VisitPlane Editorial
Verified by Official Embassy Sources
✈️ At a glance
Route
🇬🇧 India → United Kingdom
Guide type
Visa Guides
Read time
11 min read
Updated
Jun 2026
Overview
Money is the part of a United Kingdom student-visa application that trips up the most applicants — not because the rules are unknowable, but because they're specific. The UK assesses your money for the Student visa through a strict maintenance (living-cost) rule plus your unpaid tuition. The amount and the way you hold it are both tested. This 2026 guide explains exactly how much you need, what counts as acceptable evidence, and the mistakes that turn a strong file into a refusal.
On VisitPlane, we verify every route against official sources, and our document checklist helps you assemble a clean financial file.
Key takeaway: For the Student visa, plan around £13,347 (London) or £10,224 (outside London) in living costs (£1,483 (London) / £1,136 (outside London) per month) on top of tuition, hold the money in an acceptable form, and be ready to prove it's genuinely yours. Precise, well-documented funds are what convert a hopeful application into an approval.
How Much Money You Need in 2026
You must show £1,483 per month for courses in London and £1,136 per month outside London, for up to 9 months — that is £13,347 (London) or £10,224 (outside London) — plus your first-year tuition minus any amount already paid. If you've paid a deposit or hold a scholarship, you show the remaining balance.
The single most common misunderstanding is treating the living-cost figure as the whole requirement. It isn't — it sits on top of tuition (and, for most routes, travel). Build your number from all the parts, then add a sensible buffer so a small exchange-rate move can't push you under the line.
What Counts as Proof of Funds
Acceptable evidence includes personal bank or building-society statements, a building-society passbook, a regulated financial-institution letter, an official financial-sponsor or loan letter, or a parent's account with a birth certificate and consent letter. Some applicants (e.g. those in the UK 12+ months, or nationals of certain low-risk countries) are exempt from showing maintenance.
Whatever instrument you use, the document must be recent, legible, and in your name or your sponsor's — with a clear link between you. A statement with no name, no bank letterhead, or an out-of-date balance is treated as no evidence at all.
Source and History: Why Officers Look Deeper
The defining UK rule: the money must sit in the account for 28 consecutive days, the balance must never drop below the required amount on any day, and the closing statement must be dated within 31 days of your application. Miss the 28-day window or dip below the threshold once and the visa is refused.
This is the part applicants underestimate. A balance that's high enough but appeared last week reads as borrowed-for-the-photo money. The fix is simple and entirely within your control: build the balance early, keep it stable, and keep the paperwork for every significant deposit.
A Simple Way to Build Your Funds File
Think of it as three layers. First, the living-cost layer — the £13,347 (London) or £10,224 (outside London) benchmark, held in an acceptable form for the required period. Second, the tuition layer — either paid (keep the receipt) or shown as available. Third, the evidence layer — the statements, letters, and source documents that prove the first two are real. Assemble all three before you book your appointment, not after.
A short worked example: if your tuition is mid-range and you add the United Kingdom living benchmark of £13,347 (London) or £10,224 (outside London) plus travel, you can see your true target at a glance — and you avoid the classic error of showing only living costs while forgetting that fees sit on top.
Documents to Prepare
Keep an organised set: your admission or offer letter, evidence of paid fees or a scholarship, bank statements covering the required history, any loan sanction letter, and — if someone funds you — a sponsor letter, proof of relationship, and the sponsor's income evidence. Budget separately for the Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS), paid in full at application (currently £776 per year for students), and the visa fee. These are paid, not just shown, so factor them into your real costs.
Funds for Dependants and Multi-Year Courses
The headline figure of £1,483/£1,136 per month covers a single student for one year. Two situations change your number. First, dependants: if a partner or child joins you, the UK expects you to show additional living funds for each person, so recalculate before you apply rather than assuming the single figure is enough. Second, multi-year courses: while you usually only prove the first year in full, officers increasingly want to see that later years are realistically fundable — a sponsor with steady income, a multi-year loan sanction, or a scholarship that runs the length of the course. Showing you've thought past year one signals a genuine, well-planned student rather than someone who has scraped together a single year's worth of statements.
How Your Funds Are Actually Verified
It helps to picture what happens to your file. An officer cross-checks three things: the amount (does it meet or exceed the benchmark plus tuition?), the form (is it an acceptable instrument such as a 28-day bank statement, held for the required time?), and the origin (does the money's history make sense given who you and your sponsor are?). A file passes when all three line up and fails when one contradicts another — for example, a balance that comfortably clears the threshold but landed in the account three days ago, or a sponsor whose declared income can't plausibly produce the funds shown. Anticipate each check and you remove the guesswork.
Timeline: When to Start Building Your Funds
The biggest, cheapest improvement you can make is starting early. Aim to have your living-cost funds in place and stable at least three to six months before you apply, so your statements show a calm, consistent history rather than a last-minute spike. Use that runway to arrange your 28-day bank statement, pay or part-pay tuition, sort out the Immigration Health Surcharge, and gather source documents for any large deposit. Applicants who begin the financial groundwork the moment they receive an offer almost always present a cleaner file than those who chase the money in the final fortnight — and a calm file is a credible one. Keep your CAS consistent with the numbers throughout.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
📬
Found this helpful?
Get our weekly visa newsletter — one email, real updates, zero spam.
- Showing only living costs and forgetting tuition (or vice versa).
- A single large deposit just before applying, with no source documentation.
- Funds in a third party's name with no proof of relationship or consent.
- Statements that are out of date, unnamed, or missing bank letterhead.
- Illiquid assets (property, untradeable investments) presented as available cash.
- Ignoring the holding-period or exchange-rate buffer, so the balance dips below the line.
How to Prepare
Confirm the exact figure for your course and city, build your funds early so you have a clean multi-month history, gather your source documents, and keep tuition evidence separate from living-cost evidence so an officer can see each layer clearly. Our document checklist walks through the full set.
Use the VisitPlane Visa Wizard to confirm your requirements and the VisitPlane document checklist to assemble your file. VisitPlane verifies every route against official sources.
Self-Funded or Sponsored: Getting the Paperwork Right
Whether you fund yourself or rely on a sponsor changes the documents, not the standard. Self-funded applicants lead with their own statements and a clear source for the balance — salary, savings, a matured deposit, or a sale you can evidence. Sponsored applicants (usually a parent) must connect three things: proof of the relationship, the sponsor's own funds, and the sponsor's income that explains those funds. A short, signed sponsor letter stating who they are, how they're related to you, that they'll cover your studies, and the amount they're committing ties the package together. The mistake to avoid is leaving the officer to infer the link between you and the money — spell it out so there's nothing to assume.
The Bottom Line
United Kingdom's financial test isn't designed to catch you out — it's designed to confirm you can study without running out of money. Hit the £13,347 (London) or £10,224 (outside London) living benchmark plus tuition, hold the funds in an acceptable form for the required period, document where every significant amount came from, and keep your evidence organised. Do that, and the financial part of your application stops being the risk and starts being the strongest thing in your file.
Frequently Asked Questions
See the FAQ section below for quick answers on how much you need, what counts as proof, how long funds must be held, and whether a sponsor can fund you. The short version: plan around £13,347 (London) or £10,224 (outside London) in living costs plus tuition for the Student visa, hold it in an acceptable form, and be ready to prove the money is genuinely yours with a clear source and history.
Sources
- UK Government — Student visa: money you need: https://www.gov.uk/student-visa/money
- UK Government — Student visa: https://www.gov.uk/student-visa
- UKVI — Immigration Health Surcharge: https://www.gov.uk/healthcare-immigration-application
VisitPlane — visa requirements, decoded in seconds. Free, accurate, always updated. Financial requirements change; always confirm the current figures on the official United Kingdom government site before applying.
Build your file with the VisitPlane checklist
Get instant visa requirements, fees, and processing times — completely free.
Check Visa Requirements →📋 Check Visa Requirements
Frequently Asked Questions
How much money do I need for a UK student visa?▾
£1,483/month in London or £1,136/month outside, for up to 9 months, plus your first-year tuition minus any amount already paid.
What is the 28-day rule?▾
Your funds must sit in the account for 28 consecutive days, never dropping below the required amount, with the statement dated within 31 days of applying.
What counts as proof?▾
Bank or building-society statements, a regulated-institution letter, an official sponsor or loan letter, or a parent’s account with consent and a birth certificate.
What about the health surcharge?▾
The Immigration Health Surcharge (currently £776/year for students) is paid in full at application — budget for it on top of fees.
Recommended for this trip
Travel Insurance — United Kingdom
Not required but highly recommended. Medical bills abroad can reach $50,000+.
eSIM for United Kingdom
Stay connected from arrival. Activate before you fly — no SIM swap needed.
Flights: India → United Kingdom
Compare 700+ airlines and find cashback-eligible fares with WayAway.
Affiliate links — VisitPlane may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend services with ≥4★ Trustpilot ratings.
About VisitPlane
VisitPlane is a free visa-requirements platform covering 197 countries. The VisitPlane Editorial team verifies every route against official embassy and government sources, so you get accurate, up-to-date guidance — no signup required. Explore more VisitPlane tools below.
VisitPlane — visa requirements, decoded in seconds. Free, accurate, always updated. Check your visa requirements →