GRE Test Centers in United Kingdom

GRE Testing Locations

Decided to take GRE exam? Now it is time to determine where to take the test.  This site provides a full list of GRE testing centers in United Kingdom, among which, you can choose one that is nearest to you. Good news is that the following GRE test locations in United Kingdom offer both GRE general test and the GRE subject tests.

GRE Test Centers in United Kingdom

  1. EDINBURGH, UNITED KINGDOM – APCU-8104
    Pitman Training, 4 Queen Street, EDINBURGH
    United Kingdom EH21JE
    Computer Based Test
  2. GLASGOW, UNITED KINGDOM – APCU-8105
    Pitman Training Centre, 82 Union Street, GLASGOW
    United Kingdom G13QS
    Computer Based Test

GRE Test Dates

There are two types of test format offered by the test maker – ETS: Computer-delivered and Paper-delivered GRE general tests.  For computer based test format, the GRE General Test is offered year-round on a continuous basis, and available for registration on a first-come, first-served basis. For paper based general test,  testing is available three times per year. The following test dates apply:

Test Dates for Paper Based Deadlines for Registration Scores Available
November 09, 2019 October 4, 2019 December 20, 2019
February 1, 2020 December 27, 2019 March 13, 2020

GRE Subject Tests in United Kingdom

The GRE Subject Tests are available on paper based only. In all GRE test centers throughout the world (both inside and outside United States), the exam is available three times a year. The three test dates are:

  • April
  • September
  • October

GRE Testing Locations in United Kingdom

More about United Kingdom

Great Britain and Northern Ireland is a country in northwestern Europe with (2018) 66.5 million residents; The capital is London. Great Britain consists of England, Wales and Scotland. The Channel Islands and the Isle of Man are not part of the national territory, they are directly subordinate to the Crown.

History

People have lived in the British Isles since the Stone Age. From 4th / 3rd Century BC BC Britain belonged to the cultural area of ​​the Celts. In the first centuries AD, the Romans ruled most of the island. After their departure, Anglo-Saxons established themselves, later also Danish Vikings.

After the conquest by Duke William of Normandy in 1066, England remained linked to France. In the Hundred Years War (1339-1453) England lost almost all possessions on the mainland. However, its kings began conquering Ireland as early as the 12th century. Wales had been under English rule since the end of the 13th century.

The aristocrats and later the parliament defied the kings more and more of their political say. These were expanded over the centuries until the monarchy and its government became dependent on a majority of MPs in parliament in 1689. England had become Protestant under Henry VIII (1509–47). In 1707 Scotland and England were united to form Great Britain.

In the 18th century Great Britain began to rise to become the largest European colonial power and strongest sea power. In the 19th century, the overseas territories with the “pearl” India were expanded to form the British Empire. However, by 1783 the North American colonies (except Canada), the USA, had separated from the motherland. Its position as a trading power gave Great Britain a head start in industrialization (from 1750). Social contrasts also allowed the labor movement to gain strength. With the Labor Party (from 1900) the party system of conservatives and liberal parties received a new force. Great Britain persecuted on the European continent until shortly before the First World War an independent position in foreign policy in order to maintain a “balance of power” in Europe. It was not until 1904 that a permanent alliance with France was established.

In the First World War (1914-18) Great Britain stood on the side of France and Russia against Germany and Austria-Hungary. Military victory came at the cost of great sacrifices, economic weakness and financial dependence on the United States. Ireland gained independence in 1921, the north (Ulster) of the island remained with Great Britain and became the scene of the bloody Northern Ireland conflict in the late 1960s. Most of the overseas colonies broke up by the 1960s. In the Second World War (1939–45), Great Britain, allied with the USA and the Soviet Union, fought against Hitler’s Germany.

In the post-war period, the British welfare state was expanded. In the North Atlantic Defense Alliance, NATO, founded in 1949, Great Britain became a permanent partner of the USA and many European countries. In 1973 the United Kingdom finally became a member of the European Community, which later became the European Union. Great Britain tried to keep as many powers as possible in national hands. In 2016, a referendum heralded the farewell to the Union (Brexit). Great Britain left the EU on January 31, 2020.