If you’re heading to Brighton as a student in 2026 and trying to work out what it will actually cost, this is the page. The figures below come from the same official government data that drives the rest of LiveWhere, with the inputs adjusted to reflect how students typically live: sharing a house with three or four other people, exempt from council tax, eating on a tighter budget, and walking or busing rather than running a car.
Brighton is home to the University of Sussex (just outside the city at Falmer) and the University of Brighton. As a student city, it sits somewhere distinct in the UK landscape, and the cost picture is part of that. Some of the figures below will surprise you and others will not.
The headline numbers
A realistic monthly cost for a student in Brighton, sharing a four-bedroom house with three housemates, comes to around £889/month. Here is the breakdown:
| Cost | £/month | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Rent (share of a 4-bed house) | £630 | ONS Price Index of Private Rents |
| Council tax | £0 | Full-time students are exempt |
| Energy and water (share) | £49 | Ofgem cap, Water UK averages |
| Groceries | £160 | Student estimate, below the ONS single-person figure of £220 |
| Transport | £50 | Local bus, walking, bikes |
| Total | £889 |
A few things worth saying about that figure. This estimate uses the four-bedroom rent average for Brighton (£2,514/month) divided between four people. Your actual rent will depend on where in the city you live, the condition of the property, and the timing of the let. The reference points from the same ONS data are a one-bed average of £1,198/month and a four-bedroom average of £2,514/month for the whole house.
Council tax is the genuine win. Full-time students are exempt, which saves around £645/year per person compared with what a working adult in the same area would pay (the Band D rate for Brighton is £2,581/year). If you’re sharing with non-students, the household stops being fully exempt, so this is one of the small bits of paperwork worth checking when you set up the tenancy.
This estimate is based on sharing a four-bedroom house between four people, using official rent data from the ONS Price Index of Private Rents. Your actual costs will depend on where you live, who you live with, and how you spend. See our full methodology on the about page for the underlying data sources, or the cost of living calculator for a personalised estimate.
Rent in detail
The full rent picture for Brighton, from the most recent ONS data:
- 1 bed average: £1,198/month
- 2 bed average: £1,529/month
- 3 bed average: £1,808/month
- 4+ bed average: £2,514/month
Divided across four people, the four-bed figure works out at around £630/person/month. That’s the working number used above.
Two important caveats. First, these are averages across the whole local authority of Brighton. Student areas tend to sit either below or close to the average because student houses cluster in lower-cost neighbourhoods near the universities; high-rent neighbourhoods like the most central postcodes are not where most students live. Second, the same ONS data doesn’t cover halls of residence or purpose-built student accommodation, which work differently. The Lewes Road corridor (from the centre out toward Falmer) is the student spine. Hanover and Round Hill are popular with second and third years. Some Sussex students live in Falmer itself, but most spread across central Brighton.
A note on halls. First-year students often choose halls of residence either through the university or with one of the private providers. Halls are usually more expensive than a shared house but they include bills, are easier to set up if you’re new to the city, and tend to land closer to the £180-£250/week range depending on the room and the provider. We don’t quote specific hall figures here because they vary by provider and aren’t in the ONS data.
On timing: most second and third-year student houses in Brighton go on the market between October and January for the following September. If you’re a first-year planning to share with new friends, that’s earlier than it sounds. Showings start in November in some cases. There’s no urgency in your first few weeks at university, but by Christmas the calendar starts moving.
How far does the maintenance loan stretch?
For 2025/26, the maximum maintenance loan for students living away from home outside London is £10,227/year, which works out at £852/month over 12 months. (The figures for 2026/27 had not been confirmed at the time of writing.)
On the headline figure of £889/month, the maintenance loan falls short by around £37 a month. At the 2025 National Minimum Wage of £12.21/hour for those aged 21 and over, that’s roughly 3 hours of part-time work a month, or about 1 hours a week, to close the gap. That margin assumes the maximum loan, which is only available to students from lower-income households. Many students receive less, which widens the gap further. Family support and savings are how the rest of the gap typically gets closed.
A few things to factor in alongside the headline numbers. Most students who work part-time aim for around 10 hours a week during term and a bit more in the holidays, partly because university advice generally caps recommended hours at 15-20 to protect study time. Bursaries, scholarships, and means-tested support from your university can also close part of the gap, and are worth checking with the student services team at whichever university you’re heading to.
The other useful angle is that the £889 figure is essentials only. Things outside the basket (going out, subscriptions, clothes, travel home) are real costs but vary so much by person that a single average isn’t useful. Start with the headline number, then add a personal estimate for the lifestyle costs that matter to you.
What’s it like to live in Brighton as a student?
Brighton sits at a unique angle for a UK student city. The combination of being a seaside town, a creative and queer-friendly capital, and an easy hour from central London gives it a feel that no other city in this list quite matches. The Lanes and the seafront are the obvious draws. The student social scene tends to revolve around the centre, Kemptown, and Hanover. The University of Sussex sits in a different place (Falmer, about 15 minutes by train into Brighton), which means Sussex students often live around Lewes Road in Brighton itself.
Honest downsides: Brighton is expensive, both for the size of the city and for the south coast in general. Of the cities in this guide it consistently ranks among the most costly to live in. Parking and traffic in town are a daily headache. Weather is better than the north but the wind off the sea in winter is real.
If you want a sense of how this compares against where you’re applying or already accepted, the Brighton area profile has the full cost-of-living breakdown for the whole city (not just the student adjustments), and the comparison tool lets you put Brighton side by side with any other UK area.
How does Brighton compare to other student cities?
To put the £889 figure for Brighton in context, here’s how it stacks up against two other big student cities. All numbers use the same shared-house basket described above.
Bristol comes in at around £901/month on the same basis, around £12/month more expensive than Brighton. Other costs does most of the work in that difference.
Cardiff comes in at around £677/month on the same basis, around £212/month cheaper than Brighton. Rent does most of the work in that difference.
You can see the full picture for each city in Bristol student guide, Cardiff student guide.
The bottom line
Living in Brighton as a student costs around £889/month on the basis above. That sits above the maintenance loan, so part-time work or other support is part of most students’ budgets, and the figures hold up to the most common variations: where you live in the city, who you live with, and what kind of property you take.
For a personalised estimate, run your situation through the cost of living calculator. For a year-on-year view of the wider Brighton cost picture, the full area profile has rent by bedroom count, council tax by band, and the long-term house-price history. If you want to compare student costs across UK cities, the cheapest places to live guide is a useful counterpart.