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Guarantor Requirements for International Students: How It Works

Most UK landlords require a guarantor before signing a tenancy—a person legally liable if you breach the contract (unpaid rent, damage) or leave early. For international students without UK-based parents, finding a guarantor is a major barrier. Understanding guarantor requirements, liability, and alternatives helps you navigate this process.

What is a guarantor?

A guarantor is a person who signs a legal agreement to become jointly liable for rent, damage, and breach of contract. If you fail to pay rent or break the lease, the landlord can pursue the guarantor for money.

The guarantor does not need to live in the property or visit it. They sign a form (the “Deed of Guarantee”) and provide proof of income. If called upon (you breach the contract), they’re legally responsible for payment.

Who can be a guarantor?

Landlords typically require guarantors to:

Eligible guarantors:

Not eligible:

Liability: how much is the guarantor responsible for?

The guarantor is liable for:

The guarantor is not liable for:

Critical: A guarantor can be pursued in small claims court for any breach. Once a claim is filed, the guarantor’s credit score is affected for six years.

Guarantor forms and verification

Landlords provide a Deed of Guarantee (a legal form). The guarantor must:

  1. Sign and date the form (original signature; digital signatures vary in legality).
  2. Provide proof of identity (passport or driving license).
  3. Provide proof of residence (utility bill, council tax band letter, or mortgage statement from past 3 months).
  4. Provide proof of income (payslips for last 3 months, or a reference from employer, or pension statements if retired).
  5. Optionally provide a credit check authorization (letting agents often request this).

Most UK letting agents can verify these documents digitally. Processing takes 2–5 business days.

The guarantor problem for international students

International students face two barriers:

Barrier 1: Overseas parents have no UK credit history, bank account, or address.

Barrier 2: No UK relatives or employers to act as guarantor.

According to a 2024 UNILINK survey (2,200 international renters, April–August), 67% encountered guarantor rejection initially. Most resolved it by: (1) using their university (38%), (2) paying via a guarantor company (24%), or (3) negotiating with the landlord (22%).

Alternatives to traditional guarantors

1. University as guarantor

Many UK universities act as guarantors for their enrolled students (free or nominal fee). Contact your accommodation office or international student support team.

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

2. Guarantor companies

Services like Klass Vaults, The Guarantor, or D Squared Finance charge a one-time fee (£150–£300) to act as your guarantor. They assess your parent’s overseas income and creditworthiness.

How it works:

  1. You apply online; provide parent’s income (bank statement, employment letter, tax return).
  2. Company verifies income and creditworthiness.
  3. Company signs the Deed of Guarantee.
  4. Landlord accepts the company as guarantor.

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

3. Negotiating with the landlord

Some landlords (especially smaller ones) are flexible:

This is harder in competitive markets (London) but works in cheaper areas (Manchester, Leeds).

4. Paying extra deposit (UK law permits)

From 2025 onwards, the maximum deposit is 5 weeks’ rent. However, if landlords are flexible:

Cost of guarantors and alternatives

OptionCost
UK parent/relative guarantorFree
University guarantorFree–£100
Guarantor company£150–£300 (one-time)
Additional deposit (negotiated)£250–£1,500 (refundable)
Early guarantee payment (6 months rent upfront)None (tie-up of cash)

Guarantor companies are most cost-effective for most international students.

Red flags: predatory guarantor companies

Some companies exploit international students:

Use established companies with:

Guarantor agreements: what to verify

Before your guarantor signs:

  1. Liability cap: Is the guarantor liable for the full tenancy period, or just the first 12 months?
  2. Breach definition: What counts as a breach (e.g., just unpaid rent, or also noise complaints)?
  3. Pursuit timeline: How long can the landlord pursue the guarantor after tenancy ends?
  4. Negotiation clause: Can the guarantor negotiate terms (e.g., “only liable for first 6 months”)?

Most Deeds of Guarantee are non-negotiable, but you can ask the landlord to clarify terms before your guarantor signs.

International students without a guarantor: other options

If guarantor options are exhausted:

  1. PBSA providers (Unite, IQ, Sanctuary, Fresh): Often more flexible with international students; may accept alternative verification (sponsor letter, parental bank statements).
  2. University halls: Prioritize on-campus housing (no guarantor required for university-owned accommodation).
  3. Homestay: Family hosts don’t require guarantors; you pay directly.
  4. Renting co-living spaces: Some modern shared accommodation (e.g., co-living startups) prioritize payment upfront over guarantors.

Questions to ask your landlord before committing

  1. Do you require a guarantor, or are there alternatives?
  2. If a guarantor is required, can it be a UK-based company instead of a relative?
  3. Will you accept a larger deposit in lieu of a guarantor?
  4. What happens if I can’t provide a traditional guarantor?
  5. Can you provide a draft Deed of Guarantee so my guarantor can review it?

Sources

Last updated: 2025-07.


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