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Bills Included vs. Excluded: Understanding UK Utility Costs

When renting in the UK, “bills included” or “bills excluded” dramatically affects your true housing cost. Many international students underestimate the cost of utilities, council tax, and internet, which can add £20–£50/week to rent. Understanding what’s included and calculating your real budget prevents financial surprises.

What counts as “bills” in UK rentals?

Usually included in “all-inclusive” or “bills included” rent:

Sometimes included (verify with landlord):

Rarely included (you’re responsible):

Bills excluded: typical costs per week

BillWeekly Cost (£)Yearly Cost (£)
Electricity£8–£15£420–£780
Gas (heating + hot water)£8–£15£420–£780
Water and sewerage£4–£7£210–£365
Internet/WiFi£5–£10£260–£520
Council tax (if liable)£8–£20£420–£1,040
TV licence (if applicable)£3£160
Total (all utilities)£36–£67/week£1,880–£3,480/year

These vary by property size, location, and season. A studio apartment uses less gas/electricity than a 4-bed house. Winter months (November–February) see higher heating costs.

Bills included vs. excluded: the real cost

Example 1: Manchester student, shared house, bills excluded

Example 2: Manchester, PBSA (Unite), bills included

The PBSA option is only £7/week more and includes professional management, maintenance, and contents insurance.

Council tax: biggest variable for renters

Council tax is a local property tax paid by the occupant or occupants. If you live in a shared house with non-students, the household is liable. Full-time students claim exemption if everyone in the house is a student.

Council tax bands (annual, England):

Divided among occupants, each person pays £300–£500/year if not exempt. If exempt (as a student), pay £0.

Critical: Even if you’re exempt, the landlord must bill the house; they cannot refuse to collect council tax. If you don’t have all students and lose exemption, the landlord is liable to pay council tax on behalf of the occupants (unless tenants pay). Verify this in your tenancy agreement.

Shared utilities and bill-splitting fairness

When bills are excluded, most share bills equally among occupants. However, this can cause disputes:

Best practice:

Internet and WiFi

Most UK rentals don’t include internet unless it’s a PBSA or “all-inclusive” property. Standalone broadband costs £20–£40/month (£5–£10/week) for home WiFi.

Options:

For student work and streaming, superfast fibre (£30–£40/month) is standard.

Avoiding hidden bills

Before signing, clarify:

  1. What’s included in the rent (list each utility)?
  2. If bills are excluded, what’s the estimated weekly cost?
  3. Is council tax included? (Usually no; you claim exemption separately.)
  4. Is contents insurance included?
  5. Are any costs non-negotiable (e.g., mandatory boiler maintenance fee)?

Red flags:

Estimated student budget: bills included vs. excluded

Shared house, bills excluded (Manchester, 3-bed):

PBSA, bills included (Manchester):

University halls, bills included (Manchester):

For budgeting, always assume you’ll pay bills unless explicitly stated and verified in writing.

Winter heating costs: planning ahead

UK winters (November–February) drive heating costs up. A 4-bed house might see gas bills of £200–£400/month (£50–£100/week) if occupants heat aggressively. Budget an extra £20–£30/week for winter if bills are excluded.

Heating tips to lower costs:

You must pay £160/year (£3/week) if:

You don’t need a licence if you only watch on-demand (Netflix, YouTube) or listen to radio.

Many students don’t pay; TV Licensing pursues unpaid fees, but enforcement focuses on households with repeated violations. However, not paying is illegal.

Sources

Last updated: 2025-06.


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