Most Student visa holders can work up to a weekly cap in term time and can work full time in official vacation periods if the role meets visa conditions.
You can usually take a job in the UK while you study, and it can help with rent, groceries, and getting used to a new workplace. The hard part is keeping every week compliant, even when shifts change at the last minute.
The Home Office treats work conditions as part of your immigration status, not a casual guideline. A small slip, like going over your weekly cap after a shift swap, can cause headaches for you, your school, and your employer.
What Working Permission Looks Like On Your Student Visa
When your Student visa is granted, you get conditions that spell out what work is permitted. Your employer may ask questions and request proof. That’s standard right-to-work checking.
Start with two items: the wording on your immigration status (often via your eVisa) and your school’s term dates. Your school sets the official vacation periods for your course, and those dates decide when “term time” starts and ends for work limits.
Many students on full-time degree-level courses at eligible higher education sponsors have a 20-hour weekly cap during term time. Some students have a 10-hour cap. Some have no work permission at all. The difference comes down to course level and sponsor type in the Immigration Rules.
Work Is Measured By The Week, Not By The Month
If your limit is 20 hours, it’s 20 hours in that week. You can’t average hours across weeks. Working 10 hours last week does not give you “extra” hours this week.
Keep your own log. A quick note works: Monday–Sunday dates, employer name, and total hours. This is dull, and it saves you when a timesheet gets edited later or you juggle two jobs.
Term Time Is Not Always The Same As A Semester Calendar
For many courses, term time lines up with taught weeks. For some courses, term time also includes periods when you still have academic commitments, like exams or a dissertation phase. If your school says you are in term time, treat it that way for working hours, even if friends on other programs are on break.
Can I Work While Studying on a UK Student Visa? Term-Time Limits With Real-World Examples
Yes, you can work while studying on a UK Student visa in many cases, but you must stay inside the weekly cap in term time and avoid restricted job types.
A simple way to stay safe is to plan your week like a budget. If your cap is 20 hours, pick shifts that land at 16 to 18. That buffer covers a late close, a training hour, or a manager asking you to stay a bit longer.
Examples That Keep A 20-Hour Week Clean
- Two shifts: 10 hours on Saturday and 10 on Sunday.
- Three shifts: 6 + 7 + 7 across the week.
- One long shift: 12 hours on one day, leaving 8 for the rest of the week.
Overtime is the usual trap. If you are close to your cap, one “can you stay?” can push you over. It still counts, even if you were trying to be helpful.
What Counts As Work Time
Paid work counts. Unpaid work can also count if it’s structured like a job with set duties and scheduled hours. Pure volunteering is different when there is no contract and you can choose when to show up, but lines can blur. If it looks and runs like a job, count the hours in your weekly total.
Work Types That Are Allowed And Not Allowed
Most students think in terms of “hours.” Employers often think in terms of “job type.” You need both to line up.
Jobs That Often Fit Student Visa Conditions
- Retail shifts with fixed rosters
- Cafe or restaurant roles with time-clock tracking
- On-campus roles where hours are easy to document
- Internships that are part time in term time and properly recorded
Work That Can Break Your Visa Conditions
- Self-employment or business activity: freelance work where you invoice clients, run ads, or trade as a sole proprietor.
- Entertainer work: paid performances and related roles covered by the restriction.
- Professional sport roles: including sport coaching at a professional level.
- Filling a permanent full-time vacancy: restricted unless you meet a specific exception tied to switching routes.
If a role involves invoices, “contractor” status, or you setting your own rates, pause and check your conditions before you start. A job that seems casual can still be treated as business activity.
For the legal wording on caps and restrictions, see Immigration Rules: Appendix Student.
When You Can Work Full Time
Many students can work full time outside term time. “Outside term time” means the official vacation periods for your course, not a gap you created by finishing classes early.
Your Confirmation of Acceptance for Studies (CAS) lists course start and end dates, and the Student route includes extra time before and after a course depending on course length. That extra time can matter if you are working after your final assessments, so line up your plans with your school’s definition of course completion.
Vacation Periods Depend On Your Program
Undergraduate courses often have clear winter, spring, and summer breaks. Some one-year master’s courses can feel like they have a long break, yet your dissertation period may still be treated as term time if you have academic commitments. Your school’s academic calendar is the safest reference point.
Work Placements Have Their Own Rules
Course-related placements can be permitted when they are assessed and integral to the program, with their own requirements in the Student route. Treat placements as part of your academic plan. Get written confirmation from your school when a placement is course-required and assessed.
Permanent Roles And Switching Routes
A Student visa is meant for study, so it blocks taking a permanent full-time vacancy in most situations. There is an exception in the rules that can let you start a permanent full-time role while an in-country application is pending for routes like Skilled Worker or Graduate, if you meet the route conditions and the timing rules in the Student route.
In plain terms, this is not a “work around.” It is a narrow allowance with specific requirements tied to your course level, your sponsor, and when you made the new application. If you are offered a graduate job and the employer wants you to start right away, ask them to build your start date around your course completion timeline and any application you plan to make.
If you are not in that exception, treat permanent full-time roles as off-limits while you are still on Student permission, even if the role pays well.
Table: Student Visa Work Rules At A Glance
| Situation | Term-Time Hours | Outside Term Time |
|---|---|---|
| Full-time degree-level course at an eligible higher education sponsor | Up to 20 hours per week | Full-time work permitted |
| Full-time course below degree level at an eligible higher education sponsor | Up to 10 hours per week | Full-time work permitted |
| Part-time study (any level) | No employment permitted | No employment permitted |
| Study abroad program in the UK with an overseas higher education sponsor | Up to 20 hours per week | Full-time work permitted |
| Student union sabbatical officer role (when visa granted for it) | Permitted (up to 2 years) | Permitted (up to 2 years) |
| Self-employment or business activity | Not permitted (limited exception when switching routes) | Not permitted (limited exception when switching routes) |
| Professional sport roles or coaching | Not permitted | Not permitted |
| Entertainer work | Not permitted | Not permitted |
How Employers Check Your Right To Work
Expect your employer to ask for evidence of your work permission. They may ask for your share code, or for proof of your term dates.
Bring clarity early. Tell them your weekly cap and that it runs across all jobs in a Monday-to-Sunday week. If you work for more than one employer, track the combined total in one log.
Table: Common Scenarios And How To Handle Them
| Scenario | Risk Level | Safe Move |
|---|---|---|
| Your manager asks you to add a shift at the end of the week | High | Check your weekly total first, then accept only if you stay under your cap |
| You work two jobs with separate timesheets | High | Track combined hours in one place and share your cap with both employers |
| You do unpaid trial shifts before hiring | Medium | Count scheduled trial hours in your weekly total |
| You plan to freelance online for clients abroad | High | Avoid self-employed setups unless you meet a permitted exception |
| Your course enters dissertation or research weeks | Medium | Follow your school’s term-time definition for those weeks |
| You want extra hours during winter or summer break | Low | Work full time only during official vacation periods for your course |
| You finish classes early and think you are “on break” | Medium | Use official term dates, not personal availability |
What Happens If You Break The Work Conditions
Going over your cap or taking restricted work can lead to serious consequences. Your school may have to report a breach, and your immigration permission can be at risk. Employers can also cut shifts quickly when they see compliance issues.
If you think you have broken the rules, stop taking extra shifts while you sort it out. Get clarity from your school’s international student office and keep your records ready.
Quick Checklist Before You Say Yes To Any Shift
- Read the work wording on your immigration status and save a copy.
- Get official term dates for your specific program.
- Plan weekly hours with a buffer under your cap.
- Avoid work that looks like freelancing, business activity, sport roles, or entertainer work.
- Track every hour across every employer in one Monday-to-Sunday log.
For a plain overview of what you can and cannot do on this route, see the Student visa overview page.
References & Sources
- GOV.UK.“Immigration Rules: Appendix Student.”Sets the term-time hour caps, when full-time work can be permitted, and restricted job types under ST 26.
- GOV.UK.“Student visa: Overview.”Summarizes what Student visa holders can do and key restrictions like self-employment and certain job categories.
