The first set of 2026 quarterly student week data provides an early indication of how the year is developing for the UK English language teaching (ELT) sector. The data points to a softer start overall, alongside familiar seasonal patterns and an increasingly clear divergence between adult and junior demand.
The full report, complete with detailed source market and course type breakdowns, pivot table datasets, and an exclusive webinar are only available to participating English UK member centres.
The latest data from our Quarterly Intelligence Cohort (QUIC) shows overall student weeks at 99,689 in Q1 2026, based on returns from 116 member centres (around 40% of membership). This represents a 7% year-on-year decrease in student week volume on a like-for-like basis.
The decline was driven by weaker adult demand, with adult student weeks down 10%, while the junior segment recorded 7% growth.
As in previous years, Q1 remains predominantly adult-led, with 85% of student weeks attributed to adult learners and 15% to juniors. This reflects established seasonal patterns, with the January to March period traditionally dominated by adult enrolments.
However, the junior segment continues to show relatively stronger performance within this context.
The Q1 data builds on patterns seen in late 2025. Junior student weeks have now recorded year-on-year growth for a second consecutive quarter, rather than simply declining more slowly than the adult segment.
This suggests a potential shift in the relative resilience of junior demand, even though it remains a smaller proportion of overall activity.
Despite being subject to external pressures and fluctuations in demand, the overall structure of the market remains largely unchanged:
These findings highlight a sector operating in a challenging environment, and underscore the need for members to remain responsive to both short-term fluctuations and longer-term structural characteristics.
QUIC provides in-year data to help member centres track seasonal performance, monitor short-term shifts in demand, and benchmark against peers and the wider sector.