Nick Hillman, director of the Higher Education Policy Institute, said year 13 students were "well placed" to study where they wanted to.
"The financial plight of universities makes them very keen to fill their courses and they will be falling over themselves to sign up good potential students," he said.
Students from England and Wales will pay higher tuition fees for university this year, after the sector called for help with its finances.
Tuition fees have risen from £9,250 to £9,535 for the 2025-26 academic year.
It is the first time they have gone up in England since 2017, and comes after universities said their real-terms value had fallen.
They have become increasingly reliant on higher fees from international students in recent years to make up for frozen domestic fees - but the number of overseas students coming to the UK has fallen.
In May, the regulator in England, the Office for Students, warned that more than four in 10 universities expected to be in a financial deficit by this summer.
Maintenance loans have also gone up this year, which means students can borrow more to help with day-to-day living costs.
In England, the maximum maintenance loan for students from England who live away from their parents outside London has increased to £10,544 a year, up from £10,227.
Ucas said last month that the number of 18-year-olds from the UK applying to university had risen again to 328,390.
However, because the total number of 18-year-olds in the UK has also grown, those applicants make up a slightly smaller proportion of the total 18-year-old population than last year (41.2%).
Students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will receive A-level and other level-three grades next week.
In Scotland, the number of pupils achieving an A, B or C grade at National 5, Higher and Advanced Higher rose across the board this year.
The Scottish Qualifications Authority also reported a reduction in the attainment gap between candidates from the most and least deprived areas.