University of Dundee to cut 190 more jobs to save £20m

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Dundee University announced a potential £30m deficit in November 2024

The University of Dundee has announced plans to cut 190 more jobs as it deals with a large financial deficit.

Despite already cutting about 675 jobs through voluntary redundancies, the university said it still needed to make annual savings of about £20m - mostly from staff costs.

The university first announced a potential £30m deficit in November 2024 and "inevitable" job cuts.

Members of the University and College Union (UCU) have already staged 28 days of strike action in the last year over the cuts.

They voted in favour of strike action again earlier this month, since the time limit on a previous strike vote had expired.

The university informed staff of the new round of cuts in a meeting which lasted about 10 minutes.

Prof Nigel Seaton, interim principal and vice-chancellor, said staff at risk of redundancy were being informed today.

He said that despite "vigorous action" to address the university's situation, it still had "some way to go" to become financially sustainable.

"We have made progress in recuring non-staff spending, and this has already been substantially reduced," said the principal.

"We will make further cuts in this area, but there is a limit to how much further we can go, so the greater part of the additional saving will have to come from staff costs.

"Today we are beginning a period of collective consultation with the campus unions about proposals for our future organisational structure, how these would be implemented, and the impact this may have on some jobs."

He added that these were proposals rather than final decisions and could change following consultation.

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Members of the University and College Union Scotland have repeatedly carried out strike action in the last year

Prof Seaton said the institution aimed to achieve the reduction in roles through voluntary redundancy.

He added: "I am very conscious of the very difficult – actually, awful – experience that staff in particular have gone through since our financial crisis was acknowledged.

"If there were any other way to secure the future of the university without carrying out the change we have outlined, we would take it.

"But we must go through this to ensure that the university survives and that we continue to do great things for our students, for those who benefit from our research, and for society more widely."

News imageGoogle Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, the University of Dundee's Art School. It is a modern grey building and an exterior sandstone wall has the University of Dundee signGoogle
The university includes Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design

A critical report in June 2025 into the university's financial collapse led to the resignations of its interim principal Prof Shane O'Neill and two senior members of its governing body.

The Gillies Report said university bosses and its governing body failed multiple times to identify the worsening crisis and continued to overspend instead of taking action.

The Scottish government provided £40m in emergency funding last year to help stabilise the university, with ministers expecting at the time that this would limit job losses to about 300.

However, interim principal Prof Nigel Seaton told Holyrood's education committee in November that the Scottish Funding Council (SFC) had accepted more redundancies would still be needed.

Last week the UCU said the university's senior management was still refusing to rule out using compulsory redundancies in future.