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Things to Do at University | The Student Bucket List | Unifresher
Student Life Guide

Things to Do at University: The Student Bucket List

60 genuinely achievable things to tick off across three years. Societies and clubs, sport, culture, free and cheap things to do, nightlife, year-by-year priorities and how to actually make the most of the time you have.

10 min read Updated April 2026 Interactive bucket list
60
Things on the student bucket list: all genuinely achievable
150-300
Active societies at the average UK students union
21 weeks
Time outside of term each year: the most free time you will have for decades
Year 1
The window when joining new things is easiest: use it before social groups solidify
Three years

How do I make the most of three years?

The students who look back most fondly on their degree are not the ones who worked hardest or went out most: they are the ones who were intentional. This guide is a prompt as much as a list. Here is what is available, here is how to use it, and here is what most students wish they had known earlier.

Bucket list

What is on the student bucket list?

60 genuinely achievable things across six categories: people, academic, adventures, culture, personal growth and sport. All ticked interactively. None require money you do not have. Start with the ones that scare you slightly.

Societies

Should I join a society?

Yes, and sooner rather than later. The first two weeks of first year are socially unique. You will never have more permission to turn up somewhere new without knowing anyone. Most students join two or three societies, attend regularly for one, and look back wishing they had joined more things when it was easy.

Budget

What can I do that is actually free?

Plenty. National museums, university public lectures, student radio, parks, open mic nights, film screenings and free walking tours. A significant proportion of the best things available to students costs nothing. We have listed them all, including the ones students walk past every day without realising.

Making the most of it

Three years, used well

University is genuinely unlike any other period of life. You are surrounded by thousands of people your age with shared interests, low costs of entry to almost everything, and more unstructured time than you will have again until retirement. The students who use it well are not the ones who planned it to the minute: they are the ones who stayed curious, said yes to things they were not sure about, and built a life at university rather than waiting for it to happen.

The single biggest regret of graduates? Not joining more things in first year, before social groups solidified and routines formed. Fresher-year you has more social fluidity than any subsequent version. Use it. Say yes to things you are not sure about. You can always stop going.
Interactive checklist

The student bucket list: tick them off

60 genuinely achievable things across six categories. Click to tick them off as you go. Progress saves in your current session.

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1
People and Community
10 things

Join a society in the first two weeks

Before life gets busy and you default to the people on your corridor

Take on a committee role in a society

President, treasurer, social sec: whatever suits you. Genuine leadership experience.

Make a friend from a completely different background

University is one of the few places this happens naturally

Volunteer for something that matters to you

Most SUs run volunteering programmes. Regular or one-off: either counts.

Become a student rep or course rep

Represent your cohort, develop your voice, get into rooms you would not otherwise

Have a proper conversation with one of your lecturers

Office hours exist. Most academics love talking to engaged students.

Stay in touch with someone from every year of your degree

Your network is being built right now, whether you are deliberate about it or not

Go to a house party where you barely know anyone

Uncomfortable for twenty minutes, often brilliant after that

Cook a proper dinner for your housemates

Not pasta. Something you actually put effort into.

Do something for someone anonymously

Leave good food in the kitchen, cover a shift, pay for a stranger's coffee

2
Academic and Career
10 things

Go to a lecture you are not enrolled in

Most universities let you attend any open lecture. Pick something completely different from your subject.

Get your CV reviewed by the careers service

Free, ten minutes, almost always surfaces something you had not noticed

Do a summer internship or work experience

Even one week changes how you think about what you want to do

Attend at least one careers fair

Even in first year. Even just to look around. Especially in first year.

Start a project that has nothing to do with your degree

A blog, a business, a podcast, an app, a zine: something entirely yours

Write something you are genuinely proud of

An essay, a piece of fiction, an article: and keep it

Apply for a scholarship or grant

Most go under-applied. You will not get ones you do not apply for.

Read one book per term unrelated to your course

Fiction, biography, economics, philosophy: just something for you

Attend an industry event or employer talk on campus

Free insight into what jobs actually look like and who is doing the hiring

Use your university library properly

Not just Google Scholar. The actual physical library, the special collections, the quiet floors.

3
Adventures and Travel
10 things

Inter-rail or backpack through Europe

One summer. Multiple countries. Cheaper than you think.

Travel somewhere you have never been on a student budget

Does not have to be far. Somewhere genuinely new to you.

Spend a night outdoors: camping, wild camping or bothying

The UK has some of the best hiking and wild country in Europe. Most of it is free.

Do a university society trip

Ski trip, hiking weekend, sports tour, music tour: different from anything you would organise yourself

Visit another university city for a weekend

Stay with a friend or in a hostel. Every UK student city has a different personality.

Go to a UK music festival

Glastonbury if you can get a ticket. Also: Green Man, End of the Road, Latitude.

Explore your university city properly, not just the student bits

The neighbourhoods, the markets, the parks, the things locals actually do

Do a spontaneous trip booked less than 48 hours out

A cheap Ryanair fare, a friend with a car, or a train somewhere on a reading week

Apply for a year or semester abroad

The most consistently life-changing thing available to most students, if your course allows it

Try a sport or physical activity you have never done before

Most university sports clubs welcome complete beginners. The barrier is lower than it looks.

4
Culture and Creativity
10 things

Go to a live gig: not just big names

Small venues, unsigned bands, your city's grassroots music scene. Often £5 to £10 and excellent.

See a play or show at your SU or local theatre

Student productions are free or nearly free. Professional theatre has student standby tickets.

Go to a free museum or gallery exhibition

UK national museums are free. Most cities have world-class collections students walk past every day.

Perform something in front of an audience

Open mic, spoken word, comedy night, music, improv: once is enough. It changes something.

Write for your student newspaper or student media

Low barrier to entry. Genuine bylines. Better than most work experience for journalism or comms.

Learn something new unrelated to your degree

A language, an instrument, pottery, coding, climbing: pick one thing and actually learn it

Go to an arthouse or independent cinema

Most student cities have one. Student tickets are usually £5 to £7. Completely different from a multiplex.

Visit a comedy club or stand-up night

Work-in-progress shows by well-known comedians are often £5 to £8. New material, intimate rooms.

Explore your city's food scene

Street food markets, independent restaurants, cuisines you have never tried

Create something and share it publicly

Post a photo series, publish an article, put a design on a t-shirt

5
Personal Growth
10 things

Have a proper conversation about mental health

Yours or someone else's. Not "how are you, fine": a real one.

Do something that scares you at least once a year

A presentation, a cold-water swim, asking someone out, applying for something competitive

Spend a day entirely alone, deliberately

A solo walk, a solo trip, a solo afternoon at a cafe with a notebook

Change your mind publicly about something you believed

The willingness to update your views is one of the most underrated intellectual skills.

Disagree with your lecturer in a seminar: politely, with evidence

This is what seminars are for. They will not only survive it: they will probably enjoy it.

Cook for yourself every day for a whole week

No delivery, no meal deals. A full week of actually feeding yourself.

Take a social media break of at least a week

Most people who do this sleep better, feel less anxious, and do not miss it as much as expected.

Keep a journal for at least one full term

Not for anyone else. To process, to notice, to have something to read in ten years.

Ask for help when you actually need it

From a friend, a tutor, the counselling service. Asking is harder than it looks and more rewarding than you expect.

Forgive yourself for a year that did not go to plan

Not every year will be the best. That is not a failure: it is three years of a life being lived.

6
Sport and Wellbeing
10 things

Join a university sports team at any level

Most clubs have a first team, second team and recreational team. You do not need to be good.

Try a completely new sport

Ultimate frisbee, fencing, water polo, lacrosse, rock climbing. University clubs are the cheapest entry point.

Get a university gym membership

Often £80 to £180 for the full year. The best-value gym membership you will ever have.

Complete a charity run or physical challenge

5K, 10K, a long hike: sign up with friends and raise money while you do it

Go to Varsity

The annual sports competition against your rival university: one of the most electric events in student sport.

Swim outdoors: a lido, a lake or the sea

Wild swimming is genuinely exhilarating and completely free.

Take a long walk with no destination

Two hours, no headphones for the first half, nowhere to be. Underrated.

Establish a morning routine that actually works for you

Not necessarily 5am. Just consistent, intentional, yours.

Spend a day in nature: proper countryside or coast

Most university cities are within 45 minutes of somewhere genuinely beautiful

Learn to cook at least one nutritious meal you genuinely enjoy

Not for a deadline. For you, because eating well is worth it.

Each year matters differently

What to prioritise each year

University has a natural rhythm. First year is for exploring, second year is for deepening, final year is for converting. Knowing which phase you are in helps you use your time well rather than doing final-year things in first year and first-year things when it is too late.

Year 1: Explore
Year 2: Build
Final Year: Deliver
Social

Join everything, filter later

The first two weeks are socially unique. Join three or four societies before you settle on one or two. Say yes to things you are unsure about: the cost of stopping is zero.

Your city

Learn your city

Most students spend first year in a five-street radius. Make a deliberate effort to explore: neighbourhoods, markets, parks, independent venues. Your city is one of the best things about your university choice.

Academic

Establish good academic habits

First year grades often do not count towards your final degree, but the habits you form do. Students who build good note-taking and attendance routines in year one rarely abandon them.

Career

Start thinking about work, even briefly

Attend one careers fair. Get your CV reviewed once. Have one conversation with someone doing a job you might want. This means year two applications do not start from zero.

Depth

Go deeper in the things you love

Take a leadership role in a society you have been a member of. Apply for the internship you researched in year one. Pick the modules you are most excited by. Second year is when breadth becomes depth.

Summer

Plan your big summer

The summer between second and final year is the longest free window of university. Plan it deliberately: a placement, inter-railing, extended travel or a summer internship. This window is harder to replicate after graduation.

Applications

Apply for placements and internships

Applications open in September. Most large employers close their summer internship windows before Christmas. Year two autumn is when to move, not spring.

Self-awareness

Get honest about what you want

Second year is a good time to do the thinking that first-year excitement made hard: what do you actually want from your degree and your life after it? Not what sounds impressive: what genuinely suits you.

Grades

Do not let the degree slip

Final year grades determine your degree classification. Students who have a return offer often coast academically. This is a mistake: conditional offers can be withdrawn for poor results.

Job applications

Apply for graduate roles in autumn

Major graduate scheme portals open in September and October. Students who secure good offers are the ones who apply in first term, not January when many schemes have already closed.

Presence

Say a proper goodbye to your university

It is easy to spend final year so focused on what comes next that you do not enjoy what you have. Block out time for the things you love: the venues, the people, the routines, before they are gone.

Perspective

Think about what you want your life to look like

Where do you want to live? What do you care about outside work? Final year narrows focus to careers. Keep the wider picture in view.

Find your people

Societies and clubs

The average university students union has 150 to 300 active societies. Most students join two or three, attend regularly for one, and look back wishing they had joined more things in first year when it was easiest. The barrier to joining something new is lower than it ever will be again.

Football Rugby Swimming Rock Climbing Hiking and Mountaineering Fencing Ultimate Frisbee Rowing Martial Arts Netball Lacrosse Water Polo Film Society Book Club Debating Philosophy Politics History Model UN Law Society Medicine and Surgery Engineering Society Investment Club Entrepreneurship Psychology Society Drama and Theatre Improv Comedy Orchestra A Cappella Photography Art and Illustration Creative Writing Fashion and Design Student Newspaper Student Radio Student TV Podcast Society
Taking a committee role is worth the time it costs. Running a society gives you genuine leadership experience: managing a budget, organising events, recruiting members, dealing with conflict. These are exactly the things graduate employers ask about in competency interviews. "I was social secretary of the hiking club and grew membership by 40%" is a better answer to "tell me about a time you took initiative" than most students have.
Most underused resource

Sport at university

University sport is one of the most accessible and most underused things available to students. Every club, from first team to social team, is looking for people. You do not need to have played before. The social side of university sport is arguably as valuable as the athletic side.

No budget needed

Free and cheap things to do

A significant portion of the best things available to students cost nothing or nearly nothing. This is for the days between payday and the end of term when the budget is tight but staying in feels like a waste.

Free

National museums and galleries

Every major UK city has free national or civic museums. The British Museum, Tate Modern, National Galleries of Scotland, National Museum Cardiff: all free, all world class.

Free

Student radio and open mic nights

Most university radio stations welcome contributors with no experience. Open mic nights at local venues are free to attend and often free to perform at.

Free

Parks, nature and green spaces

Most UK cities have genuinely beautiful parks. A Saturday morning with a coffee and a Frisbee costs almost nothing and is genuinely good for you.

Free

University public lectures

Most universities run open public lecture series: history, science, philosophy, current affairs. Free to attend, often with eminent speakers. Check your university's public events page.

Free

Your university library

Beyond books and journals: printing, quiet study rooms and access to software you would otherwise pay for. Spend an afternoon in a corner of the stacks.

Cheap

Student film screenings

Most universities have a film society running weekly screenings: classic films, foreign language films, cult cinema. Usually £2 to £5. Better than Netflix and more social.

Cheap

Student theatre productions

Your SU drama society puts on multiple productions a year. Tickets are usually £3 to £8. The quality is often surprisingly high and it means everything to the people performing.

Cheap

Cook with friends

A shared dinner with four friends costs £3 to £5 per head and is often more fun than going out. Rotate whose house, rotate who cooks. The best student nights are often the unplanned kitchen ones.

Free

Free walking tours

Most student cities offer free tip-based walking tours covering history, architecture and local stories. A good way to understand the city you are living in, even if you have been there a year.

Free

Get up early and see your city before anyone else

A sunrise walk or run through a city before it wakes up costs nothing and stays with you. Do it once per term at least.

Social life

Nightlife and social life

Nightlife gets a disproportionate amount of the "university experience" narrative, and it is genuinely a part of it for many students. But the social life that matters most and lasts longest is rarely the nights out. It is the late-night kitchen conversations, the society trips, the spontaneous Sunday afternoons, and the habits of connection built across three years.

You do not have to drink to have a social life. Most universities now run extensive alcohol-free social programmes. If you do not drink, or do not want to drink on a given night, there is genuine social life available to you that does not require explanation or justification.
Use your city

Getting beyond your campus

One of the quieter regrets of many graduates is having lived in a city for three years without really knowing it. The campus and a few surrounding streets become the entire world, and the city itself stays largely unexplored.

Free

Explore a different neighbourhood each month

Pick a part of your city you have never been to. Walk it, find a cafe, look in the independent shops. Every city has corners that most students never reach.

Cheap

Rent a bike for a day

Most cities have cycle hire schemes. See far more of a city from a bike than on foot, and for less than a day's bus fare.

Cheap

Get to the coast or countryside

Most UK university cities are within an hour of genuinely beautiful countryside or coastline. A day trip by train split four ways costs less than a night out.

Free

Visit a local market

Farmers markets, street food markets and covered markets exist in every student city. Better than a supermarket on a Saturday morning.

Cheap

Use your 16 to 25 Railcard for day trips

A third off rail fares opens up almost every UK city for a day. A £25 return on your Railcard is often cheaper than a night out.

Free

Attend cultural events beyond student venues

Diwali celebrations, Chinese New Year events, Eid gatherings, Caribbean carnivals: most university cities host significant cultural events that are free, public and genuinely unmissable.

Frequently asked questions

Things to do at university: FAQs

I am in second year and feel like I missed out on a lot in first year. Is it too late?
No, genuinely. Second year is actually a great time to join things, because the pressure of freshers week is gone and societies are actively looking for engaged members. Committee roles often become available between first and second year. The window for joining something new does not close in October of first year: it just feels that way.
I do not drink. Will I miss out on the social side of university?
No. Student social life has diversified significantly. Most SUs now run substantial alcohol-free programmes and a significant proportion of students do not drink regularly or at all. Societies, sport, cultural events, cinema, pub quizzes and almost everything else in this guide does not require alcohol. The students who find it most limiting are usually those who assume they will be excluded rather than testing that assumption.
How do I balance having a social life with actually doing well academically?
The research suggests the conflict is less severe than most students fear. Students involved in societies and social activities often perform better academically, up to a point. The ceiling is usually around 15 to 20 hours per week of non-academic commitments. The students who struggle academically are rarely those who are in a society and go out twice a week: they are those who have lost structure entirely. Protecting your academic work means protecting the time for it, not eliminating everything else.
What if I am an introvert and find all of this overwhelming?
Almost everything in this guide is available in formats that do not require large social groups: smaller societies, one-on-one connections built through shared interests, individual sport, solo exploration of your city. If large social situations drain you, find the activities that let you connect in smaller ways. The connections formed in a niche society of eight people often outlast those formed in a freshers week crowd of 200.
I am struggling to enjoy university. Is that normal?
More common than the highlight reel of student life suggests. The expectation that university is automatically the best years of your life creates a specific kind of distress in students who are not finding it that way. First terms are often genuinely hard. If you are struggling significantly with loneliness, anxiety or low mood, please speak to your university's counselling service or your GP. If you are just finding it harder than you expected: that is normal, it is honest, and it usually gets better.
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Our student travel guide covers inter-railing, year abroad, budget destinations and how to make the most of 14-week summers.

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