For high/secondary schools

Free access to FT.com for high/secondary teachers,
schools and students anywhere in the world.

Supported by:

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Get your sign-up link

1Check if your school is already registered

Register now

Please fill in the form to register your interest. A member of the team will


be in touch to discuss setting up your institution with free FT access.

Only a school staff member should fill in this form.
If you are a student, please share this page with a staff member so they can sign-up.

For any inquiries after registering, please click here.
For other inquiries, please email FTschools.support@ft.com.

Your details

Your school

FT Schools banner - 5.7k schools registered for free access // 70k students and teachers reading the FT
FT Schools banner - 5.7k schools registered for free access // 70k students and teachers reading the FT
FT Schools banner - 5.7k schools registered for free access // 70k students and teachers reading the FT
FT Schools banner - 5.7k schools registered for free access // 70k students and teachers reading the FT
FT Schools banner - 5.7k schools registered for free access // 70k students and teachers reading the FT

Preparing for life after school

Free access to FT.com can help students with relevant and fresh ideas for study, extra-curricular activities, advice on the world of work and interviews. Universities and employers confirm that broader general knowledge helps the best candidates stand out. For a full description, click here.

Participants receive access to all FT.com content available to regular subscribers. In addition, with the help of teachers, we highlight and guide readers to FT journalism that can enrich education and help prepare students for successful careers.

What does FT do for students

  • Improve learning through examples of concepts learned in the classroom
  • Prepare for the world beyond school through tips and insights
  • Broaden general knowledge to prepare for active life and citizenship
  • Develop news literacy to tackle disinformation

If you are a teacher, librarian or school officer

Register your interest for free access to FT.com. This offer is for any school worldwide teaching 16-19 year old students.

If you are a student, parent, governor or someone else with an interest

Please share details with teachers, schools and colleges you know and tell them to register at ft.com/schoolsarefree. For more information you can read our guide to the Financial Times for schools programme, or if your school already has access, our guide to creating or reactivating your FT.com account.

Preparing for life after school
Preparing for life after school
Preparing for life after school
Preparing for life after school
Preparing for life after school

Our journey

John Ridding, CEO of the FT, gave a talk at my school on journalism when I was 15. I found it fascinating and wanted to learn more about reporting the news and the role it plays in our lives. After an opportunistic chat following the lecture, John agreed to let me spend some time at the FT to better understand journalism in action.

During my time absorbing how the FT works, it occurred to me that there was a role for its journalism to keep informed young people emerging into the adult world.

My generation will inherit so many different challenges so we need to be more informed and engaged in these big global issues from a younger age. We must get access to high-quality journalism. I told John that the FT had a responsibility to help people like me to better understand the world. So the idea of FT Schools was born.

From here, lots of conversations with some truly inspiring people across the FT brought the idea to life. I am grateful to John and the rest of the FT Board for their open-mindedness and willingness to listen to me when at the time, I was a teenage outsider.

Once hired, I was fortunate enough to work with brilliant people to bring the FT to students around the world. I am very proud of what we achieved and how FT Schools continues to grow, helping students with everything from essays and everyday school work, to helping them make the next decision about their future after school.

KRISHAN PUVVADA
FT Schools Founder

Preparing for life after school
Preparing for life after school
Preparing for life after school
Preparing for life after school
Preparing for life after school

Our Student Advocate Programme

The Financial Times is offering ambitious students in Years 12–13 (Grades 10–12) at secondary/high schools around the world the chance to become a Student Advocate.

Advocates complete short, purposeful tasks that help them build leadership, communication and critical thinking skills, while representing student perspectives to the FT. They also promote the value of trusted news to peers and teachers, becoming informed voices within their school communities.

By taking part, students not only shape how the FT engages with young readers - they also grow as leaders, collaborators and communicators, gaining experience that supports future academic or career goals.

If you are a teacher at a secondary school with free access to FT.com, nominate your school’s Student Advocates before 10am BST on Monday 13 October 2025.

Advocates will be able to complete their role from their school, but will be in regular communication with the FT Schools team digitally. The placement runs from October to February, and we recommend that students spend roughly four hours per month on their role. Student Advocates are unpaid. For more information on the programme, please refer to the FAQs and guidelines below.

For more information, please refer to the FAQs and guidelines below.

If your secondary school does not already have access to FT.com, you can sign up for free.

We’re launching a pilot of our Teacher Champions Programme this September. If you’re interested in taking part, you can register your interest here.

As a Student Advocate I learned many things including proactivity, teamwork, public speaking and networking. I have also improved my time management skills, learning to balance my FT work with my school work, which will be helpful for university. I would recommend being a Student Advocate to anyone looking to develop transferable skills, regardless of what they are studying and it has been a confidence booster, and something I never would have done before.

Lauren, Hills Road Sixth Form College

Read the case study

Find out more about the Student Advocate Programme
and discover what the benefits could mean for you.

Section content illustration Section content illustration

Student Advocate Programme 2025-26

Teachers: You may nominate up to two students from your school. Submit your nominations here.

Students: You must be nominated by a teacher. We’re unable to accept nominations submitted directly by students.

Guidelines

  1. Student Advocates must prioritise their school work over this role. If you (or your teachers) feel that your workload is too much, you must pause your participation activities until you have more time. If this happens, please email your mentor who will be able to offer the support you need.
  2. Participation in the FT Student Advocate Forum is encouraged but isn’t compulsory. When posting on the forum, you must not post any content that:
    a) belongs to someone else (such as copyright material);
    b) consists of advertising, sponsored or promotional links or content;
    c) is offensive, defamatory, threatening or indecent;
    d) discriminates on the grounds of race, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, disability or age; or
    e) personally attacks other members of the forum.
  3. You must not act in any way that is harmful to the FT or your school.
  4. You must only promote the FT within your school, not externally.
  5. You must not use the FT brand to promote or endorse any of your other activities.
  6. We encourage Student Advocates to be creative, but ideas which involve using the FT brand must be cleared with the FT first via Slack.

The FT can cancel your participation at any time if we believe that you have broken any of these rules. If we cancel your participation then you must stop all activity relating to it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Schools can offer two curious and ambitious students a work experience opportunity at a prestigious news organisation. Improving engagement with current affairs makes for a more informed sixth form: 92% of FT reading students say the FT improves their intellectual curiosity and 85% feel they understand their subjects better from reading the FT.

This Programme is great for schools looking to demonstrate they are meeting the Gatsby careers benchmarks.

Each school may nominate up to two Student Advocates from Years 12–13 (or Grades 10–12). It’s up to individual schools to decide how they choose their nominees. Many teachers ask students to write a short application explaining why they would be a good fit for the role.

We aim to select a global group of advocates, reflecting the 130+ countries represented by schools in the FT Schools programme. To support regional balance, we're aiming for around 60 per cent of advocates to come from outside the UK.

Time zones will be taken into account when assigning students with mentors, who are based in the UK, US and Hong Kong.

Nominations must be submitted by 10am BST on Monday 13 October 2025. We appreciate for every nomination, but as places are limited, not all nominated students will be offered a place on the programme.

100% of students in previous years felt they had some or significant development in their time management, leadership, communication and creativity and public speaking in their exit survey. Students will be able to showcase these new skills gained through working for the FT in their personal statement/CV, helping to make applications more impressive.

The Programme is also an excellent networking opportunity. Students will work with like-minded, bright young people and the FT Schools team. References will also be made available upon request to those students who are actively engaged with the programme.

The Student Advocate Programme is designed to help students build real-world skills in communication, critical thinking and leadership — while exploring how quality journalism can support their learning and future plans.

Advocates act as ambassadors within their schools, helping peers and teachers discover how the FT can support classroom topics, university preparation and broader awareness of global issues. They also take part in collaborative projects designed to make FT content more engaging and relevant for young readers. These may include:

  • Researching how the FT is used or perceived in their school community
  • Creating and sharing their own content inspired by FT journalism
  • Organising discussions or initiatives on current affairs
  • Attending careers-themed webinars delivered by employees from across the FT Group
  • Taking part in monthly group calls with University Mentors and fellow Advocates around the world

We encourage students to explore the full breadth of FT content, from global news and opinion to lifestyle, business and culture. Whatever their interests, students are supported to bring these into the monthly activities.

The programme is entirely remote - all work is done either online or in school. There are no current visits to the FT offices.

The programme runs for four months each academic year, typically from October to February.

It is entirely flexible, but we recommend roughly 4 hours per month. Academic work should come first, and students should pause participation if their workload becomes too much. You can speak with your mentor if you have any concerns.

Students are grouped together in clusters of Advocates from schools around the world.

Each cluster is mentored by a Student University Mentor. Their mentor will answer questions on Slack, post feedback/new resources as well as lead monthly calls.

Mentors will be the point of contact for Advocates, but there will be involvement from others in the FT Schools Team including the Project Lead for FT Schools.

The FT Schools Team will provide all the resources Advocates need to complete the set tasks, develop their own ideas for raising awareness of the FT in schools and support their personal development throughout the programme.

What teachers say about FT Schools

Gavin Clarke
Gavin Clarke
Gavin Clarke
Gavin Clarke
Gavin Clarke

The FT is a fantastic resource for students to practice applying theory in context, as they will have to do in the external exams.

Gavin Clarke, Head of Sixth Form, Emmanuel College, United Kingdom

What students say about FT Schools

Zoelle Soh
Zoelle Soh
Zoelle Soh
Zoelle Soh
Zoelle Soh

I thought all FT articles would be about the economy and businesses but I have now found a new passion: travel articles.

Zoelle Soh, Student, Dulwich College, Singapore
James Lamont - Director, Strategic Partnerships
James Lamont - Director, Strategic Partnerships
James Lamont - Director, Strategic Partnerships
James Lamont - Director, Strategic Partnerships
James Lamont - Director, Strategic Partnerships

James Lamont

Director, Strategic Partnerships

Andrew Jack - Global Education Editor
Andrew Jack - Global Education Editor
Andrew Jack - Global Education Editor
Andrew Jack - Global Education Editor
Andrew Jack - Global Education Editor

Andrew Jack

Global Education Editor

Kimberley Lim - Operations Manager
Kimberley Lim - Operations Manager
Kimberley Lim - Operations Manager
Kimberley Lim - Operations Manager
Kimberley Lim - Operations Manager

Kimberley Lim

Operations Manager

Olivia Hylton - Project Lead
Olivia Hylton - Project Lead
Olivia Hylton - Project Lead
Olivia Hylton - Project Lead
Olivia Hylton - Project Lead

Olivia Hylton

Project Lead