The University of Oxford says it has become the first UK higher-education institution to give university-wide access to ChatGPT Edu, OpenAI’s education-focused version of the AI tool, following a year-long pilot with about 750 academics, students and staff.
The deployment forms part of a five-year partnership with OpenAI announced in March and includes training on generative AI that will “emphasise ethical usage, critical thinking and responsible application.”
Oxford’s Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Digital, Prof Anne Trefethen, called the move “an exciting step in our ongoing process of digital transformation,” adding that AI has “huge potential” to accelerate curiosity-led research and help tackle global challenges. “All our students will be able to utilise ChatGPT Edu as an accessible tool for study, to enrich and personalise their learning,” she said.
ChatGPT Edu is tailored for universities and offers enhanced privacy and security, with data retained by institutions rather than used to train public models—an assurance intended to address common concerns over confidentiality and academic integrity.
OpenAI’s international education lead, Jayna Devani, said Oxford is “setting a new standard for how AI can enrich higher education,” arguing that universal access will equip students, academics and professional staff with the skills and tools needed “to succeed in the AI era.”
Alongside access to the software, Oxford will provide guided training and support materials on practical use cases across teaching, learning, research, and administration—ranging from literature reviews and coding assistance to drafting feedback and workflow automation—within the university’s existing policies on assessment and AI use.