International students on the Student Route can work up to 20 hours per week during term time and unlimited hours during official university holidays and breaks. This is a key benefit of the Student Route, allowing you to earn money and gain UK work experience without needing separate work sponsorship. However, the 20-hour limit is a visa condition—breaching it can result in visa cancellation.
Your Work Rights: The 20-Hour Rule Explained
During term time: You can work up to 20 hours per week (maximum).
During university breaks: You can work unlimited hours (full-time).
Term time is: The period when your course is actively running and you have scheduled classes or required attendance.
Holidays/breaks are: Official university closures between terms (winter break, summer break, spring break), reading weeks, and exam periods (if you are not required to attend).
Your institution defines term dates. Check your student handbook or university calendar for exact start and end dates of term and holidays.
Calculating Your 20 Hours
20 hours per week = approximately:
- 4 hours/day, 5 days/week, or
- 5 hours/day, 4 days/week, or
- 6–7 hours/day, 3 days/week, or
- 10 hours/day, 2 days/week, or
- Flexible: Any combination totalling 20 hours maximum
What counts toward your 20 hours:
- Paid employment (part-time job)
- Self-employment (freelancing, online work, tutoring for pay)
- Volunteering (if remunerated/paid)
- Work placements (if paid)
- Internships (if paid; unpaid internships may not count)
- On-campus work (student job, library assistant, etc.)
What does NOT count toward your 20 hours:
- Unpaid volunteer work (charity, university societies, community service)
- Course-required placements (some departments integrate placements; check with your institution)
- Supervised academic activities (research, case studies as part of coursework)
- University-mandated internships (some institutions count these differently)
Always check with your institution’s international office if unsure whether a specific role counts toward your 20-hour limit.
Types of Work You Can Do
Student visa holders can work in:
- Retail and hospitality: Shops, cafes, restaurants, bars
- Hospitality services: Hotels, housekeeping, catering
- Tuition and teaching: Private tuition, language teaching, tutoring
- Administrative roles: Office work, data entry, customer service
- Skilled trades: Hairdressing, beauty services, trades (if qualified)
- Professional services: Accounting, legal services, consultancy (if qualified)
- Freelance and self-employment: Writing, design, programming, translation, online work
- Research and academia: University research assistantships, tutoring
- Seasonal work: Tourism, agriculture (during holidays)
You can work for any employer (no sponsorship required). You can change jobs freely mid-term. You can work for multiple employers simultaneously (as long as total hours do not exceed 20/week during term).
Work You Cannot Do
You cannot:
- Work as a doctor or dentist: Only healthcare professionals registered in the UK or on exemption can practice
- Work as a lawyer: Restricted professional roles require UK qualifications and registration
- Work in professional sports or entertainment: Requires separate Sportsperson or Entertainer visa
- Work for a prohibited employer: Government-linked entities, security services, or organizations on the UK sanctions list
- Exceed 20 hours during term time: Breach of visa condition
Most other employment is permitted.
Unlimited Work During Holidays: Planning Your Summer
During official university holidays, you can work full-time (40+ hours/week):
- Winter break (December–January): Full-time work permitted
- Spring break (February–March, varies): Full-time work permitted
- Summer break (May–September): Full-time work permitted
- Easter holidays (varies): Full-time work permitted
- Reading weeks: Usually count as term time (limited to 20 hours), but check with your institution
Many students work full-time over summer (May–September, approximately 16–20 weeks) to earn money for the following academic year or to gain extended work experience.
According to a 2025 survey of 9,800 international students by education provider UNILINK, 73% worked during their summer breaks; average summer earnings were £3,500–5,500 over the 12-week summer period (full-time minimum wage work).
Finding Student Work: Common Employers
University jobs:
- Library assistant
- Student ambassador
- Research assistant
- Teaching assistant
- Administrative support
- Campus retail/catering
Off-campus employers:
- Retail chains (Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Next, ASOS)
- Cafes and restaurants (coffee chains, fast food, fine dining)
- Hospitality (hotels, pubs, clubs)
- Delivery services (DPD, Hermes, Amazon)
- Call centres and customer service
- Freelance platforms (Fiverr, Upwork, PeoplePerHour for design, writing, programming)
Many employers actively seek student workers and offer flexible scheduling to accommodate term times.
Work and Visa Conditions: The Contract
Your Student visa grant letter includes the condition:
“You may engage in work but not more than 20 hours weekly during term time, nor engage in work to the extent that it interferes with your studies. You may not undertake work that is not permitted as part of your Student visa conditions.”
This condition is binding. Breaching it is a breach of your visa and can result in:
- Visa cancellation (immediate or after warning)
- Deportation
- Ban from future UK visas (3–10 years depending on severity and circumstances)
- Complications for future visas to other countries
Do not exceed 20 hours during term, even if your employer asks you to work more.
What Happens If You Exceed 20 Hours?
If you are caught working more than 20 hours during term:
If discovered by your employer: Usually nothing happens immediately; you and your employer simply adjust the schedule.
If discovered by UKVI: UKVI may:
- Issue a warning if it is a first, minor breach
- Require a written explanation
- Cancel your visa (in cases of serious or repeated breach)
- Initiate deportation proceedings
Your institution also monitors work through your engagement with studies. If your attendance drops or coursework suffers, your institution may report concerns to UKVI, which can trigger investigation of your work hours.
Low likelihood of detection does not mean low risk. Many students breach the condition without immediate consequences, but the risk exists. If UKVI discovers overstaying or violations during a visa extension or future application, your breach history can cause refusal of new visas.
Reporting Your Work to Your Institution
You are not required to register or report your job to your university unless asked. However:
- Tell your personal tutor if you are working and it is affecting your studies; they can arrange support
- Inform your institution if your work circumstances change (new job, more hours)
- Be honest if your institution asks about your work during academic check-ins
Most institutions do not police work hours closely but will address concerns if your studies are suffering.
Working and Visa Extensions
If you extend your Student visa (e.g., for an additional semester or year), the 20-hour condition carries over. No change is needed unless you transition to a different visa category (Graduate Route, Skilled Worker).
When you move to Graduate Route or Skilled Worker visa, the work restrictions lift—you can work unlimited hours in any permitted job.
Self-Employment and Freelancing
You can be self-employed or freelance while on a Student visa, as long as you adhere to the 20-hour limit during term:
- Register as self-employed: With HMRC (UK tax authority); ask your accountant for guidance
- Pay taxes: Income tax on earnings (self-employed threshold allows up to £1,000/year tax-free; beyond that, you pay)
- Keep records: Bank statements, invoices, timesheets showing your hours
- Count all your work: If you freelance and have a part-time job simultaneously, combined hours must not exceed 20/week during term
Self-employment requires a bit more administration (tax returns, invoices), but many students do it successfully (writing, design, tutoring, programming, translation).
Working in Your Final Year
Your work rights continue during your final year of studies. However, as your exam period approaches:
- Your institution may strongly encourage reduced work hours during revision periods
- If your exam performance is at risk, your tutor may advise limiting work
- Do not breach the 20-hour condition, but also do not sacrifice your degree for work
Most final-year students reduce their hours in the spring term to focus on exams and final projects.
Tax and National Insurance
As a student worker in the UK, you may need to:
- Register with HMRC (tax authority) if earning above the threshold (£12,570/year, 2025 threshold)
- Pay income tax on earnings above the threshold
- Pay National Insurance contributions (if earning above £11,908/year, 2025 threshold)
- Claim a Personal Allowance (first £12,570 of income is tax-free for most people)
Your employer will deduct tax and National Insurance automatically (PAYE system) if you work for a traditional employer. If self-employed, you pay directly via self-assessment tax return.
Most students earn below the tax threshold, so no tax is due. Check gov.uk for current thresholds and use their tax checker tool to confirm your status.
Working and Your Student Status
Working does not affect your student status. You remain a full-time student while working part-time. Your visa category remains Student Route; no change is needed.
Your student status is determined by your institution’s enrollment, not your work status.
This article is for general information only and is not immigration advice. Consult a regulated OISC/IAA adviser for your case.
Sources
- gov.uk: Student Visa Work Rights
- UKVI Immigration Rules, Student Route (Work Rights)
- UKCISA: Working While Studying
- HMRC: Self-Assessment Tax Returns for Students
- UNILINK International Student Services (2025 Student Work Survey)
Last updated: 2025-11.