Tips for setting up bills in a student house
Make sure you know which household bills you need to set up
The first step should always be to know which utilities your new student house needs. You’ll have to pay three main bills, including water, electricity, and gas.
However, not all houses use gas. Make sure you check whether your home uses gas or not before doing anything else. You don’t want to go through the hassle of setting up a gas bill if your house doesn’t even need it!
The other bill that’s essential for every student house is broadband. If you forget about this one, you could spend the first few weeks in your new house hot-spotting your phone and burning through all your data!
You should also decide if you’re going to need a TV licence. If one of your housemates plans on buying a TV, and you’re all keen to watch live football matches or BBC iPlayer, you’ll need to pay for a TV licence. If you’re not sure if you’ll need one, you can check on the TV licence website.
Students don’t need to pay council tax, so if you’re living in a house with full-time students, that’s one bill you don’t need to bother with!
Decide on how to pay early on
After the house is sorted and everyone’s signed the contracts, you should decide how you’ll handle payments as a household.
The easiest option is to use a bill-splitting service, like Split The Bills. We’ll bundle and split everything easily, setting up and managing all the bills for the house. All you and your housemates have to do is make one simple payment each month. Plus, you won’t have to chase anyone for money – meaning zero household awkwardness!
If you decide against a bill-splitting service, you’ll have to manage multiple utility accounts yourself. This will involve contacting your water and energy suppliers, setting up accounts, and tracking monthly or quarterly direct debits. Don’t forget, the designated bill payer in your house will have to collect these payments from each housemate every month, and then ensure everything is paid on time.
Learn where to start with student bills to understand how to set up each bill in more detail.
Share the responsibility
If you do decide that you’re going to manage the bills yourself, don’t take it all on alone. Sit down with your future housemates and work out who’ll manage which bill. For example, one person tackles the energy bill, one takes the water bill, and another handles the WiFi bill. This ensures that one person doesn’t get stuck with all the boring admin.