
Liverpool is one of the UK’s biggest student cities, and the size of that student population is the first thing worth planning around. The University of Liverpool, LMJU and Liverpool Hope University sit close together near the centre, and Unite Students puts the city’s combined student body at more than 60,000. Right now Mystudenthalls.com lists 12 live Liverpool properties, with weekly rents running from £105 at Agnes Jones House in the Georgian Quarter up to £212 at Fontenoy Apartments near the city-centre museums. That price range for Liverpool student accommodation covers shared flats, en-suite rooms and studios. There are options for tighter first-year budgets as well as postgraduates looking for self-contained studios.
There is a good choice of studios here. The live grid carries plenty, from the spacious studio apartments at Baltic 56 to the en-suite-and-studio mix at Cathedral Campus and Capital Gate, so a well rated studio is easy to find. Central postcodes dominate the choice, which matters because both main campuses sit inside or beside the city centre. Use the price, area and room-type filters at the top of the page to narrow the 12 live student properties.
Every property here is private student accommodation in Liverpool: purpose-built and co-living buildings run by professional operators such as Gather Students, Student Roost, Flow Student and Prestige Student Living, rather than by the universities. The practical difference is who can book and what comes with the room. Private student accommodation in Liverpool is open to any student at any Liverpool institution, in any year of study, and the rent usually bundles in extras like on-site gyms, cinema rooms, study lounges and a staffed reception. University accommodation, by contrast, tends to prioritise first years and ties you to that university’s own buildings; the University of Liverpool alone runs more than 4,400 rooms across its student village and city-centre residences. Whatever you call it, this kind of professionally managed student housing gives you the choice the university route does not: you pick the building, the area and the room type, and it is equally open to undergraduates, postgraduates and international students. Most student housing Liverpool offers in this market follows the same model, so the comparison comes down to area, room type and price rather than who runs the building.
Liverpool is genuinely affordable by national standards, so students looking for cheaper accommodation in Liverpool are not chasing a myth. HEPI and Unipol’s Student Accommodation Costs Survey (HEPI Report 166, October 2023) recorded the city’s average annual purpose-built rent at £6,467 in 2023/24, the lowest of the ten major university cities it surveyed and the city with the smallest increase since 2021/22. That makes cheap student accommodation Liverpool offers easier to find than in most big university cities. On the live grid, the lower-priced student homes Liverpool offers cluster in and just north of the centre.
Because Liverpool is so compact, picking a lower rent here rarely means a long commute, which is the trade-off you would face in a bigger city.
Beyond price, a handful of districts stand out for what is on the doorstep, and the best student accommodation Liverpool offers tends to cluster centrally, where most of the live stock also sits.
Liverpool’s campuses are clustered tightly, but the exact building you study in still shapes where it makes sense to live. Each university below links to its dedicated page on Mystudenthalls.com.
Liverpool is one of the more walkable big cities in England, and from a central base you can often reach campus on foot. When you do need to travel, Merseyrail reports a network of 69 stations across two lines, the Northern and the Wirral, covering 76 miles and running around 600 timetabled services a day, so there is usually a station near your door. Buses run frequently across the city and out to the suburbs, and the Mersey Ferry adds a scenic option across the water. Cycling is popular and well supported, with most student accommodation in Liverpool providing secure bike storage. Students can also stretch a budget with discounted travel passes through Merseytravel.
Parking is a genuine Liverpool feature worth checking, because the universities themselves offer little on-site parking. A few live properties help here: Capital Gate includes free parking, and Agnes Jones House offers car parking for an additional charge. If you are bringing a car, filter for parking and confirm spaces directly, as they are usually allocated first come, first served.
Most live listings here come with bills included, meaning your rent typically wraps up electricity, water, heating and broadband in a single payment, with no separate utility accounts to set up. Beyond the bills, the student living experience in these buildings often adds on-site gyms, cinema and games rooms, study spaces, laundry and a staffed reception, though the exact mix varies by building, so check each listing.
On room types, Liverpool leans toward studios and en-suites:
You will find student flats in Liverpool, student apartments Liverpool and studio formats side by side on the grid, so filter by room type to compare. Postgraduates and couples are welcome at many properties, and some, like Baltic 56, do not charge extra for a couple sharing a studio.
Student tenancies are built around the academic year, so contract lengths vary, commonly 44 to 51 weeks, with some operators offering shorter or longer terms for placement years or international arrivals. Read the contract length on each listing before you commit.
On deposits, the Tenant Fees Act 2019 caps what any provider in England can ask for. A holding deposit, paid to reserve a room while paperwork is finalised, cannot exceed one week’s rent, and a tenancy deposit cannot exceed five weeks’ rent where the annual rent is under £50,000. Many purpose-built operators ask for a smaller deposit or none at all, and any deposit must be protected in a government-backed scheme.
Most providers ask for a UK-based guarantor who agrees to cover the rent if you cannot. If you do not have one, for example as an international student, paid services such as Housing Hand can act as a guarantor for a fee, and some operators let you pay rent up front instead.
Council tax is the reassuring part: full-time students are exempt. Liverpool City Council confirms that households where everyone is a full-time student do not pay council tax, and purpose-built student accommodation is treated as exempt automatically. If you watch live TV or use BBC iPlayer in your room you will need your own TV Licence, which GOV.UK confirms rose to £180 a year from 1 April 2026, though in many shared buildings a communal-area licence may already cover shared lounges.
Liverpool packs a lot into a small, friendly footprint. It was named a UNESCO City of Music in 2015, the first English city to hold the title, and its live scene runs from the Cavern Club, where The Beatles built their name, to the venues of the Baltic Triangle. The waterfront and the Royal Albert Dock put the Tate Liverpool, museums, bars and restaurants within a short walk of central student homes, while Bold Street and the Ropewalks serve the city’s food and independent-shop crowd. Football is woven through the city at Anfield and Goodison Park, and green space is never far, from the Georgian Quarter’s squares to Sefton Park further out. For ideas, browse fun things to do in Liverpool for students, the city’s best brunch spots and the tongue-in-cheek Drunk Food Index, where a Liverpool takeaway took the top spot.
On Mystudenthalls.com, live Liverpool rooms run from £105 a week at Agnes Jones House to £212 a week at Fontenoy Apartments, depending on the room type, the building’s facilities and how central it is. For context, HEPI and Unipol’s Student Accommodation Costs Survey found Liverpool the cheapest of the ten major university cities it tracked, with an average annual purpose-built rent of £6,467 in 2023/24.
The lowest live rents sit in and just north of the city centre and around the Georgian Quarter, where Agnes Jones House, Unity Square and Haigh Court start between £105 and £130 a week. Because Liverpool is so walkable, a cheaper room rarely costs you a long commute.
Where a listing says bills included, your weekly rent normally covers electricity, water, heating and broadband in one payment, so there are no separate utility accounts to set up. Always check the individual listing, as a TV Licence and contents insurance are sometimes separate.
No. Full-time students are exempt from council tax, and Liverpool City Council treats purpose-built student accommodation as automatically exempt. If you share with someone who is not a full-time student, a bill may apply to them, with a possible discount.
Under the Tenant Fees Act 2019, a holding deposit is capped at one week’s rent and a tenancy deposit at five weeks’ rent where annual rent is below £50,000. Many purpose-built providers ask for less, and any deposit must be protected in a government-backed scheme.
Most providers ask for a UK-based guarantor who would cover unpaid rent. International students without a UK guarantor can use a paid guarantor service such as Housing Hand, or arrange to pay rent up front, which many operators accept.
Yes. Private student accommodation in Liverpool is open to any student in any year, including first years, so you are not limited to university-allocated rooms. It is also a common choice for postgraduates and international students who want to pick their own area.
Contract lengths vary, commonly 44 to 51 weeks to match the academic year, with some shorter or placement-friendly terms available. Check the length on each listing before booking.
As early as you can. Popular studios and the cheapest rooms book up first, and many providers work first come, first served, so starting six to nine months ahead of your move-in date gives you the widest choice.
A studio is fully self-contained, with your own kitchenette and bathroom. An en-suite room gives you a private bedroom and bathroom but a shared kitchen and lounge. A non-en-suite room shares both bathroom and kitchen and is usually the cheapest. A studio suits students who want privacy; shared flats suit those who want a social, lower-cost base.
Yes. Studios are one of the more common room types here, and studio student accommodation Liverpool ranges from compact rooms to the larger studios at Baltic 56. A student studio Liverpool gives you your own bed, kitchenette and bathroom in one space, and you can filter by studio at the top of the page to compare what is live.
Yes, though parking is limited so check early. Among the live properties, Capital Gate includes free parking and Agnes Jones House offers car parking for an extra charge, usually allocated first come, first served. Filter for parking and confirm directly with the property.
Liverpool is generally considered a safe student city, and its centre has held a Purple Flag award for well-managed evening safety every year since the scheme began in 2010, according to Liverpool City Council. Purpose-built student residences add secure key-fob entry, CCTV and staffed or 24-hour reception, which you can filter for on the grid.
For Liverpool John Moores University, central and Knowledge Quarter buildings reach both the City and Mount Pleasant campuses on foot. For the University of Liverpool, the Knowledge Quarter, Georgian Quarter and city centre are all within a short walk. Liverpool Hope students do well from central properties with good bus links.



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