The UK has 11 fixed public holidays (bank holidays) plus school half-terms that affect transport, tourism, and accommodation prices. Universities run on different term dates (usually 2–3 terms per year; Christmas is always Dec 15–Jan 15). During school holidays and half-terms, trains are packed, hotels are expensive, tourist attractions have long queues, and some student accommodation closes. Plan ahead: book transport early and know when your campus closes.
UK School Holidays & Bank Holidays (2025–26)
| Period | Dates | Duration | Who’s Affected | Impact on Transport/Prices |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| New Year | 1–3 Jan | 3 days (bank holidays) | Everyone | Trains packed; hotels expensive |
| Easter | 18 Apr–2 May | 2 weeks (schools); universities have study week | Schools + some universities | Peak travel period; avoid if possible |
| May bank holidays | 5 May, 26 May | 2 bank holidays | Everyone | Trains busy; some businesses closed |
| Half-term (Spring) | 17–21 Feb | 1 week (schools only) | Mainly schools | Slight crowding; not major |
| Half-term (October) | 27–31 Oct | 1 week (schools only) | Mainly schools | Slight crowding; not major |
| Summer | 18 Jul–2 Sep | 6–7 weeks (schools/universities) | Everyone; longest holiday | Most packed period; avoid long journeys if possible |
| Christmas | 15 Dec–15 Jan | 1 month (universities); varies for schools | Everyone | Peak travel period; book early |
University-specific: Each university sets its own term dates (usually within 2–3 weeks of each other). Check your university’s academic calendar; your specific terms might differ slightly from the national school calendar.
Impact on You: A Practical Guide
Christmas Break (15 Dec–15 Jan)
Duration: 4–5 weeks (longest; universities close partly)
What changes:
- Campus accommodation closes (must leave or pay extra)
- Libraries, sports facilities, and university services mostly close
- Flights home increase 30–50% in price
- Trains to airports are packed
- Many restaurants and attractions close Dec 24–26
What you should do:
- Book flights/trains early (book by September if going home)
- Find alternative accommodation if living in halls (ask residence office for winter options; usually available for extra fee £5–10/night)
- Plan to be away: Most students go home or travel; few stay
- Work: Christmas break is lucrative for part-time work (retail is busy; delivery jobs pay overtime); many students pick up extra shifts
Costs: Flights/trains are 30–50% more expensive than September. Budget £200–400 for intercontinental flights; £30–80 for domestic trains.
Easter Break (18 Apr–2 May, 2025)
Duration: 2–3 weeks (varies by university)
What changes:
- Campus partially closes
- Schools are on holiday (families travel; chaos on trains)
- Hotels are expensive (families, holidays)
- Tourist attractions are packed
What you should do:
- Book travel early (by January)
- Travel mid-break if possible (avoid the first and last few days when everyone’s moving)
- Consider staycation or nearby country travel (cheaper than flying home)
- Work: Easter break is good for extra shifts; fewer students around means more job availability
Costs: Similar to Christmas for flights; trains are expensive and crowded.
Summer Break (July 18–September 2, 2025)
Duration: 6–7 weeks (longest holiday; campus closes)
What changes:
- Campus accommodation closes
- Most universities shut down (labs, libraries have limited hours)
- Peak travel season (families, backpackers, students)
- Accommodation prices peak
- Jobs are plentiful (retail, hospitality boost for summer)
What you should do:
- Decide early: Stay in UK (work full-time, save money) vs. go home (expensive travel, family time)
- If staying in UK: Find accommodation (not guaranteed; book by April for July)
- Book work: Many students commit to 40+ hour/week summer jobs (7–10 weeks); plan schedule in April
- If going home: Book flights by April; book return flights before August (undercut prices before summer peak ends)
Costs: Highest travel prices of the year; accommodation harder to find. Budget accordingly.
May Bank Holidays
Dates: 5 May (Early May Bank Holiday), 26 May (Spring Bank Holiday)
What changes:
- Slight crowding on transport (3-day weekend)
- Some businesses closed
- Tourist attractions busy
Impact: Minor; not as severe as school holidays. Trains are busy but not impossible.
Half-Terms (February, October)
Dates: 17–21 February (Spring half-term), 27–31 October (Autumn half-term)
What changes:
- Schools close (families travel; slight crowding)
- Universities usually stay open
- Small impact on trains, transport
Impact: Very minor. You likely won’t notice unless you’re travelling to a popular destination.
Planning Your Breaks: Practical Tips
1. Decide Where You’ll Be
By August, know:
- Christmas: Home or UK?
- Easter: Home or UK?
- Summer: Work (UK) or home or travel?
Early decision = better prices.
2. Book Travel Early
| Booking Timing | Flight Price | Train Price |
|---|---|---|
| 3+ months ahead | -30–50% | -20–40% |
| 1–2 months ahead | Standard | Standard |
| 2–4 weeks ahead | +10–20% | +10–30% |
| 1 week before | +30–50% | +30–50% |
Golden rule: Book Christmas travel by September; Easter by January; summer by April.
3. Avoid Peak Travel Days
Peak days (most crowded, expensive):
- Christmas: 18–23 Dec; 27 Dec–2 Jan (return)
- Easter: 17–18 Apr; 30 Apr–2 May
- Summer: 15–18 July; 28–31 August
Off-peak days (cheaper, less crowded):
- Christmas: 24–26 Dec (unlikely to travel); 3–6 Jan
- Easter: 19–25 Apr
- Summer: 18–27 July; 1–10 August
If possible, travel on off-peak days (especially for flights home; even 1–2 days’ difference saves £30–80).
4. Summer Break: Stay or Go?
Stay in UK (Work):
- Earnings: £1,500–£3,000 (8–10 weeks at 35–40 hours/week)
- Accommodation: £200–400/month (if you can find it)
- Savings after accommodation: £800–£2,500
- Pros: Save money, build UK work experience, network
- Cons: Lonely (many students leave); campus quiet; family misses you
Go Home:
- Flights: £200–£600 (return)
- No accommodation costs (family home)
- Family time, familiar food, rest
- Pros: Family connection, recharge, cultural reset
- Cons: Expensive travel, long flight, readjust when returning
Travel (Budget Option):
- Stay with friends in other UK cities (free/cheap)
- Travel Europe on budget airlines (£15–50 flights)
- Camps, au pair positions (earn while traveling)
- Saving: Save 80% of summer wages while still earning
5. Campus Closure: Where to Stay?
If your halls close:
- Ask your residence office about winter/spring accommodation (usually £5–10/night)
- Book into a hostel (£15–30/night in popular cities)
- Couchsurf or stay with friends (free)
- Book Airbnb (£30–60/night; cheaper outside tourist seasons)
International students: Plan early. Don’t get stuck without accommodation.
Part-Time Work During Holidays
Opportunities:
- Retail (Boxing Day sales staff, Christmas decorations team)
- Hospitality (holiday parties, restaurant bookings increase)
- Delivery (peak demand Dec, July–Aug)
- Tutoring (students need catch-up before exams)
Pay: Often 15–20% higher during peak periods (overtime, shift bonuses).
Earning potential: 8 weeks at 40 hours/week at £12/hour = £3,840 gross (before tax). At current tax thresholds, you’ll keep ~£3,400.
Reality check: Many students work 2–3 weeks, then take time off (exams, recovery, family). Realistic earning: £1,200–£2,000 per summer break.
Tourist Attraction Prices
During school holidays, UK attractions increase prices or implement timed ticketing:
- Tower of London, Big Ben, Windsor Castle: +15–30% prices; 2–4 hour queues
- Stonehenge, Lake District: Crowded; arrive early
- Museums (British Museum, National Gallery): Free but crowded; book timed slots online
Tip: Visit major attractions during term-time (Jan–April, Sep–Nov), not during holidays.
Accommodation Prices: When to Book
| Period | Price | When to Book |
|---|---|---|
| Peak (Jul–Aug, Dec, Easter) | +30–50% | 2–4 months ahead |
| Standard (Sep–Nov, Jan–Mar) | Normal | 4–6 weeks ahead |
| Off-peak (May, June) | -10–20% | Flexible; 2–4 weeks ok |
International Students: Visa Implications
Fact: Your student visa allows you to leave the UK for up to 4 weeks during official university breaks without needing to do anything special. HOWEVER, you must:
- Return before the new term starts
- Not miss mandatory attendance events (check your course requirements)
- Keep proof of your breaks (e.g., passport stamps) in case UKVI asks
Very long breaks (e.g., leaving for 8+ weeks in summer and returning late): Informally notify your university. You’re allowed to, but good practice is to tell your department you’ll be away.
Public Holidays (When Schools Close)
Even if universities are open, public holidays mean:
- Banks close; you can’t do banking
- Government offices closed (UKVI, HMRC) if you need to visit
- Some shops/restaurants closed
- Transport reduced schedule (trains run but fewer services)
Key public holidays:
- 1 January (New Year)
- Good Friday (18 April 2025)
- Easter Monday (21 April 2025)
- 5 May (Early May Bank Holiday)
- 26 May (Spring Bank Holiday)
- 25 December (Christmas)
- 26 December (Boxing Day)
On these days, plan ahead (book restaurants, don’t plan banking, etc.).
Term Dates Vary by University: Check Yours
Each university sets its own term dates. Your university’s calendar might be:
- Oxford/Cambridge: Michaelmas, Hilary, Trinity (very early)
- Scottish universities: Different (often September–December, January–May, May–August)
- Most others: Semester 1 (September–December), Semester 2 (January–May), Summer (May–July)
Check your student portal for your specific 2025–26 dates. Plan accordingly.
Summary: The Dates You Need to Know (2025–26)
- 1–3 Jan: New Year bank holidays
- 17–21 Feb: School half-term (minor impact)
- 18 Apr–2 May: Easter break (major travel)
- 5 May: Early May Bank Holiday
- 26 May: Spring Bank Holiday
- 27–31 Oct: School half-term (minor)
- 15 Dec–15 Jan: Christmas break (campus closes; major travel)
- 18 Jul–2 Sep: Summer break (campus closes; major period)
Sources
- GOV.UK: UK bank holidays
- UCAS: University term dates
- Your university’s academic calendar (check your specific institution)
- Trainline: Peak travel dates
Last updated: 2025-05.