Health & Wellbeing
Mental health
It's normal to feel stressed, anxious, or overwhelmed at university. The key is recognising when you need support and knowing where to find it — from your university counselling service to NHS talking therapies, there are more free options than most students realise.
Fitness & self care
Staying active boosts your mood, sharpens your focus, and helps you manage stress. Whether it's joining a sports team, using your university gym, or going for a daily walk — the key is finding something you enjoy and making it a regular part of your routine.
Student wellness
Wellness at university is about balance — managing the demands of academic life alongside taking care of yourself. From eating well to creating a study environment that works for you, small consistent habits make a bigger difference than any one-off effort.
Need support now?
If you're struggling, please reach out. Samaritans: 116 123 (free, 24/7). Shout: text 85258 (free crisis text line, 24/7). Your university's counselling service and your GP are also there for you — earlier is always better than later.
In this guide
- Mental health — understanding & getting support
- Student anxiety — causes & coping
- Fitness & self care at university
- Sleep — the most underrated student health habit
- Alcohol & student social life
- Student wellness — daily habits that work
- Further reading — articles by students
- Frequently asked questions
Mental health — understanding & getting support
Student mental health has become significantly more visible over the last decade — and for good reason. University is a period of genuine psychological challenge: independence, academic pressure, financial stress, and social upheaval all hitting at once. The fact that it's hard is not a personal failing. It's a predictable response to a demanding transition.
What matters is knowing that support exists, knowing how to access it, and doing so earlier rather than later. The students who navigate mental health challenges best are rarely the ones who found it easiest — they're the ones who asked for help before a difficult patch became a crisis.
Where to get support
| Support type | Who it's for | How to access | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| University counselling service | Any enrolled student — for stress, anxiety, low mood, relationship issues, academic pressure | Self-refer online or via student services. Usually 1–3 week wait for an initial appointment. | Free |
| University mental health adviser | Students with more complex or ongoing needs — can connect you to NHS services | Via student services or your university GP/health centre | Free |
| NHS GP | Any student — for assessment, medication, and referrals to NHS mental health services | Register with a local GP. Book an appointment — mention mental health so they allocate enough time. | Free |
| NHS Talking Therapies (IAPT) | Anxiety, depression, and related conditions — short-course CBT and other therapies | Self-refer at talkingtherapies.nhs.uk or via GP | Free |
| Togetherall | 24/7 anonymous peer support and self-help tools — available through most UK universities | Log in via your university email at togetherall.com | Free via uni |
| Samaritans | Anyone in distress or crisis — not just suicidal thoughts. Available any time. | Call 116 123 (free, 24/7) or email jo@samaritans.org | Free |
| Shout | Crisis support via text — good if you can't talk out loud | Text 85258 (free, 24/7) | Free |
| Private therapy | Students who want more sessions than NHS/university provides, or shorter waiting times | Psychology Today, BACP directory, or your university's list of approved counsellors | £40–£90/session |
🆘 If you're in crisis right now
You don't need to be at breaking point to reach out. If you're struggling — however small it feels — please contact one of these services. They're there for you.
Student anxiety — causes & coping
Anxiety is the most commonly reported mental health issue among UK students. It's worth distinguishing between normal, manageable stress — which is part of any challenging experience — and anxiety that is significantly interfering with daily life, sleep, or academic work. Both are valid. Only the latter reliably warrants professional support.
The most common causes of student anxiety
Based on Student Minds and NUS survey data. Percentages represent proportion of students citing each as a significant source of stress or anxiety.
Lola's top tips to manage student stress
- Have a playlist of music you like on hand for when things feel overwhelming
- Make sure you stay hydrated — it sounds basic but it genuinely helps
- Keep healthy snacks around you when studying so you're not running on empty
- Take frequent breaks: go for a walk or sit outside for five minutes to clear your brain
- Plan ahead and leave plenty of time for work — cramming makes everything more stressful
Coping strategies that actually work
Break tasks into smaller steps
Academic anxiety often comes from looking at the whole mountain rather than the next step. Breaking an essay or revision task into 30-minute chunks with clear outcomes reduces the overwhelm. Write down the next single action, not the whole project.
Move your body daily
Physical activity is one of the most consistently evidenced interventions for anxiety — not as a cure, but as a reliable moderator. A 20-minute walk genuinely reduces cortisol levels. It doesn't need to be exercise; it needs to be movement.
Limit social media during stressful periods
Social comparison is one of the most consistent drivers of student anxiety. Seeing peers' curated successes while you're in the middle of a difficult period is actively unhelpful. Scheduled phone-free periods, particularly in the evenings before sleep, make a measurable difference.
Talk to someone — anyone
Keeping anxiety entirely internal tends to amplify it. Saying it out loud to a friend, a family member, or a counsellor immediately reduces its hold. You don't need a solution; you need to not be alone with it. This is what your university's counselling service, Samaritans, and Shout exist for.
Fitness & self care at university
Regular physical activity is one of the most reliably effective things a student can do for their mental and physical health. The evidence for its benefits on mood, sleep quality, concentration, and stress resilience is overwhelming — and yet most students significantly reduce their activity levels compared to pre-university life, particularly once the novelty of freshers week wears off.
The key is finding something that fits your schedule and that you actually enjoy, rather than the thing you feel you should be doing. A sport you love three times a week is worth more than a gym routine you abandon after January.
Exercise options at university — compared
| Option | Typical cost | Social? | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| University gym membership | £80–£180/year | Solo or group classes | Students who want flexible, any-time exercise. The best-value gym membership you'll ever have — use it. |
| University sports team (competitive) | £20–£60/year club fee | Very social | Students who've played a sport before and want competitive fixtures. BUCS leagues run on Wednesday afternoons. |
| University sports team (recreational) | £10–£30/year | Very social | Students who want the social benefit of a team without the commitment of competitive play. No experience required. |
| Running / cycling outdoors | Free | Solo or group | Students who want no-cost, flexible exercise. Most cities have Parkrun (free 5K every Saturday morning). Running clubs are social and welcoming to beginners. |
| Yoga / pilates classes | Free–£10/class (many unis offer free SU classes) | Group setting | Good for flexibility, stress management, and students who find high-intensity exercise difficult to sustain. |
| Walking | Free | Solo or social | Genuinely underrated. 8,000–10,000 steps a day has significant documented health benefits. Most students reach this naturally by walking between lectures if they try. |
Self care — what it actually means
Self care has been co-opted by wellness marketing into something that requires products, routines, and spare cash. In practice, the self care habits that make the biggest difference for students are much simpler — and most of them are free.
Get outside once a day
Even ten minutes of daylight exposure — particularly in the morning — has measurable effects on mood and circadian rhythm. In winter months, when UK daylight is limited, this is especially important. Walk to lectures rather than taking the bus where possible.
Cook for yourself regularly
Nutrition and mood are more closely connected than most students recognise. Regular home-cooked meals with vegetables and protein stabilise energy levels and reduce the mood volatility that comes with a diet of caffeine and convenience food.
Maintain one regular social commitment
A weekly sports session, a regular coffee with a friend, or a society meeting — one scheduled regular social touchpoint is far more protective against loneliness than occasional spontaneous plans. Put it in the diary and protect it.
Separate your study space from your rest space
Studying in bed or in your bedroom indefinitely blurs the boundary between work and rest, which degrades both. Even going to the kitchen or a different room to study helps your brain associate your bed with sleep rather than deadlines.
Sleep — the most underrated student health habit
Sleep is the health behaviour with the largest impact on academic performance, mood, and physical health — and the one most consistently sacrificed in student culture. Pulling all-nighters before exams, irregular sleep schedules, and treating sleep as optional all have measurable negative effects on the things students most care about: grades, memory, and how they feel.
| Sleep behaviour | Effect | What the evidence says |
|---|---|---|
| Less than 6 hours regularly | Significant harm | Impairs memory consolidation, reduces attention span, increases anxiety and depression risk, and suppresses immune function |
| 7–9 hours (recommended) | Optimal | Associated with better academic performance, lower anxiety levels, faster physical recovery, and more stable mood |
| Irregular sleep schedule | Moderate harm | Even adequate total hours are less restorative when sleep times are highly variable. Consistent bed and wake times matter. |
| Screens in bed | Moderate harm | Blue light from screens suppresses melatonin and delays sleep onset. A 30-minute screen-free wind-down genuinely helps sleep quality. |
| All-nighters before exams | Counterproductive | Sleep is when memories are consolidated. Studying then sleeping outperforms studying all night. All-nighters reliably reduce next-day recall. |
Alcohol & student social life
Alcohol is heavily embedded in UK student culture — and being honest about its effects is more useful than either moralising about it or ignoring it. Most students who drink do so without significant harm. The minority who drink heavily and regularly face real consequences: disrupted sleep, worsened mental health, reduced academic performance, and longer-term health risks.
What you're actually drinking
| Drink | Approximate units | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pint of 4% lager | 2.3 units | ~180 kcal | A standard Friday night of 4–5 pints = 9–12 units — well above the weekly low-risk guideline in one session |
| Large glass of wine (250ml, 13%) | 3.3 units | ~230 kcal | Most standard wine glasses served in bars are large (250ml) — a bottle is 10 units |
| Single spirit & mixer (25ml, 40%) | 1 unit | ~100 kcal | Doubles (50ml) = 2 units. Easy to lose count in a round-buying context |
| Alcopop / WKD (275ml, 4%) | 1.1 units | ~170 kcal | High sugar content — hangover effects often worse than equivalent alcohol from beer |
| NHS weekly low-risk guideline | 14 units/week | — | Spread across at least 3 days — equivalent to about 6 pints of 4% lager or 6 medium glasses of wine |
You don't have to drink to have a social life at university. Most universities now run substantial alcohol-free programmes, and a significant proportion of students don't drink regularly or at all. If you'd prefer not to drink in social situations, you don't owe anyone an explanation for what's in your glass.
Student wellness — daily habits that work
Wellness isn't a destination or a product — it's a set of small, repeatable habits that keep you functioning well when university life gets intense. The ones below are consistently supported by evidence and genuinely manageable alongside a full academic schedule.
| Habit | Effort required | Evidence-backed benefit | How to start |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7–9 hours of sleep, consistent schedule | Medium | Biggest single predictor of mood, cognitive performance, and immune health | Set a consistent wake time, even on weekends. Sleep follows wake time. |
| 30 min moderate exercise, most days | Medium | Reduces anxiety and depression risk, improves sleep quality and concentration | Walk to lectures. Join a recreational sports team. Start with what's already nearby. |
| Regular home-cooked meals | Medium | Stabilises energy and mood; reduces anxiety associated with blood sugar spikes and crashes | Batch cook on Sunday. Ten meals a week from scratch is sufficient — not every single meal. |
| Daily outdoor time (10+ minutes) | Low | Light exposure regulates circadian rhythm; reduces depression risk especially in winter months | Walk outside between 9am–2pm when possible. Even grey UK daylight counts. |
| One social commitment per week | Low | Social connection is one of the strongest protective factors against depression and loneliness | Join one society. Schedule one regular coffee or call. Put it in the diary. |
| Phone-free wind-down before bed | Low | Reduces sleep onset time; lowers evening anxiety; improves next-day mood | 30 minutes before bed, phone on charge outside the bedroom. Read, journal, or listen to something instead. |
| Talking to someone when struggling | High (feels hardest) | Most reliably effective intervention for mental health — but the one most students avoid | Self-refer to university counselling. Call Samaritans. Text Shout. Tell a friend. Any of these. |
Further reading — articles by students
These articles are written by Unifresher student writers from universities across the UK — covering mental health, fitness, and wellness from personal experience.
🧠 Mental health
What causes student anxiety?
Leah Corbett, De Montfort University — March 2025
Can I get free therapy as a student?
Sofia Lambis, Bristol — March 2025
Can I get tested for ADHD through my university?
Unifresher — March 2025
10 useful mental health apps for students
Lola Hobson, Bangor University — April 2025
🏃 Fitness & self care
🌿 Student wellness
Frequently asked questions
How can I manage stress during university?
What should I do if I'm struggling with my mental health?
Does my university have to provide mental health support?
How do I create a good work-life balance at university?
What are some quick and healthy meals for busy students?
What is hangxiety and how do I deal with it?
How can I stay motivated to look after my health?
Looking after your mind and body starts with the basics
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