Parent guide

What does University of Stirling cost your family?

What the student finance system assumes

The maintenance loan your child receives is means-tested against your household income. The lower their loan, the more the government assumes you will contribute — but this is an assumption, not a payment anyone makes to you.

Household incomeMonthly loan (outside London)Cheapest halls at StirlingMonthly gap
Under £25,000£903£433/mo+£215 surplus
£35,000£838£433/mo+£150 surplus
£45,000£709£433/mo+£21 surplus
£60,000£421£433/mo−£267 shortfall
£70,000£421£433/mo−£267 shortfall
The government does not pay your family the contribution gap. It simply reduces your child's loan on the assumption that you will make up the difference.

The real monthly costs at Stirling in Stirling

Cheapest halls at Stirling (£100/wk)
Source: Stirling accommodation pages
£433/month
Typical halls at Stirling
Source: Stirling accommodation pages
£607/month
Private rent in Stirling
Source: SpareRoom 2025
£650/month
Food estimate
Source: ONS 2025
£180–£220/month
Transport
Source: City data 2025
£55/month
Total estimated monthly£688/month

Notable Stirling alumni

I
Iain Banks
Author of The Wasp Factory
Wikipedia →
H
Hardeep Singh Kohli
Journalist and broadcaster
Wikipedia →

Based on Stirling halls, over three years your family could be contributing:

Household incomeAnnual gapThree-year total
£35,000+£1,800 surplus+£5,400 surplus
£50,000−£1,548−£4,644
£70,000−£3,204−£9,612

This does not include tuition fees (£9,535/year), covered by the tuition fee loan.

What Stirling graduates earn

The average Stirling graduate earns £25,000/year within 3 years of graduating. In Stirling, entry-level roles typically start at £1,458/month take-home after tax.

Graduate employment rate: 86% within 15 months of graduation.

Full graduate salary data →

Five things to sort before August

1

Work out your expected household income contribution — use the Student Finance England calculator

2

Review the cheapest halls options at University of Stirling

3

Understand the contract difference: halls are 40–51 weeks, private rentals are 12 months

4

Consider a buffer fund: £500–1,000 covers the gap between loan arrival and rent due

5

Have the conversation before August — results day is not the moment to work out the finances

Share this guide with your partner

Share on WhatsApp