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Best student deals right now: what's genuinely worth it in July 2026

3 min read Article Updated 2026-07-04

A student comparing prices on a laptop

Student discounts are scattered across half a dozen apps, and most of the "deals" pushed at you are things you would never actually buy. This is the honest version: the handful of offers genuinely worth claiming this July, each one checked against the provider's own site today. Some links are affiliate-tracked, so we may earn a small commission. A deal only makes this page if we would use it ourselves.

Start with the free apps, not a paid card

Before you pay a penny for a discount, get the free stuff working. UNiDAYS and Student Beans are both free to join with a uni email, and between them they cover most of the high-street brands, streaming services, takeaways and tech you will realistically use. Set both up in ten minutes. That alone covers the bulk of everyday student discounts without spending anything.

Supermarket loyalty cards do more for your weekly shop than any branded student card. A Tesco Clubcard or a Sainsbury's Nectar card is free, and member prices now beat the shelf price on a big chunk of a normal food shop. If you are not scanning one at the till, that is the easiest saving on this whole list.

A student listening to music in a cafe

Streaming: the one subscription worth the student rate

Spotify is the clear pick. When I checked the Spotify student page today, Premium Student was free for the first month and then £5.99 a month, which sits well under the standard rate and held even after the recent round of price rises. You re-verify you are a student once a year. That is the only catch.

Everything else is optional. If you already split a family plan for Netflix or Disney, keep doing that. Paying full price for three separate video services on a student budget is the quickest way to lose forty quid a month you will not miss until it is gone.

Travel: the Railcard maths still works

If you take more than a couple of intercity trains a year, a 16-25 Railcard pays for itself fast. A one-year card is £35 and a three-year card is £80, and both take a third off most fares across Great Britain. Do the sum on your own travel. Two return trips home usually clears the cost of the yearly card, and the three-year option is the obvious pick if you are early in your course.

A student waiting on a UK railway platform

One thing worth knowing: there is a minimum fare on some peak journeys, so the card saves you most on off-peak and longer routes. For a summer of visiting home and friends, it is still the best-value card a student can hold.

Amazon Prime Student, and why you did not miss out on Prime Day

Amazon ran Prime Day back in June this year rather than July, so there is no summer event left to hold out for. Ignore the countdown timers. If you genuinely want Prime for the delivery and the video, the student deal is the real saving: a six-month free trial, then £4.49 a month or £47.49 a year, which is half the normal price. The trial is the bit that matters. Set a reminder to cancel before it renews if you decide it is not for you.

A student walking through campus

Where an Amazon link makes sense on our site, it carries our tag, and it costs you nothing extra. We only point you at Prime if the free trial is the actual win.

The paid discount-card question

People ask whether a paid card like TOTUM is worth it. The honest answer for most students: only if you will use it. UNiDAYS and Student Beans already cover most of the eating-out and retail offers you will reach for, so a paid card earns its keep only if you shop somewhere it uniquely unlocks, or you want the bundled 18-plus ID. Check the merchant list against where you actually spend before you pay.

The bottom line for July

Free apps first. Spotify if you want one subscription. A Railcard if you travel. The Prime student trial if you want the delivery. Skip the rest until you have a specific reason to claim it. That is the whole list, and it is short on purpose.

Reviewed · Editorial standards

Ella Woodward
Written by
Ella Woodward

Ella is UniSorted's Deals Editor. She funded a year of food shops by stacking TOTUM, UNiDAYS, Student Beans and every bank-switch bonus going, and she still checks whether a 'student discount' is genuinely cheaper than the normal sale price. Covers discount schemes, cashback, travel, tech, and switching offers. ella@unisorted.co.uk

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