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Dec 18, 2025

The Landlord’s Guide to What Students Actually Want in 2025/26

loc8me
loc8me

5 min read

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Student renters in 2025/26 are more switched on, more cost-aware, and far less impressed by surface-level shine. 

That doesn’t mean they’re demanding penthouse living; it means they want a home that runs smoothly. The modern viewing is less about “Is it cute?” and more about “Will this make life easier or harder for the next 10 months?” 

Landlords who understand that shift tend to see fewer voids, fewer complaints, and better word-of-mouth.

Location still wins, but convenience is the real prize

Location remains the first filter, but it’s not always about being right on the doorstep of campus. Students are looking for an easy routine: a straightforward commute, reliable public transport, and the essentials close by. 

Proximity to supermarkets, takeaways, gyms, and late-opening convenience shops often matters just as much as distance to lectures, because student life isn’t lived on a timetable that ends at 4pm.

A useful way to think about location in 2025/26 is “friction.” If getting home involves multiple buses, long walks in the dark, or expensive daily travel, students will either avoid it or demand a discount. 

If the route is simple – even if it’s a little further out – many will happily trade a few extra minutes for better value and a calmer living setup.

Bills included: certainty beats cheapness

If there’s one phrase that still turns heads on a listing, it’s “bills included,” and that’s because it removes uncertainty. 

Students don’t just budget for rent; they budget for risk. Energy costs fluctuate, water usage can get messy in shared houses, and nobody wants the end-of-tenancy argument about who owes what.

In 2025/26, bundling bills isn’t simply about being competitive – it’s about reducing decision fatigue. When students compare properties, the one with fewer unknowns often feels like the safer pick, even if the headline rent is slightly higher. 

If you don’t include bills, clarity becomes your weapon: realistic ranges, what’s covered, what isn’t, and how the household is expected to manage payments.

Wi-Fi is no longer a perk — it’s part of the tenancy experience

Students will ask about Wi-Fi early, and they’ll ask in detail. That’s because Wi-Fi isn’t just entertainment; it’s lectures, coursework, job applications, video calls home, and sometimes paid work. 

In practice, the question isn’t “Do you have Wi-Fi?” but “Will it work in my bedroom, consistently, at peak times, without drama?”

The landlords who do best here treat the internet like a utility. They invest in a decent package, place the router intelligently, and – crucially – think about coverage across the whole house. 

If the signal dies upstairs or drops whenever two people stream at the same time, students will remember. And they will tell their friends.

Room size: privacy, productivity, and storage all rolled into one

Room size matters because the bedroom is the student’s personal HQ. 

Even in sociable households, students want somewhere they can shut the door, focus, decompress, and feel like they have a bit of control. That doesn’t mean every room needs to be huge, but it does need to be functional.

A good student room in 2025/26 is defined by how it lives. A proper desk setup, enough plug sockets, good lighting, and storage that prevents clutter are often more valuable than an extra square metre. 

When a room feels cramped, students don’t just worry about comfort; they worry about whether the house will feel stressful during exam season.

The kitchen and living space: where houses are made or broken

Shared houses succeed or fail in the communal areas. Students don’t expect luxury, but they do expect a kitchen that can handle real usage without becoming a battleground. If there’s one oven tray, not enough fridge space, and nowhere to eat together, the house can feel chaotic fast.

Living rooms have also become more important again – not as party zones, but as social and mental “breathing space.” A house that offers a comfortable shared area signals balance: you can be friendly without being forced into each other’s bedrooms. 

Even small touches – decent seating, a usable dining table, and a layout that doesn’t feel like an afterthought – can change the feel of a property and the tone of a tenancy.

Nice-to-haves that genuinely sway decisions

Once the essentials are covered, certain extras can push a property from “fine” to “favourite.” 

Dishwashers are a classic example because they reduce friction. Fewer disputes about washing up usually means a happier household, and happier households tend to look after the home better.

A second bathroom can be a quiet game-changer, especially for larger groups. Outdoor space, even if modest, can add appeal when it feels private and usable rather than neglected. 

Secure bike storage is valuable in many towns and cities, and good-quality furniture that doesn’t feel like it survived five previous tenancies can leave a strong impression during viewings.

What students won’t forgive: damp, delays, and feeling dismissed

The quickest way to lose trust is to minimise issues that students experience as real problems. 

Damp and mould are high on the list, not only because they’re unpleasant, but because they affect health, comfort, and confidence in the property. Students also notice patterns: if a house smells musty at the viewing, if windows don’t open properly, or if ventilation feels poor, alarm bells ring.

Responsiveness is the other major factor. Students understand that repairs take time, but they expect acknowledgement, clear communication, and sensible timescales. In 2025/26, a “good landlord” isn’t defined by never having issues; it’s defined by handling issues professionally and promptly when they arise.

The headline for 2025/26: make it easy to live in, and easy to choose

Students want a home that supports their year, not a house that becomes another problem to manage. If you nail the fundamentals – convenient location, predictable bills, reliable Wi-Fi, and rooms that function properly – you’ll already be ahead of the pack. 

Add a few thoughtful upgrades that reduce household friction, keep the property well maintained, and communicate like a professional, and you won’t just attract tenants. You’ll keep them happy, protect your asset, and build the kind of reputation that fills rooms before the listing even goes live.