- Upfront visa costs
- Visa fee + immigration health surcharge
- Accommodation
- Deposit, sometimes upfront rent
- Course
- Materials, equipment, field/studio costs
- Other
- Travel home, setup, insurance
Key takeaways
- The immigration health surcharge is paid upfront for the whole visa, on top of the visa fee.
- Accommodation deposits and sometimes upfront rent are needed before you arrive.
- Course materials, equipment and some field/studio costs can add up.
- Don't forget travel home, first-weeks setup costs and insurance.
The costs people forget
The two costs everyone plans for are tuition and rent — but several others catch international students out. The immigration health surcharge is paid upfront for the entire length of your visa, on top of the visa fee. Accommodation usually needs a deposit and sometimes several months' rent in advance. Course materials, textbooks and equipment vary by subject, and creative, science or fieldwork courses can carry studio, lab or trip costs. Travelling home in the holidays is a recurring expense too.
Plan them in from the start
First-weeks setup also adds up: a phone and SIM, bedding and kitchen basics, and initial groceries before your routine settles. Contents insurance for your belongings is worth considering. The fix is simple — build all of these into your budget before you arrive, not after. Study UK Now provides a complete cost picture, including the surcharge, deposits and setup, so nothing is a surprise. Confirm visa-related costs on GOV.UK.
How Study UK Now helps with this
Get expert, end-to-end help — from university matching to your visa.
Frequently asked questions
What are the hidden costs of studying in the UK?
Beyond tuition and rent, budget for the immigration health surcharge (paid upfront for the whole visa), the visa fee, an accommodation deposit and possibly upfront rent, course materials and equipment, travel home in holidays, first-weeks setup costs and insurance. Some courses add field-trip or studio costs. Building these in early prevents mid-year stress.
How much should I budget for setup costs when I arrive in the UK?
Plan for a phone and SIM, bedding and kitchen basics, initial groceries, transport and any deposit balance in your first weeks, before your routine and UK bank account are fully set up. Keeping an accessible buffer for this period is wise. Study UK Now helps you budget the arrival period specifically.
Sources — verified June 2026
Visa, fee and policy details change. Always confirm the latest on the official source before you rely on it.