Study Abroad

Budgeting for Rent and Living Costs as a Student

Introduction

Student Finance Guide

How to Budget for Rent and Living Costs as a Student

By StudentBuddy·Updated June 2025·8-min read
Student budgetLiving costsFinanceUK students

Money management is one of the skills that separates students who enjoy their time at university from those who are perpetually stressed about finances. A realistic, maintained budget is the single most effective tool. Here is a practical guide to budgeting for rent and living costs as a UK student.

Step 1: Know your income

List all income sources: your maintenance loan and how many weeks it covers, any parental contribution, part-time work income, scholarships or bursaries, and savings. Explore scholarship opportunities on StudentBuddy — many students leave significant funding unclaimed simply through not applying. Divide your total annual income by 52 to get a weekly budget figure.

Step 2: Allocate rent first

Rent is your largest fixed cost. As a rule of thumb, keep rent below 40 to 45 percent of your total monthly income. If your combined income is £1,200 per month, your maximum affordable rent is approximately £480 to £540 per month.

UK student monthly cost breakdown (outside London): Rent £450-£600 · Bills £80-£120 · Food £150-£200 · Transport £50-£100 · Phone £15-£25 · Leisure £100-£150 · Total £845-£1,195 per month.

Step 3: Estimate bills and utilities

If your accommodation doesn't include bills, budget: gas and electricity £40 to £80 per person per month, broadband £25 to £35 per month shared, water £10 to £20 per person per month, TV licence £13.25 per month if you watch live TV. Total bills run £80 to £150 per person per month in UK private housing.

Step 4: Food budgeting

A realistic food budget for a student cooking most meals at home is £30 to £50 per week. Meal planning and batch cooking are the most effective strategies — cook a large pot of curry or pasta sauce on Sunday and eat it across the week. This is dramatically cheaper than ready meals or frequent takeaways.

Step 5: Track and review monthly

Use Monzo, Starling, or a simple spreadsheet to record spending against your budget. Review it at the start of each month and adjust. Most students find that seeing their spending pattern changes their behaviour naturally within a month or two. For international students planning their UK budget, StudentBuddy For Students includes financial planning guidance.

Find student accommodation that fits your budget

Use StudentBuddy accommodation search to filter by weekly price and find properties within your budget.

Browse student accommodation →

Frequently asked questions

As a general rule, rent should not exceed 40 to 45 percent of your total monthly income. Outside London, this typically allows for rent of £400 to £600 per month depending on your income level.
Outside London, students typically spend £850 to £1,200 per month in total including rent, bills, food, transport, and leisure. In London this rises to £1,200 to £1,800 per month.
The most effective strategies are: cooking at home rather than eating out, using student discounts (NUS card, Unidays, Student Beans), cycling rather than using public transport, living in a cheaper area of your city, and applying for all available scholarships and bursaries.

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Budgeting for Rent and Living Costs as a Student

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