Investment into the UK’s purpose-built student accommodation sector rose sharply over the past year, with more than £5.6bn invested between Q2 2025 and Q1 2026, according to new research from Property Inspect.
The analysis found that investment activity increased by almost 46% compared with the previous 12-month period.
The strongest quarter came in the opening three months of 2026, when investment reached £2.1bn — the highest quarterly total recorded in at least the last three years. The previous peak came in Q3 2025, when investment exceeded £1.8bn.
Separate analysis by Property Inspect found that around 9.2% of listed student accommodation stock across Britain had already been let, with 1,730 units occupied from a total market stock of 17,150.
Demand was strongest in the South East, where almost 19% of available units had already secured tenants. The East of England followed at 16.5%, ahead of the South West at 13.9%, while both Scotland and London recorded demand levels of 12.7%.
Wales recorded the lowest level of demand at 4.3%, followed by the East Midlands at 4.9%. The East Midlands also had the largest volume of available stock, with more than 3,300 units currently on the market.
Sián Hemming-Metcalfe, operations director at Property Inspect, commented: “Institutional appetite for PBSA continues to strengthen because the fundamentals remain compelling: high demand, resilient occupancy, and consistent long-term rental performance. PBSA has evolved into a mainstream institutional residential sector, attracting sustained interest from major investors looking for resilient long-term assets.
“But as portfolios scale, operational pressure increases just as quickly. Higher tenant turnover, tighter turnaround windows, rising maintenance expectations, and growing compliance obligations mean operators are now being judged as much on operational performance as occupancy rates.
“In a market attracting record levels of investment, the ability to manage inspections, maintenance, safety, and property standards efficiently at scale is becoming a key differentiator for landlords and accommodation providers alike.”

