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Guides

University support

UK universities provide services beyond lectures and exams: help with visas, money, wellbeing, disability, careers, and more. This page describes what most institutions offer so you know what to look for on arrival not a substitute for your own university’s handbook.

Looking for Fursa UK’s coaching or admissions help? See Support on our site.

Students collaborating at a shared table on campus
Universities combine teaching with services that help you stay on track.

International student support

Most universities have an international office or student advice team. They help with visa compliance (such as attendance and CAS-related questions), orientation, and practical settling-in topics. They are not a replacement for UKVI, but they know how students in your situation usually navigate common issues.

Academic skills

Libraries and learning centres run workshops on referencing, essay structure, time management, and sometimes statistics or software. If English for academic purposes is new to you, ask whether in-sessional courses are available.

Wellbeing and counselling

Two people having a supportive conversation indoors
Wellbeing teams are there for stress, homesickness, and crisis signposting.

Student mental health services vary in capacity; many offer short-term counselling and signposting to NHS or community support. Chaplaincies and peer listening schemes can also help. If you are in crisis, use local emergency numbers and your university’s out-of-hours line if they publish one.

“Asking for help early before deadlines pile up is a strength, not a weakness.”

Disability and inclusion

Disability advisory teams can arrange reasonable adjustments exam arrangements, note-taking support, accessible formats often after you share medical or diagnostic evidence. Contact them as early as possible so support is in place before teaching starts.

Careers and employability

Careers services offer CV reviews, mock interviews, employer events, and advice on internships or graduate schemes. If you hope to work in the UK after study, pair their guidance with up-to-date immigration information about work rights and post-study routes.

  • Part-time work rules depend on your visa confirm before you accept a job
  • Placements may need a visa update if they sit outside normal term-time arrangements