Kent

Student Accommodation Finance in Canterbury

Development finance, investment loans, bridging and refinance for purpose-built student accommodation in Canterbury. This is finance for the scheme as a trading asset, not a student loan.

Matt Lenzie
Written and reviewed by Matt Lenzie Founder & Principal Broker · 25 years arranging student accommodation finance · Reviewed June 2026
31,000
Full-time students (HESA)
6,000
International students (HESA)
6.5%
South East rental growth
3 students/bed
Students per bed, UK avg (Savills)

If you are buying, building or refinancing purpose-built student accommodation in Canterbury, the right facility is rarely the cheapest headline rate. It is the one that reflects the operator covenant, the lease-up profile and any nomination agreement with a university, and that funds the scheme through to stabilised occupancy. We arrange student accommodation finance across Canterbury and the wider Kent market, from development finance to long-term investment debt.

Canterbury is a university town: HESA records around 31,000 full-time students here, of whom roughly 6,000 are international (HESA, Higher Education Student Statistics 2023/24 (approximate, CC-BY 4.0)), studying at University of Kent, Canterbury Christ Church University. PBSA lending reads that demand alongside supply. Across the UK, beds equate to about 27% of full-time students (Savills, 2025) and the average is near 3 students/bed (Savills, 2025), so well-located schemes lease up and hold occupancy at about 99% (Cushman & Wakefield, 2024/25).

Funding a Canterbury PBSA scheme across its lifecycle

We arrange the full range of student accommodation finance for Canterbury developers and operators. Development finance funds a ground-up build or a conversion to PBSA, usually to 60 to 70 percent of cost, sized on the gross development value and the lease-up assumption. A senior investment loan funds the purchase of a stabilised building, typically to 60 to 70 percent of value over a longer term, sized on the income the scheme produces. Bridging moves at auction or pre-planning pace and refinances out on completion. Refinance lowers a rate, releases capital once a scheme stabilises, or exits a development facility onto investment terms. Where a scheme carries a nomination agreement with a university, that covenant strengthens the case. We place each case with the lenders that back this kind of scheme across Kent.

The PBSA formats we fund in Canterbury

Each format is built, let and underwritten differently, and we arrange finance for all of them in Canterbury and across Kent. That covers studio-led schemes, cluster flats with shared kitchens, hybrid buildings that mix both, direct-let stock and stock let to a university under a nomination agreement, plus conversions of offices or larger HMO portfolios into purpose-built rooms. A studio scheme turns on rental tone and the international share of demand. A nomination-let building turns on the strength of the university covenant. Knowing which lender backs which format here, and at what leverage, is the work we do before a case ever reaches a credit committee.

Universities in Canterbury

  • University of Kent
  • Canterbury Christ Church University

Source: HESA, Higher Education Student Statistics 2023/24 (approximate, CC-BY 4.0).

Is Canterbury student accommodation a good investment?

Purpose-built student accommodation is held for income, so the return comes from rent and rental growth against a resilient demand base. Operational schemes nationally have run at about 99% occupancy (Cushman & Wakefield, 2024/25), and rents in the South East have grown at around 6.5% (Cushman & Wakefield, 2024/25). Investors price the deal on the net initial yield, which has sat near 4.25% (Knight Frank, 2025) on prime stock, with regional and operational schemes priced higher to reflect lease-up and covenant risk. In Canterbury the figures that matter are the local student-to-bed balance, the rental tone and how quickly a scheme reaches stabilised occupancy.

Before you commit to a Canterbury scheme, the checks that matter are the size and trajectory of the student population, the international share of demand, the live and consented PBSA pipeline nearby, any nomination agreement and the strength of the university covenant behind it, the operator's track record on lease-up, and the rental tone the building can hold. We pressure-test these as part of arranging the finance, because the same things an investor should weigh are the things a lender underwrites.

What the South East PBSA market means for funding in Canterbury

Brighton, Oxford, Reading and the southern university towns combine high rents with constrained supply. High rents and tight supply favour well-located standing assets. Rents in the South East have grown at about 6.5% (Cushman & Wakefield, 2024/25). Lenders read these regional rental and supply trends, alongside the town's own student numbers, when they size a facility for a Canterbury scheme.

  • Oxford and Brighton are highly supply-constrained
  • High rents near London
  • Strong covenant demand

The local residential market in Canterbury

Local house prices are useful context for a PBSA scheme: they indicate land and build cost, the strength of the wider rental market, and the exit options if a building is ever sold to an owner-occupier or residential investor. Canterbury recorded around 1,558 residential sales over the past year at a median of £331,530, which makes the local market steady.

This residential data is local market context for affordability and exit. It is not a measure of student-accommodation demand, which turns on the student population, the international share and the live PBSA supply pipeline.

Residential sold price by type (Canterbury)

Detached£470,000
Semi-detached£338,000
Terraced£292,500
Flat / apartment£187,500

Source: HM Land Registry residential price-paid data, last 12 months. Local market context, not a student-accommodation valuation.

Recent price trend

QuarterMedianSales
2024-Q2£340k583
2024-Q3£350k663
2024-Q4£345k737
2025-Q1£340k833
2025-Q2£325k456
2025-Q3£336k528
2025-Q4£345k476
2026-Q1£315k273
FAQ

Student accommodation finance in Canterbury: common questions

How much can I borrow to fund student accommodation in Canterbury?

Development finance typically funds up to 60 to 70 percent of cost on a Canterbury PBSA scheme, sized on the gross development value and a credible lease-up assumption. A stabilised building is funded to around 60 to 70 percent of value on its income. Leverage reflects the operator covenant, any nomination agreement and the demand evidence. We hold more than one hundred lender relationships and shortlist the desks most likely to back a Canterbury scheme.

Which lenders provide student accommodation finance in Canterbury?

We arrange across high-street and challenger banks, specialist real-estate lenders and debt funds that back PBSA. The right lender for a Canterbury scheme depends on the format, the operator's track record, whether the building is direct-let or nomination-let, and the leverage you need. We match the case to the desks that actively fund student accommodation across Kent.

How many students are there in Canterbury?

HESA records around 31,000 full-time higher-education students in Canterbury, of whom roughly 6,000 are international (HESA, Higher Education Student Statistics 2023/24 (approximate, CC-BY 4.0)), studying at University of Kent, Canterbury Christ Church University. That demand base, set against the local PBSA supply, is what a lender reads first when assessing a scheme here. We treat these figures as HESA-derived and refresh them on the annual data pass.

What is the student accommodation market like around Canterbury?

Across the UK, PBSA beds equate to about 27% of full-time students (Savills, 2025) and the student-to-bed ratio averages near 3 students/bed (Savills, 2025), so the market is structurally undersupplied. Rents in the South East have grown at around 6.5% (Cushman & Wakefield, 2024/25), and operational schemes have held occupancy near 99% (Cushman & Wakefield, 2024/25). We read these alongside Canterbury's own student numbers and pipeline.

How much money do you need to develop student accommodation in Canterbury?

Most developers need to fund 30 to 40 percent of cost from equity, since development finance covers 60 to 70 percent. On top of that you need the land, professional fees and a contingency, plus enough headroom to carry the scheme through lease-up to stabilised occupancy. The exact figure depends on the scheme size, the format and your track record as a developer or operator, which we assess before approaching lenders.

Is owning student accommodation in Canterbury profitable?

It can be, but the return turns on occupancy, rental growth and the cost of running the building, not on the bricks alone. Well-located schemes with a strong demand base and, where relevant, a university nomination agreement tend to hold occupancy and rent; schemes that misjudge the local supply pipeline or the rental tone do not. We read the demand evidence and the operator before forming a view, and a lender does the same.

Do you only arrange finance in Canterbury?

No. We arrange student accommodation finance across the whole of Kent and the wider UK, with the same approach: read the demand and the supply, match the case to the lenders that back the format, and negotiate terms on the borrower's behalf.

Funding student accommodation in Canterbury?

Send us the scheme and the operator and we will come back with a view on fundability and likely terms within one working day.