Edexcel International GCSE Further Pure Mathematics (4PM1) is a genuinely distinct, single-tier qualification — not a harder version of the same exam, but new content including calculus, built to bridge directly into A-Level.
Unlike Edexcel's main IGCSE Mathematics (4MA1), Further Pure Mathematics is offered through a single tier only — every student sits the same two papers. Grades range from 9 down to 4, with grade 3 allowed as a near-miss safety margin; below that, the result is unclassified.
This specification is constructed to extend the further pure mathematics topics already in Edexcel's main IGCSE Maths Higher tier — not duplicate them.
Covers Number, Algebra and calculus, and Geometry and trigonometry — including differentiation, integration, and their applications, genuinely new content beyond standard IGCSE Maths.
Each paper is worth 50% of the total grade, 100 marks each, sat in the same series — both papers can draw on any part of the specification.
Designed specifically to support progression to A-Level and beyond — the content bridges directly into A-Level Maths and Further Maths topics.
Boundaries vary by series — always verify current thresholds at the official board site before relying on these for a live decision.
| Session | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 2025 | 173 | 156 | 140 | 113 | 86 | 60 | 47 |
| Nov 2025 | 166 | 141 | 117 | 93 | 70 | 47 | 35 |
Out of 200 (Papers 01+02, 100 marks each). Source: Pearson Edexcel official grade boundary documents. Note the meaningful difference between the June and November 2025 series — a reminder that boundaries genuinely shift between series and shouldn't be treated as fixed targets.
Knowing the content isn't the same as knowing how marks are awarded. The terms below decide whether correct knowledge actually converts into marks on the page.
| Term | What It Requires | Where Marks Are Commonly Lost |
|---|---|---|
| Prove | Provide a complete, logically ordered chain of algebraic steps that establishes the given result for all cases, not just a specific example. | A common case of lost marks: re-stating the result rather than deriving it, or skipping a step an examiner needs to see explicitly. |
| Show that | Demonstrate the given result using a method an examiner can follow line by line. | At this level, often requires combining two techniques (e.g. differentiation followed by substitution) before reaching the stated result — skipping the intermediate step loses marks even if the final line is correct. |
| Hence | Use a previously established result or earlier part of the question directly, rather than starting the next step from scratch. | Marks are frequently lost when a student re-derives something from first principles instead of using the result the question is explicitly pointing toward. |
| Find the general solution | Provide the complete family of solutions, typically involving a constant of integration or a periodic term, not just one specific value. | A single correct value where a general solution was required caps the available marks, even if that one value is itself correct. |
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