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If you’ve ever searched for student accommodation, you’ll know “close to campus” gets used like a magic phrase.
The problem is, it can mean wildly different things depending on the city, the university, and even the time of day. In the United Kingdom, “close” might mean a ten-minute walk in a compact city like Oxford or Durham. In a bigger place like Manchester or Birmingham, “close” can easily mean a short tram or bus ride – and still be considered totally normal.
The real question isn’t “How many miles?” It’s “How easy is it to live your actual week from here?”
In many UK cities, the “campus” isn’t a single neat block of buildings. Some universities have multiple sites spread across town, and students might have lectures in different locations depending on their course, year group, or lab access.
Add in the fact that students also care about supermarkets, gyms, part-time work, and nightlife, and “close” starts to become a balance of convenience, cost, and lifestyle.
So, when you see “close to campus,” assume it’s shorthand for “not a nightmare to commute” – not necessarily “you can roll out of bed and be in a lecture in five minutes.”
In most UK student cities, “walking distance” tends to mean somewhere between 10 and 25 minutes on foot. Under 15 minutes is generally viewed as genuinely close. Around 20–25 minutes is still walkable for most people, but it becomes weather-dependent (and in the UK, that matters).
Anything beyond that tends to shift into “short commute” territory, even if the listing still says “close.”
The giveaway is whether the accommodation mentions specific routes like “10 minutes to the engineering building” or names a particular campus area – that’s usually more reliable than a vague claim.
In larger UK cities, “close to campus” often really means “one simple ride.” One bus or one tram line with a predictable schedule can feel closer than a shorter journey that involves switching.
As a rough guide, if the door-to-door trip is under 30 minutes and doesn’t require multiple changes, students usually accept it as close enough – especially if the accommodation is also near shops and social areas.
But if a commute relies on a bus that’s unreliable, gets packed at peak times, or stops running early, “close” stops feeling close very quickly.
Here’s what listings don’t always spell out: “close to campus” means different things at 2pm compared to 10pm.
Students don’t just travel for lectures – they travel after library sessions, society events, gym classes, and late shifts at work. A 15-minute walk through well-lit streets can feel easier than a 10-minute walk through quiet roads or industrial areas.
When judging closeness in the UK, it’s worth thinking about the “walk home” as much as the “walk there.” If you wouldn’t feel comfortable doing the route alone at night, the distance becomes irrelevant.
If you want a quick, realistic way to judge closeness, use a routine-based test. Pick two or three places you’ll go most often – your main teaching building, the library, and a supermarket – and check the travel time for each.
Then add a simple question: “Would I do this every day, in the rain, carrying a laptop?” If the answer is yes, you’re probably in the close-to-campus zone. If you start imagining excuses, missed buses, or £12 Ubers after a late night, you’ve learned something useful.
Now for the tricky part: judging closeness abroad. Many countries have different transport culture and city design.
In some European cities, walking and cycling infrastructure makes a longer distance feel easy. In parts of North America, a short distance can still be awkward because roads are built for cars, not pedestrians.
In some Asian cities, public transport is so frequent that living “far” is still effortless – until you factor in rush-hour crush. When you go abroad, you can’t copy-paste UK assumptions like “20 minutes is fine” without checking what that 20 minutes actually looks and feels like.
To judge closeness abroad, focus on three things: time, cost, and friction.
Time is obvious – door to door, not just “on the train.” Cost matters because some cities have expensive daily travel, and that adds up fast over a term. Friction is the underrated one: how many steps does it take? Do you need to buy tickets daily? Are there confusing zones? Is the last train early? Do you need to walk through poorly lit streets to reach the station?
A 35-minute journey with low friction can feel closer than a 20-minute journey that’s stressful and unpredictable.
If you want one reliable approach, think like this: “Close to campus” means you can get to where you need to be without planning your whole day around it. In the UK, that often means walkable or a single straightforward public transport route.
Abroad, it depends on the local reality – safety, reliability, and whether the city is built for pedestrians or cars.
Don’t let the listing decide what “close” means for you. Decide based on your routine, your comfort, and your time. That’s how you avoid ending up “close” in theory… and exhausted in real life.