomes will not always resonate with students navigating very different economic realities.
In practice, equity in TNE means more than access to a UK award. It means involving partners in curriculum design, reflecting local labour markets, building student support around the delivery context, recognising partner expertise and creating benefits that flow both ways.
Across the sector, there is growing interest in industry-integrated programmes, joint connect employers, governments and universities.
If TNE is viewed mainly as a commercial hedge against recruitment volatility, its long-term value will be weakened
Technology will sharpen this challenge. AI-enabled learning, digital personalisation and hybrid delivery models can extend access and strengthen support. But technology will not make a weak partnership equitable. If provision is simply dropped into a market from elsewhere, digital tools will not fix the underlying problem.
The value of TNE will increasingly lie in community, employability, research collaboration and regional engagement, not content provision alone.
The sector also needs to be honest about risk. If TNE is viewed mainly as a commercial hedge against recruitment volatility, its long-term value will be weakened. At its best, TNE is a vehicle for sustainable global engagement, knowledge exchange and international purposeful partnership.
The British Council’s TNE strategy rightly emphasises quality, partnership, inclusion and student outcomes. Rapid expansion without deep integration risks weakening both quality and reputation. Recent discussions around governance, oversight and partnership management demonstrate that the sector is already grappling with these tensions.
The next phase of TNE therefore needs a more mature conversation about what good TNE looks like.
Five questions matter:
- What outcomes are we trying to achieve through TNE?
- How do students themselves define value?
- What role should employers and local partners play in shaping delivery?
- How do partnerships become genuinely reciprocal and equitable?
- How do institutions demonstrate impact beyond enrolment numbers and new campus announcements?
The test is not just whether institutions can answer those questions but whether they can evidence the impact through student outcomes, partner feedback, graduate employment and sustained institutional relationships.
At UWS, our international work is rooted in widening access, applied learning and purposeful partnership. That shapes how we think about TNE: not as a detached export model but as a way of working with partners to create provision that is credible locally and connected internationally, no longer peripheral to international higher education strategy, it’s become a key pillar. Our 2030 strategic ambitions include growing our global impact – growth that must be grounded in equity, relevance and mutual benefit.
The universities that lead in the next decade may not be those with the largest international footprint. They will be those that build trusted partnerships, demonstrate clear outcomes for students and partners and show that UK higher education can adapt without losing its standards or distinctiveness.
Growth will remain important. But the future of UK TNE will depend on whether institutions are prepared to evolve from exporting education to co-creating it.


