Student Accommodation

Smart Living Tips for Students in India

Smart Living Tips for Students in India shares practical advice on budgeting, safety, health, and everyday student life.

5 mins read

Posted: 2026-07-02

Safety & Lifestyle

Smart Living Tips for Students in India

By StudentBuddy·Verified June 2026 Updated January 2026·8-min read
Student lifeSmart livingIndiaTips

Student life in India has its unique challenges and rewards. These practical tips will help you navigate your first year in student accommodation more smoothly, saving money, staying safe, maintaining your health, and making the most of the experience. StudentBuddy India is the all-in-one student platform for accommodation, scholarships, courses, and university life in India.

How can students save money on daily living in India?

The biggest savings come from eating at the college canteen rather than restaurants, buying second-hand textbooks from seniors, using student discounts on apps and services, and tracking spending carefully in the first month to…

Financial smart habits

  • Track every expense in the first month, you cannot manage a budget you don't understand. Apps like Walnut or simple Google Sheets work well.
  • Cook or eat at the college canteen for at least one meal daily, restaurant and delivery app costs add up dramatically over a semester.
  • Buy second-hand textbooks from graduating seniors, WhatsApp groups and college noticeboards are the best source. This can save ₹3,000 to ₹10,000 per semester.
  • Use student discounts actively, most software, streaming services, and transport apps offer verified student pricing. Explore scholarship options on StudentBuddy that include living allowances.

Managing power cuts and infrastructure challenges

  • Keep a torch or headlamp charged and accessible at all times.
  • Download offline versions of essential course materials, do not rely on consistent internet access for last-minute study.
  • A small UPS (₹1,500 to ₹3,000) for your laptop and phone charger can be worth the investment in cities with frequent cuts.
  • Know your accommodation's water supply schedule if it is not 24-hour, fill water storage containers before daily cuts begin.
Essential items to bring or buy on arrival: Torch/headlamp · Mosquito repellent (coils, electric mat, or spray) · First aid kit · Reusable water bottle and water purifier (Lifestraw or basic filter jug) · Lock for your room if the existing one is inadequate · Universal plug adaptor if from abroad.

Health and wellbeing

  • Register with a doctor or campus health centre in the first week, do not wait until you are unwell.
  • Drink filtered or bottled water until you are familiar with the local water quality. Tap water in most Indian cities is not safe to drink without filtering.
  • Eat at least one hot cooked meal per day, irregular eating patterns are a common health risk for students adjusting to independent living.
  • Maintain contact with family and friends from home, social connection is one of the strongest predictors of student mental health outcomes.

Making the most of student life

Join at least one society, club, or sports team in your first month, these are the primary mechanisms through which lasting student friendships form. Attend your institution's orientation events fully, even if they feel unnecessary. Explore your city beyond your immediate campus neighbourhood, India's university cities have extraordinary food, culture, and history that most students never fully experience. For guidance on making the most of studying in India, visit StudentBuddy For Students.

Find accommodation that supports your student life in India

Browse StudentBuddy verified student accommodation across India with all-inclusive amenity details.

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A monthly savings plan for Indian students

Monthly money-saving strategies for Indian students
StrategyMonthly saving (est.)DifficultyOne-time action required
Cook lunch instead of buying₹1,500, ₹3,000MediumBuy basic cooking equipment (₹1,000 once)
Cycle to campus instead of auto₹800, ₹1,500LowBuy second-hand cycle (₹2,000, ₹4,000 once)
Buy second-hand textbooks from seniors₹300, ₹800/month avgLowJoin WhatsApp senior network
Use library instead of buying books₹300, ₹1,000LowGet library card on day 1
Student SIM plan (Jio/BSNL student offer)₹100, ₹200Very lowVisit telecom store with student ID
Meal prep on Sundays₹600, ₹1,200MediumInvest in good containers
Use university health centre (free)₹200, ₹500 when illVery lowRegister on arrival
Buy off-season clothing₹500, ₹1,000 avg monthlyLowPlan shopping seasonally

Student wellbeing guide, managing life in Indian accommodation

Managing homesickness

Homesickness is normal and affects the majority of students who relocate to new cities, particularly in the first 4 to 8 weeks. Effective strategies specifically for Indian student accommodation context: call home at a regular time (same day each week builds routine), cook or request your regional food from your PG landlady, familiar food is one of the fastest comfort mechanisms, get physically involved in campus life within the first two weeks before isolation sets in, and connect with students from your home state through your institution's regional student association.

Managing housemate and PG conflicts

PG conflicts in India most commonly involve noise during study hours, cleanliness of shared bathrooms and kitchens, meal timing disputes, and night-time disturbances. The most effective resolution: raise issues directly and kindly in the first occurrence rather than letting resentment build, involve the PG landlady or manager only after a direct conversation has failed, and if issues persist, document them in writing. Most PG conflicts resolve quickly when addressed directly and respectfully.

✓ Essential apps for student life in India

Frequently asked questions

The biggest savings come from eating at the college canteen rather than restaurants, buying second-hand textbooks from seniors, using student discounts on apps and services, and tracking spending carefully in the first month to identify your largest costs.
Tap water in most Indian cities is not safe to drink without filtering or boiling. Use a water purifier, filtered water dispenser, or bottled water until you are familiar with the local water quality. Many PGs and managed hostels provide purified drinking water, confirm this before moving in.
Keep a charged torch and have a small UPS for your laptop and phone charger. Download course materials for offline access. Know your local power cut schedule and time chores (charging devices, laundry) around reliable supply periods.
manage-semester

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