Halls vs Private Rented in Manchester – Which Is Right for First Year

Most Manchester first-years live in university halls. That’s the default and it usually works. But not always. Some students are better suited to private PBSA (purpose-built student accommodation), shared houses, or even living at home. The default choice costs £7,000-£10,000 a year and shapes your whole first year experience. Worth thinking about properly.

The Three Main Options

University halls (owned or managed by UoM/MMU/Salford)

Residential blocks run by your university. Bed, desk, shared or en suite bathroom, sometimes shared kitchens, bills included. Cost: £130-220/week depending on the specific hall. Tenancy runs September/October to June/July.

Private PBSA (purpose-built student accommodation)

Commercial student housing like Unite Students, Host, iQ, Vita Student. Usually en suite studios or cluster flats. More modern than most university halls. Cost: £170-280/week. Location: mostly city centre.

Private rented shared house

A normal house or flat rented from a private landlord, usually 4-6 bedrooms. Cost: £380-550/month per person depending on area. Typically 12-month tenancy starting July.

Cost Comparison

University hallsPrivate PBSAShared house
Weekly cost£130-220£170-280£90-130 equivalent
Annual cost (44-week lease)£5,700-9,700£7,500-12,300£4,700-6,700 (12-month)
Bills includedAlwaysAlwaysUsually (check carefully)
FlexibilityLow – fixed leaseLow – fixed leaseLow – 12-month usually

Pros and Cons

University halls – pros

  • Social life built in. You meet your first Manchester friends in halls.
  • Everything is sorted – no landlord dealings, no bills admin, no maintenance hassle.
  • Pastoral support on site – resident advisors, welfare tutors.
  • Fixed-price bills means no surprise winter energy bills.
  • Usually the easiest route into student life.

University halls – cons

  • You don’t choose your flatmates. Flat dynamics are a lottery.
  • Some halls are noisy, some have poor maintenance. Location-dependent.
  • More expensive per room than a private shared house.
  • Fixed term – you have to move out in June/July whether you have plans or not.
  • Less private space than a studio.

Private PBSA – pros

  • Usually en suite, often studios with own kitchen.
  • Modern, well-maintained, good security.
  • City centre locations, walking distance to MMU and a bus from UoM.
  • All bills included, predictable cost.
  • Some include gym, cinema room, study spaces.

Private PBSA – cons

  • Most expensive option. £7,500-12,300/year is real money.
  • Isolating for first years. If you’re in a studio you may not meet flatmates naturally.
  • Lots of international students and postgrads – social scene is less traditional student.
  • City centre means further from Fallowfield student scene.
  • Fixed long lease terms similar to halls.

Shared house – pros

  • Cheapest option per person. Can be £2,000-4,000/year less than halls for similar space.
  • You choose your housemates (if you’re lucky enough to have a group).
  • More space – living room, kitchen, often garden.
  • Real responsibility. You learn to manage bills, landlord, housemate dynamics.

Shared house – cons

  • Hard as a first year – you usually don’t know anyone well enough to choose housemates.
  • 12-month leases means you pay for summer even if you go home.
  • Landlord quality varies wildly. See housing guide.
  • You handle all the admin – deposit, bills if not included, maintenance requests.
  • Council tax exemption requires all-student household.

What to Pick

Pick university halls if you’re:

  • A first year with no existing Manchester friend group
  • Moving from a long distance and want support systems
  • Nervous about making friends
  • International and want the full immersion experience
  • Not confident enough yet to manage a private rental

This is 80% of first years. Halls is the right default.

Pick private PBSA if you’re:

  • At MMU with a city centre campus and want to walk everywhere
  • International, have the budget, and want guaranteed en suite
  • Postgrad or mature student who doesn’t want halls culture
  • Prioritising convenience and own space over cost
  • Aware of and comfortable with the reduced social integration

Pick shared house (rare for first years) if you’re:

  • Already have a group of friends from home coming with you
  • A second-year transfer or returning student
  • A local student living in a family-owned student property
  • A mature student who definitely doesn’t want halls
  • Someone with specific needs that PBSA or halls can’t meet

The Second-Year Transition

After first-year halls, most students move to a shared house for second year. This is usually the right economics. See our second year guide and area comparison.

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