Once every three weeks, Adelaide Coupland drives the hour and a half from Leeds to her mum’s home in Gainsborough in Lincolnshire. There, she works on Friday evenings and on Saturday and Sunday from 9am to 8pm, seeing beauty clients back to back.
Adelaide is a second-year fashion student at Leeds Beckett and her side hustle is luxury nail design, for which she has built up a dedicated client list. She also works in a bar every holiday and fits doing nails for clients in Leeds around the four days a week of her course.
“It does knock me down sometimes - managing it all,” she says. But Adelaide has promised her mum, a single parent, that she won’t ask for money while at university.
Adelaide receives the maximum student loan for maintenance in England of £10,200, in addition to taking out the annual student loan for tuition fees, which are currently £9,250 year. So her total student loans will amount to roughly £58,000 by the time she leaves university.
Even with the maximum loan, day-to-day life for Adelaide is a struggle - after her annual rent of £6,800, she has little left for food or anything else.
She records her spending in a small red notebook, tracking every penny. “The bus fare just went up by 50p. I’m in university four days a week so it’s over £50 a month just to get the bus.” Sometimes she wakes in the night full of worry.
Soon the situation could become more challenging still for Adelaide and other students already struggling to make ends meet and facing vast student debt, as an increase in tuition fees in England is on the cards in the Budget or soon after, the first to be allowed for many years.
Tuition fees, which are currently frozen at £9,250 for this academic year, are set to rise further from autumn 2025 in line with a measure of inflation called RPIX, which counts the cost of everything except mortgage interest costs.
Under this measure, tuition fees for students starting their degree in England would reach £9,500 in October 2025 and £10,500 a year by 2029, according to Kate Ogden, a senior research economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies.