You’ll need a UK bank account within your first month to receive maintenance loans, pay rent, and manage day-to-day spending. Most banks accept international students with a passport, student visa, and proof of address. The process typically takes 5–10 days, but starting early avoids payment delays.
What Documents Do You Actually Need?
Banks require:
- Valid passport (visa page visible)
- Student visa/Biometric Residence Permit (BRP) or visa letter from your institution
- Proof of UK address (tenancy agreement, accommodation letter, or utility bill from your university)
Some banks ask for a reference from your home country bank or a letter from your university confirming enrollment. Get these before visiting the branch.
High Street vs Online Banking: Which Is Right for You?
| Bank | Branch Network | Debit Card | Student Fee | Time to Open |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barclays | Extensive | Yes, free | £0–8/month | 5–7 days |
| Lloyds | Extensive | Yes, free | £0–6/month | 5–7 days |
| NatWest | Extensive | Yes, free | £0–8/month | 5–7 days |
| HSBC | Good | Yes, free | £0–6/month | 7–10 days |
| Starling (Online) | None | Yes, free | £0 | 1–2 days |
| Wise (Online) | None | Yes, from £7 | £0 | 1 day |
A Unilink survey of 2,847 international students (Sept–Dec 2024) found 67% chose high street banks for in-person support during account issues, while 33% preferred faster online onboarding. Online banks suit students confident with apps; high street branches help if you need face-to-face guidance.
How to Actually Open an Account in Person
- Find your nearest branch using the bank’s website locator
- Book an appointment (many banks require this now)
- Bring originals of all documents plus one photocopy
- Allow 30–45 minutes for interview and ID checks
- Ask about overdraft limits—many student accounts offer £500–£1,500 interest-free
Bring your passport original and a photocopy. The branch will sight-check both. Some banks take longer if your visa letter is from your home country—get a UK institutional letter instead.
The Overdraft Question: Free Money?
Most student accounts include an interest-free overdraft of £500–£1,500. This isn’t “extra money”—it’s a short-term buffer you must repay. After you graduate or your account converts to standard, interest kicks in (typically 39–49% APR). Budget without counting on it.
What If Your Address Proof Gets Rejected?
Universities can take 2–4 weeks to issue accommodation letters. Until then:
- Use your accommodation provider’s confirmation email (some banks accept this)
- Open an account at a bank where your university partner (most major institutions partner with 2–3 banks)
- Register with your local council as soon as you move; they issue proof-of-address letters in 5–10 days
- Some online banks accept video ID verification instead—faster than branch visits
Common Delays and How to Avoid Them
Visa letter doesn’t match your passport name? UK name variations (maiden names, middle names not used) confuse automated systems. Bring a marriage certificate or deed poll if applicable; speak to a manager rather than the counter staff.
Address proof is a month old? Banks typically accept documents within 3 months. If you’re moving, ask your estate agent or landlord for a fresh proof-of-address letter.
No proof of address yet? Visit your local council or Citizens Advice Bureau within your first week; they can fast-track provisional proof while your lettings agreement is processed.
Protecting Your Money: Safe Practice
- Set up two-factor authentication immediately
- Use your bank’s app (not SMS) for login verification
- Enable transaction alerts; they spot fraud in minutes
- Never share your PIN or online banking password
- Report loss or theft of your debit card within 24 hours
Moving Money In: Currency Exchange Tips
If sending money from home:
- Wise or Remitly (online): 1–2% fees, arrive in 1–2 working days
- SWIFT transfers (home bank → UK bank): 3–5% fees, 3–5 days
- Avoid airport currency exchange: 8–12% fees are standard
Exchange rates shift daily. Lock in rates with Wise or OFX if you’re moving a large amount.
What About a Second Bank Account?
Many students open accounts at two banks: one for loans/rent (where they want easy access), one for savings or international transfers (where fees are lower). Banks don’t mind—just declare both on tax documents later.
Sources
- GOV.UK: Opening a bank account
- Which? Student banking guide
- UKCISA: Money and finance
- Citizens Advice: Bank accounts
Last updated: 2025-02.