<p>The true cost of a UK one-year master’s degree encompasses the full scope of direct and indirect financial commitments an international applicant must plan for: tuition fees, visa charges, accommodation, living costs, travel, and the offsetting effect of permitted part-time work. According to the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education (QAA), a standard taught postgraduate programme in the UK is designed around 180 credits, delivered over a single calendar year. Using the University of Glasgow—a Russell Group institution with one of the largest international cohorts in Scotland—for the 2024–2026 academic year, this article provides an itemised costing anchored in official Home Office, UKVI, HESA, and university-published data.</p> <h2 id="tuition-fees-management-computer-science-and-engineering-benchmarks">Tuition Fees: Management, Computer Science, and Engineering Benchmarks</h2> <p>Tuition for international postgraduate taught students at the University of Glasgow is fixed by programme and published annually. For entry in September 2024, the MSc Management fee is £33,930. The MSc Computer Science and MSc Information Technology programmes are listed at the same rate of £33,930. By comparison, the MSc in Civil Engineering and MSc Mechanical Engineering carry a fee of £31,860. These three figures capture a representative band for classroom-based business degrees and laboratory-intensive STEM disciplines at a leading UK institution. The data are publicly retrievable from the University’s online fee schedule for 2024–2026 and are typically payable in a single instalment at the beginning of the session or in two instalments via an agreed plan.</p> <p>Beyond the headline fee, applicants should budget for a non-refundable deposit to secure their place. For the majority of postgraduate taught programmes, the University requires a £2,000 deposit from international offer-holders, which is deducted from the total tuition. Some competitive programmes may set a higher deposit; applicants must consult their offer letter for the exact amount. Additionally, a student who needs to resubmit a dissertation or retake an examination after the standard 12-month period may incur a supplementary registration charge, usually in the order of £300–£500, though this is not common for full-time candidates who complete all assessments on the first attempt.</p> <h2 id="accommodation-university-managed-housing-and-private-rented-flats">Accommodation: University-Managed Housing and Private Rented Flats</h2> <p>Accommodation in Glasgow constitutes the largest recurring monthly outgoing after tuition. The University of Glasgow’s residence portfolio includes self-catered en-suite rooms in purpose-built student villages such as Cairncross House, Kelvinhaugh Street, and Murano Street Student Village. For a 39-week tenancy—covering early September to early June—the median 2024–2026 contract price for a standard single en-suite room across these sites is approximately £170 per week, yielding a total tenancy cost of £6,630. Premium studios with private kitchenettes rise to around £210–£230 per week, or £8,190–£8,970 for the contract period.</p> <p>A sizeable share of international postgraduates, particularly those arriving with a partner or preferring off-campus independence, opt for a private rented room in a shared flat (HMO-licensed property). Letting portals and the City of Glasgow’s housing intelligence indicate that for the West End and city-centre areas—Anniesland, Partick, Hillhead, and Woodlands—a double room in a shared flat with bills included averaged £155 per week in 2024. On a 12-month lease, that figure equates to £8,060. Excluding bills, which add roughly £45–£60 per month for energy and broadband, the base rent sits closer to £130–£140 per week. International students should also account for a tenancy deposit of up to six weeks’ rent, registered with a government-approved tenancy deposit scheme, and a holding deposit of up to one week’s rent.</p> <p>Glasgow’s overall rental market has seen annual inflation of around 6–8% since 2021, according to data collated by the Office for National Statistics and local letting reports, though student-accommodation rates have been more stable because many university contracts are set in advance.</p> <h2 id="visa-immigration-health-surcharge-and-disbursements">Visa, Immigration Health Surcharge, and Disbursements</h2> <p>All international applicants who require a Student Route visa must budget for two mandatory Home Office charges: the visa application fee and the Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS). The current application fee for a student visa made from outside the UK is £490. The IHS for a one-year master’s programme is set at £776 per year of leave granted, calculated from the start date of the permission to its end date plus the additional four-month wrap-up period routinely added by UKVI. For a 12-month course, the total charged leave typically spans 16 months, resulting in an IHS liability of £1,034. The combined visa and health surcharge cost therefore amounts to £1,524.</p> <p>Supplementary expenditure during the visa process includes the biometric enrolment fee and the translation of any non-English documents, which, depending on the country of origin, can add £50–£150. Some applicants also use priority or super-priority visa services, costing an extra £500 or £1,000 respectively, but these are optional. Finally, the UKVI financial evidence requirements mean an applicant must demonstrate they hold the first-year tuition fee plus living costs for up to nine months, as defined by the maintenance level for Glasgow—£1,023 per month for a total of £9,207. These funds must be held in an acceptable financial institution for a consecutive 28-day period, though nationals of certain countries, including China under the differential evidence arrangement, are not required to submit the proof with the application but should have it available if requested.</p> <h2 id="living-costs-ukvi-guideline-and-real-world-expenditure">Living Costs: UKVI Guideline and Real-World Expenditure</h2> <p>While the UKVI maintenance figure of £1,023 per month serves as a policy benchmark, actual living costs in Glasgow—a city consistently ranked more affordable than London or Edinburgh—can be mapped using student expenditure surveys. The National Union of Students (NUS) and the UK’s Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) have produced indicative spending models. For an international postgrad, a realistic monthly budget exclusive of accommodation is as follows:</p> <ul> <li>Food and groceries: £220–£280. A combination of supermarket shopping at Tesco, Lidl, Sainsbury’s, and occasional eating out in the West End or city centre typically lands at £250 per month.</li> <li>Local transport: Glasgow’s Subway, FirstBus, and ScotRail services offer student discounts; a monthly ZoneCard for unlimited bus and Subway travel in the city is £56. Many students walk or cycle, reducing this to £30 or less.</li> <li>Mobile phone and broadband-inclusive SIM: £10–£20.</li> <li>Books, printing, and course materials: £15–£30, as many readings are available through the University Library’s digital collections.</li> <li>Clothing, personal care, and sundries: £60–£90.</li> <li>Leisure, gym membership, and socialising: The University’s Stevenson Building gym membership costs £199 for 12 months (£17/month), and a cinema ticket at the Glasgow Film Theatre is £6.50 for students. Budgeting £80–£120 per month for all leisure is realistic.</li> </ul> <p>Summing these categories yields a median monthly living outlay of £475–£550. Over 12 months, this translates to £5,700–£6,600. Together with accommodation of £6,630–£8,060, the annual non-tuition core cost falls in the range of £12,330–£14,660, aligning with but slightly exceeding the UKVI nine-month requirement when annualised.</p> <h2 id="travel-international-flights-and-in-country-trips">Travel: International Flights and In-Country Trips</h2> <p>A single return airfare between major Chinese cities (Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou) and Glasgow or Edinburgh, booked two to three months in advance for a September departure, averages £850–£1,200 in the economy cabin for non-direct routes via London, Amsterdam, or the Gulf. A direct London flight followed by a domestic connection or rail transfer can bring the end-to-end cost to £950–£1,300. Many students also plan a mid-year return during the Christmas vacation; a second round-trip might add £700–£1,000. On average, one return plus one additional one-way or return trip produces an annual flight budget of £1,450–£2,000.</p> <p>Within the UK and Europe, short breaks and sightseeing are part of the student experience. A day trip to Edinburgh, Loch Lomond, or Stirling costs £25–£50 using rail or coach, while a weekend city break to London or Manchester, including budget flights or rail and two nights’ accommodation, typically runs £150–£250. Students who take four to six such trips spend roughly £900–£1,200 annually on domestic and intra-European travel.</p> <h2 id="part-time-work-income-simulation-under-student-visa-conditions">Part-Time Work: Income Simulation Under Student Visa Conditions</h2> <p>Under the Student Route, a postgraduate student may work up to 20 hours per week during term and full-time outside term. The UK National Living Wage for workers aged 21 and over rose to £11.44 per hour from April 2024. Many on-campus roles—student ambassador, library assistant, catering assistant—pay between £11.44 and £12.50 per hour, while off-campus hospitality and retail roles may pay £11.44–£13.50, with premium pay for late-night shifts.</p> <p>If a student works an average of 15 hours per week over 40 weeks of the academic year (allowing for exam and holiday breaks), gross annual earnings at £11.44 per hour amount to £6,864. The UK personal allowance for income tax is £12,570 for the 2024–2026 tax year, meaning this level of earnings falls entirely within the tax-free threshold. National Insurance contributions apply only above £242 per week from employed earnings; at 15 hours on the living wage, weekly pay is £171.60, below the primary threshold. Consequently, a student in this scenario retains the full £6,864 after deductions other than small employer-arranged pension contributions that are refundable upon leaving the UK.</p> <p>During full-time vacation weeks (Christmas, Easter, and summer), a student could increase hours to 35 per week for 12 weeks, adding £4,800 in gross earnings and potentially triggering slight National Insurance, but still zero income tax. In total, a combination of term-time and holiday work can generate £8,000–£11,000 net, effectively offsetting the entirety of annual living costs for a disciplined earner. The Home Office confirms that this work right is incidental; the primary purpose of the stay must remain study.</p> <h2 id="aggregated-cost-scenario-and-net-outlay">Aggregated Cost Scenario and Net Outlay</h2> <p>For a prospective student enrolling in the MSc Management at the University of Glasgow, the gross costs and typical one-off disbursements aggregate as follows:</p> <table><thead><tr><th>Cost Category</th><th>Estimated Spend (12 months)</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Tuition fee (MSc Management)</td><td>£33,930</td></tr><tr><td>Deposit offset (already included)</td><td>(£2,000) paid in advance, deducted from fee</td></tr><tr><td>Visa application + IHS</td><td>£1,524</td></tr><tr><td>Biometrics and document translation</td><td>£80</td></tr><tr><td>Accommodation (university room, 39 weeks + summer arrangement prorated)</td><td>£7,800*</td></tr><tr><td>Living costs (food, transport, personal, leisure)</td><td>£6,600</td></tr><tr><td>International flights (1.5 round-trips)</td><td>£1,600</td></tr><tr><td>UK and Europe travel</td><td>£1,000</td></tr><tr><td>Mobile and utilities not in rent</td><td>£200</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Gross total (all outflows)</strong></td><td><strong>£52,734</strong></td></tr></tbody></table> <p>* The accommodation estimation combines a 39‑week university contract at £6,630 with an additional summer period covered by a short-term private let or university summer stay scheme at approximately £1,170 for 10 weeks.</p> <p>If the student works 15 hours per week in term and full-time during holiday weeks, earning a net £8,500 over the year, the net cash requirement reduces to roughly £44,234. For the CS programme, the tuition remains £33,930, hence the net is identical; for Engineering at £31,860, the gross total falls to £50,664 and the net to approximately £42,164. These figures can shift further if the student secures a scholarship; the University of Glasgow offers a suite of international merit-based awards such as the International Leadership Scholarship and the GREAT Scholarship, typically valued at £5,000–£10,000 and deductible from the tuition invoice.</p> <h2 id="data-context-from-uk-government-and-sector-bodies">Data Context from UK Government and Sector Bodies</h2> <p>Home Office Immigration Statistics for the year ending June 2023 recorded that 107,670 sponsored study visas were granted to Chinese nationals, up from 99,965 the previous year, making China the largest source country for UK student visas. In the same period, Scottish universities hosted 83,700 international students (HESA 2022/23), with the University of Glasgow alone accounting for 13,880 international learners out of a total student body of 32,455. UCAS postgraduate applicant data for 2024 show that postgraduate taught applications from non‑UK domiciled candidates continued to grow, with business and management remaining the single largest subject area by international volume.</p> <p>These figures underscore the sustained demand and the relevance of cost clarity for planning. Universities UK and the QAA have repeatedly emphasised the importance of transparent cost guidance for international recruitment, a principle that institutions like Glasgow operationalise through online budgeting tools and pre‑arrival webinars.</p> <h2 id="financial-planning-considerations-beyond-the-first-year">Financial Planning Considerations Beyond the First Year</h2> <p>Although this analysis is focused on the annual cycle of a one‑year master’s, some expenditure extends beyond graduation: the Graduate Route visa application fee of £822 and its accompanying IHS of £1,035 (for two years, totalling £1,857) becomes relevant for those who remain to work. The average starting salary for a taught master’s graduate in the UK varies by sector; HESA’s Graduate Outcomes survey for 2020/21 reported a median salary for full‑time employed business and management postgraduates of £28,000, though this predates recent salary inflation. Scottish cities, including Glasgow, have seen a tightening labour market in finance, technology, and engineering, which strengthens the employability rationale for the investment.</p> <p>Unexpected costs should also be modelled: an emergency dental appointment at an NHS‑registered practice for a non‑exempt patient is around £25.80 for a Band 1 treatment, but a non‑NHS filling can exceed £100. Private medical treatment outside the NHS coverage requires insurance, though the IHS entitles the student to hospital care without charge at the point of use.</p> <h2 id="faq">FAQ</h2> <p><strong>How much is the total cost of a one-year master’s at the University of Glasgow for an international student?</strong><br> Excluding any scholarship or work income, the gross outlay for a 12‑month programme such as MSc Management is approximately £52,700, comprising tuition (£33,930), visa and IHS charges (£1,524), accommodation (£7,800), living costs (£6,600), and travel (£2,600). Engineering programmes lower the total by around £2,100 due to the tuition differential.</p> <p><strong>Can I work alongside my studies to reduce costs?</strong><br> Yes. The UK Student Route permits up to 20 hours per week during term time and full‑time during university vacation periods. At the 2024 National Living Wage of £11.44 per hour, a typical work pattern of 15 hours per week in term plus full‑time holiday weeks can yield net earnings of £8,000–£11,000, entirely offsetting annual living expenses for many students.</p> <p><strong>What is the Immigration Health Surcharge, and how is it calculated for a one‑year master’s?</strong><br> The IHS is a fee paid to the Home Office to cover the use of the National Health Service during a student’s stay. For a course lasting 12 months, UKVI adds a four‑month wrap‑up period, resulting in 16 months of charged leave. At £776 per year, pro‑rated for 16 months, the IHS amounts to £1,034. This is paid upfront alongside the visa application fee.</p> <p><strong>Are there scholarships available at the University of Glasgow for international postgraduates?</strong><br> The University of Glasgow offers a range of scholarships for high‑achieving international students, including the International Leadership Scholarship (worth up to £10,000), the GREAT Scholarship (£10,000 for specific nations), and country‑specific awards. These are generally applied as a tuition fee discount; application deadlines and eligibility criteria are published on the University’s scholarship pages.</p> <p><strong>What proof of funds do I need for the Student visa?</strong><br> You must show that you have the first‑year tuition fee plus living costs of £1,023 per month for a maximum of nine months in the region of £9,207. For Glasgow, the total maintenance requirement is the tuition fee balance after deposit plus £9,207. The funds must be held for at least 28 consecutive days. Chinese nationals, among others, benefit from differential evidence arrangements and are not normally required to submit the proof, but you should have it prepared if requested.</p> <p><strong>What are the average living costs in Glasgow compared to other UK cities?</strong><br> Glasgow is consistently among the more affordable UK cities for students. Excluding rent, monthly living costs average £475–£550, compared with £580–£700 in Edinburgh and £700–£900 in London, according to multiple student living indices. Accommodation also carries a discount: a student en‑suite room in Glasgow costs around £170 per week, while a comparable room in London zone 2–3 frequently exceeds £250 per week.</p>