NQCC Launches £149,500 Quantum Computing Doctoral Studentships for UK Nationals

The National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC) has announced a doctoral studentship scheme, commencing in autumn 2025, to cultivate a new generation of quantum computing researchers. The initiative will fund thirty students over five annual cohorts, each undertaking collaborative projects co-developed between the NQCC and partner universities across the United Kingdom. These fully-funded studentships, awarded via the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council’s (EPSRC) Industrial Doctoral Landscape Awards (IDLA), aim to advance quantum computing across the entire technology stack, from hardware and software to applications and component technologies, with students dividing their time between university research and dedicated periods at the NQCC’s facilities.

The National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC) doctoral studentship scheme will award six studentships annually over five years, starting autumn 2025. Each studentship is worth £149,500, covering tuition fees, stipend, and a Research Training Support Grant (RTSG) for consumables, equipment, and travel. Funding comes from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council’s (EPSRC) Industrial Doctoral Landscape Awards (IDLA) and is paid directly to the host university.

The scheme is open to ‘home’ students – those with UK nationality, settled status, pre-settled status with qualifying residency, or indefinite leave to remain/enter the UK. Successful applicants will be jointly supervised by a university academic and an NQCC specialist. Universities with doctoral supervision authority can submit applications.

Research areas include quantum hardware (superconducting, trapped ion, and neutral atom platforms), quantum computing applications (materials science, drug discovery, finance, optimisation), and quantum software/control systems. Priority themes are reviewed annually.

A minimum of three months’ research will be conducted at the NQCC, with scheduling agreed upon by supervisors. A collaborative agreement will be established between the NQCC and the university regarding collaboration and intellectual property.

All candidates must pass national pre-employment control checks to the Baseline Personnel Security Standard (BPSS), which typically take 3-4 weeks, and offers are conditional on successful completion. Detailed terms and conditions regarding the training grant and IDLA scheme are available. Universities cover estates and indirect costs.

 

More information
External Link: Click Here For More

Dr. Donovan

Dr. Donovan

Dr. Donovan is a futurist and technology writer covering the quantum revolution. Where classical computers manipulate bits that are either on or off, quantum machines exploit superposition and entanglement to process information in ways that classical physics cannot. Dr. Donovan tracks the full quantum landscape: fault-tolerant computing, photonic and superconducting architectures, post-quantum cryptography, and the geopolitical race between nations and corporations to achieve quantum advantage. The decisions being made now, in research labs and government offices around the world, will determine who controls the most powerful computers ever built.

Latest Posts by Dr. Donovan:

SuperQ’s SuperPQC Platform Gains Global Visibility Through QSECDEF

SuperQ’s SuperPQC Platform Gains Global Visibility Through QSECDEF

April 11, 2026
Database Reordering Cuts Quantum Search Circuit Complexity

Database Reordering Cuts Quantum Search Circuit Complexity

April 11, 2026
SPINS Project Aims for Millions of Stable Semiconductor Qubits

SPINS Project Aims for Millions of Stable Semiconductor Qubits

April 10, 2026