Freshman Entrance Fees London

Just for starters, you’ll probably have to pay either your rent for the term or at least your first month’s rent and a deposit. That’s several figures down already.

City and Islington College
020 7700 9333
The Angel
London
City of Westminster College
020 7723 8826
Paddington Basin Campus
London
Quest Business Training
020 7373 3852
4 Wetherby Gardens
London
Newham College of Further Education
020 8257 4000
East Ham Campus
London
Eltham Green Specialist Sports College
020 8859 0133
1 Middle Park Avenue
London
Davies Laing and Dick College
020 7935 8411
100 Marylebone Lane
London
Hampstead Fine Arts College
020 7586 0312
24 Lambolle Place
London
University College School
020 7435 2215
Frognal
London
Eltham Hill Technology College for Girls
020 8859 2843
Eltham Hill
London
Bromley College of Further and Higher Education
020 8295 7000
Rookery Lane
Bromley
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Freshers' Week: Where the Money Goes

Just for starters, you’ll probably have to pay either your rent for the term or at least your first month’s rent and a deposit. That’s several figures down already.

Then there’ll be…

  • All the clubs, societies and sports teams you want to join (some of the do-gooding ones might be gratis, but most will set you back about £5 to £15 a pop)
  • Drinks to buy – and there’s a whole lot of drinking going on in Freshers’ Week, what with unmissable ents on every night
  • Pubs and clubs to check out
  • People to impress
  • New kitchen cupboards to fill up with grub
  • Plants and posters to make your room feel less like an asylum cell
  • Books, paper and pens to buy
  • Endless passport photos to get for all the forms and ID cards.

Allow yourself some extra for Freshers’ Week. At least an extra £50 for entertainments alone (let alone all the one-off expenses like mugs and a hole-punch). Freshers' Week is one of the few times it’s okay to push the pedalo out a bit.

Splashing out is part of settling in, getting to know the people (biblically, in some cases) and consuming cheap beer like it’s going out of fashion. It’s almost an initiation ritual – after a week of binging and parties, you wake up with a hangover, late for a lecture and completely broke. You are now, officially, a student.

But after this initial spurt of justifiable madness, it’s time to take a chill pill (or an aspirin) and review your financial status before you drink yourself into a false sense of security.

Even during Freshers’ Week there are some reins to pull on. Don’t pay out money for anything unless you know you’ll benefit from it.

For example, don’t join every student society that looks more interesting than belly button fluff – join only those where you think there’s a genuine chance you might actually turn up to something they do in the next few years. (But be open-minded – you’d be surprised what strange and perverse pastimes you might find yourself drawn to.)

And don’t feel like you have to be a big spender to make friends or impress anyone. If you insist on getting all the rounds in, you’ll look like a prat because everyone’s facing the same financial minefield. (In fact, students often don’t bother with buying rounds at all.) You’ll end up with everyone taking advantage of you for a week and then being too poor to go out again all year.

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