Finding accommodation as an international student involves a different set of decisions and obstacles than it does for domestic students. This hub covers the guarantor problem and every alternative, which accommodation type is best suited to your situation, how to book from abroad, what you need to confirm before your visa application, and when to apply for each option.
Yes. You have four options: university halls (usually no guarantor required at all), providers with dedicated international guarantor schemes (iQ and Yugo accept overseas-based guarantors through a formal process), a UK guarantor service such as Housing Hand (typically 3 to 5% of annual rent as a one-off fee), or advance rent payment (3 to 6 months upfront instead of a guarantor, available at many providers). University halls remain the simplest route if none of the alternatives suits your situation.
Yes, and most international students do. Both university halls and PBSA providers allow online booking and contract signing without an in-person visit. PBSA providers offer virtual viewings and 360-degree room tours. For private renting, not visiting before signing is risky: if this is your route, use a reputable letting agent you can communicate with remotely and understand your rights if the property does not match what was described.
University halls first year, almost always. No guarantor, priority allocation, on-campus support, bills included, shorter contracts aligned to the academic year. The university manages the accommodation and the welfare team is close by. PBSA is a strong second choice: fully manageable remotely, bills included, more flexible cancellation policies for results day. Private renting is the most complex option and is best left until you know the city and have a group.
As early as possible after your university offer is confirmed. Most UK universities open their international student accommodation window before the general application window: this is specifically to give you priority. If your university sends you an accommodation application link with your offer letter, use it immediately. Do not wait until you have confirmed your visa or sorted flights: accommodation is time-sensitive in a way that most other arrival logistics are not.
The UK student accommodation market is designed primarily for domestic students. International students face a specific set of additional challenges that domestic students do not encounter, and knowing what they are in advance makes navigating the process significantly more straightforward.
Most PBSA providers and all private landlords require a guarantor who is a UK resident. If your family is based overseas, this is a genuine barrier. Solutions exist but need to be identified before you start booking, not during.
Most domestic students can view accommodation before signing. Most international students cannot. This increases the importance of virtual viewings, provider reputation research, and understanding cancellation policies before you commit.
Many student visa applications require a confirmed UK address. Securing accommodation early means you have this ready. Leaving accommodation until after visa confirmation creates a circular problem.
International students often arrive before domestic students for orientation programmes, English language courses or simply because of longer travel. Not all halls and PBSA start dates align with early arrivals. Confirm availability for your actual arrival date, not just the term start.
Setting up a UK bank account takes time after arrival. Some providers and landlords require UK bank transfers: identify early whether your provider accepts international payments or requires a UK account. Most PBSA providers accept international payment methods.
Catered halls menus in the UK are designed around British dietary norms. Students with specific cultural dietary requirements (halal, specific cuisines, particular food practices) often find self-catered accommodation a better fit. This is worth factoring into your accommodation type choice before the options narrow.
The guarantor requirement is the most common accommodation barrier for international students. A guarantor is someone who legally commits to covering your rent if you do not pay. For most PBSA providers and all private landlords, this person must normally be a UK resident. If your family is not based in the UK, the standard requirement is unmet. Every workable alternative is listed below.
| Alternative | How it works | Cost | Availability |
|---|---|---|---|
| University halls | Most UK universities do not require a guarantor for their own halls. Priority allocation is usually given to international students specifically to remove this barrier. | No additional cost | Always: best option |
| International guarantor scheme (iQ) | iQ Student Accommodation has a formal scheme accepting overseas-based guarantors. Your parent or family member abroad can act as guarantor through their process. | Usually no extra fee | All iQ properties |
| International guarantor scheme (Yugo) | Yugo operates a similar international guarantor scheme to iQ: overseas guarantors accepted through a formal verification process. | Usually no extra fee | All Yugo properties |
| Guarantor service (Housing Hand) | Housing Hand is the main UK guarantor service: they act as your UK guarantor for a one-off fee. Accepted by most major PBSA providers and many private landlords. | Typically 3.5 to 5% of annual rent | Widely accepted |
| Advance rent payment | Pay 3 to 6 months rent upfront instead of providing a guarantor. Available at many PBSA providers: confirm before booking. | Large upfront cash requirement | Most PBSA: check first |
| Other PBSA providers case by case | Some providers (Unite Students, Student Roost, Fresh, CRM Students) consider international guarantors or alternative arrangements on a case-by-case basis. Ask directly. | Provider-dependent | Ask each provider |
The table below covers the major PBSA providers' policies on international guarantors, advance rent and virtual viewings as of 2026. Always confirm the current policy directly with the provider before booking: policies can vary by city and property.
| Provider | International guarantor? | Advance rent option? | Guarantor service accepted? | Virtual viewing? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| iQ Student Accommodation | Yes: dedicated scheme | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Yugo | Yes: dedicated scheme | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Unite Students | Case by case | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Student Roost | Case by case | Some properties | Yes | Yes |
| Vita Student | Case by case | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Fresh Student Living | Case by case | Some properties | Yes | Yes |
| CRM Students | Case by case | Some properties | Yes | Selected buildings |
| University Halls | Not required | Not required | Not required | Varies by university |
Information correct as of April 2026. Confirm policies directly with providers before booking as these change periodically and may vary by city or property.
For the majority of international students arriving in the UK for the first time, university-managed halls is the right first-year accommodation choice. The combination of no guarantor requirement, priority allocation, on-campus support infrastructure and bills-inclusive pricing makes it the most accessible and lowest-friction option.
Universities send accommodation application details with or immediately after your offer letter. The link is to an early application window specifically for international students. Use it immediately: the guarantee applies to those who apply within this window, not those who apply before a general deadline that also covers domestic students.
If you have medical, disability or dietary requirements that affect your accommodation needs (halal catering availability, accessibility requirements, noise sensitivity) put these in writing at the application stage. Universities have formal processes for accommodation adjustments. Apply early and state your requirements explicitly: do not assume standard allocation will account for them.
University halls contracts typically start on the academic year start date. If you are arriving 1 to 2 weeks earlier for international orientation, confirm whether your hall is accessible before the contract start. Some universities allow early arrivals; others do not, or charge an additional nightly rate. Knowing this before you book your flights avoids a practical problem on arrival.
The UK student accommodation booking process is fully designed for remote completion. Every major provider offers online applications, digital contract signing and virtual viewings. The steps below apply to PBSA booking specifically: university halls follow the same process through your university's portal.
Every major PBSA provider offers virtual tours: 360-degree room views, building walkthroughs and in some cases live video tours with a team member. Use these before booking. A 15-minute virtual viewing provides enough information to make a confident decision about room type, building condition and location. Ask the provider specifically to show you the shared spaces and the kitchen if you are booking a cluster room.
Most PBSA providers allow penalty-free cancellation if you miss your grades and do not attend university (results day cancellation policy). Confirm this applies to your booking before paying a holding deposit. The policy window is usually 72 hours after results day: keep the provider's contact details easily accessible on results day even if you are in a different time zone.
Many PBSA booking systems automatically use UK time for deadlines. A 'book by midnight' deadline in October is midnight UK time, which may be significantly different from your local time. Check all deadline communications for time zone confirmation.
Passport, university offer letter and guarantor details (or your guarantor service application reference) should all be scanned clearly before you begin. Applications are timed in some cases: having documents ready means you can complete the application in one session rather than losing your session while you look for a document.
The UK Student visa application (and the Certificate of Acceptance for Studies that precedes it) requires a UK address. Securing accommodation before or during the visa application process gives you this address to provide. If you are applying for your CAS and do not yet have a confirmed UK address, your university's accommodation letter or a confirmed PBSA booking confirmation can serve as evidence of your intended address.
Important: The address on your visa documentation should match where you actually live. If you change accommodation after arriving, notify your university's international student team so they can update your sponsorship record if required. Staying in accommodation different from the address on your student record without notifying your sponsor university can create compliance issues.
Once in the UK, your accommodation address is also relevant to: registering with a GP, opening a bank account, receiving the BRP (Biometric Residence Permit) if on a student visa, and council tax exemption applications if in private accommodation.
The accommodation steps below are sequenced by when they should happen. Acting on each at the right time prevents the most common problems international students experience.
Apply as soon as you receive accommodation details with your offer. Do not wait for an unconditional offer if conditional applications are accepted.
Act immediatelyIdentify whether you need a guarantor, whether your parent or family can serve as international guarantor via iQ or Yugo, or whether you will use Housing Hand. Have this decided and in progress before you select a specific room.
Sort earlyOnce your guarantor or alternative is in place, book your PBSA or confirm your halls allocation. Get written confirmation of your booking and the address.
Confirm and documentYour PBSA booking confirmation or university halls letter provides the UK address needed for your CAS and visa application. Keep this document accessible.
Visa documentationCheck whether your accommodation is accessible on your actual arrival date. If arriving before the contract start, confirm early check-in availability and whether there is a charge.
Confirm logisticsConfirm how rent will be paid and whether your provider accepts international payments or requires a UK bank account. Set up an international student bank account (HSBC, Monzo, Wise) if needed.
BankingComplete check-in, collect keys and note your building's emergency contact. Register your address with your university's international student team. Apply for council tax exemption if in private accommodation.
Register addressRegister with a local GP (your university likely has a campus medical practice). If in private accommodation, apply for council tax exemption with your local council using a student status letter from your university.
AdminThe accommodation experience and considerations differ slightly depending on where you are coming from. The notes below reflect common practical differences by region.
International students cannot book PBSA without a UK guarantor.
Multiple routes exist: iQ and Yugo accept overseas guarantors through formal schemes, Housing Hand acts as a UK guarantor for a fee, and most providers accept advance rent payment instead. International students book PBSA successfully every year. The barrier is real but it is not a closed door.
You should wait until your visa is confirmed before booking accommodation.
The opposite is usually better. Securing accommodation early gives you the UK address needed for your visa application and CAS. Most accommodation bookings allow penalty-free cancellation if you do not get into your chosen university. Book as early as possible: waiting for visa confirmation means competing for fewer rooms, usually at higher prices.
University halls are lower quality than PBSA.
Quality varies across both types. Modern university halls are comparable to PBSA in room quality, facilities and support. Some of the best first-year accommodation in the UK is university-managed. The key advantage of university halls for international students is not higher quality: it is no guarantor requirement and priority allocation. Quality should be assessed on the specific property, not the accommodation type.
Private renting is a viable option for most international first years.
Private renting is significantly more complex for international students: UK guarantor required, 12-month contract signed in January for properties you cannot visit, joint tenancy liability with people you have not yet met, and no management support structure. These challenges are manageable but they are best navigated once you know the city and have a trusted group. Almost all university advice to international students recommends halls or PBSA for year one.
This hub covers the overview. Each of the guides below goes into detail on a specific topic that is particularly relevant to international students making accommodation decisions.
Who qualifies, income requirements, every alternative if you cannot provide one
TimingFull application calendar, PBSA booking windows, international priority dates
The processHalls, PBSA and private renting: the full application process for each
Compare providersAll 7 major providers honestly compared: prices, policies, student reviews
Protect your moneyWhat PBSA and private rental deposits cover and how to get yours back
BudgetingFull price comparison by city, accommodation type and room type
Answer 4 questions about your budget, priorities and guarantor situation. We match you to providers whose policies work for international students in your circumstances.
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