University is expensive — and that's before you factor in nights out, textbooks, and the endless stream of takeaway orders. But being a student doesn't mean you have to be permanently broke. With a few smart habits, you can stretch your maintenance loan further, build a savings buffer, and graduate without unnecessary debt. The trick isn't deprivation — it's being intentional about where your money goes. If you haven't already, setting up a simple budget framework and automating even small savings can make a surprising difference over three or four years.
Get Every Student Discount Available
Your student status is a genuine financial asset — use it before it expires. The TOTUM card (formerly NUS Extra) costs around £15 per year and unlocks discounts at hundreds of retailers including ASOS, Co-op, and Domino's. But TOTUM is just the start. Here's how to maximise your student discounts:
- •Register with UNiDAYS and Student Beans — both are free and offer rotating discounts on fashion, tech, food, and entertainment.
- •Get a 16-25 Railcard (£30/year) for a third off rail fares. If you travel home regularly, this pays for itself in one trip.
- •Use your university email for free or discounted software: Microsoft 365, Adobe Creative Cloud, GitHub Pro, and Notion are all free for students.
- •Apple Music, Spotify, and Amazon Prime all offer student pricing at roughly half the normal rate.
- •Always ask 'Do you have a student discount?' in shops, restaurants, and cinemas. Many offer 10-20% off but don't advertise it.
- •Check if your university offers an emergency hardship fund or bursary you might be eligible for — many students don't claim money they're entitled to.
Meal Prep and Food Shopping on a Budget
Food is typically the second-biggest expense after rent, and it's the easiest one to control. The average UK student spends around £100-£150 per month on food, but you can eat well for significantly less with a bit of planning. Batch cooking on Sundays saves both money and time during the week — cook a big pot of chilli, curry, or pasta sauce and portion it into containers. Shop at Aldi or Lidl for your staples and use the Too Good To Go app for surprise bags of reduced food from local shops. Plan your meals around what's on offer rather than buying specific ingredients at full price. A freezer is your best friend: bread, vegetables, and batch-cooked meals all freeze well and reduce waste dramatically. If you're in halls with limited cooking facilities, even simple habits like making your own lunch instead of buying meal deals saves roughly £5-£7 per day — that's over £1,000 across an academic year.
Use a Budgeting App (Seriously)
The single most impactful thing you can do as a student is track where your money actually goes. Most students receive their maintenance loan in three large chunks and spend the first few weeks flush before scraping by at the end of term. A budgeting app fixes this pattern. Split your termly loan by the number of weeks in the term to get a weekly budget — this simple calculation prevents the feast-and-famine cycle. Apps like SYM help you track spending, set savings goals, and see exactly where your money is going. Even saving £20 per week adds up to over £700 across an academic year — enough for a holiday, an emergency fund, or a head start on post-graduation life. The no-spend challenge is another great way to reset your spending habits if things get out of control mid-term.
Cut Your Recurring Costs
Subscriptions and recurring expenses are the silent killers of student budgets. Audit every monthly payment and be ruthless:
- •Share streaming subscriptions with housemates — Netflix, Disney+, and Spotify Family plans split between four people cost almost nothing each.
- •Switch to a SIM-only phone deal if you're out of contract. You can get generous data plans for £8-£12/month on networks like Smarty, Voxi, or giffgaff.
- •Use your university gym instead of a commercial one — it's usually included in your tuition or heavily subsidised.
- •Check if you're exempt from Council Tax. Full-time students don't pay it, but you may need to apply for the exemption with your local council.
- •Review your bank account — student accounts from Santander, HSBC, and Nationwide offer interest-free overdrafts of £1,000-£3,000. Use this as a safety net, not spending money.
Earn While You Learn
Having some income alongside your studies takes enormous pressure off your budget. The key is finding work that's flexible enough to fit around lectures and deadlines. On-campus jobs (library, student union, events) are ideal because employers understand your academic commitments. Tutoring younger students or peers in subjects you're strong in typically pays £15-£25 per hour. Freelance work — writing, design, social media management, coding — can be done on your own schedule. If you're looking for something simpler, apps like Deliveroo or odd-job platforms let you work when it suits you. Even 8-10 hours per week at minimum wage adds roughly £400-£500 per month to your budget. Just be mindful of how much you earn relative to your personal tax allowance — as a student you're still entitled to the full allowance, but it's worth understanding where the threshold sits.
Build the Savings Habit Now
The most valuable thing you can take from university isn't just your degree — it's the financial habits you build along the way. Students who learn to budget, track spending, and save consistently are dramatically better prepared for the financial realities of post-graduation life: deposits for flats, professional clothing, and the gap between your last loan payment and your first paycheque. Start small. Even £10 or £20 per week into a savings account builds the muscle memory of paying yourself first. Use a savings challenge to make it feel like a game rather than a sacrifice. By the time you graduate, you could have a genuine emergency fund — something most new graduates wish they had. The habits you set now compound for decades, and future you will be genuinely grateful.
#student finance#university#student discounts#budgeting#TOTUM
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