Tuesday 24th February 2026

Bridging the gap? Oxford’s fight against wealth inequality

The life of a student is rarely one of luxury. Pot Noodles for dinner, Vinted bids in place of new clothes, and the widely-prized Tesco Clubcard have become small but vital saving graces as the cost of living in the UK continues to soar. While today’s economic strain is a national reality cutting across generations and incomes, in Oxford it operates on a different scale altogether. Routinely named the second most expensive city in the UK (the first being London), spiralling rents and rising prices magnify financial pressures for students already balancing limited incomes with an unforgiving housing market and ever-demanding workload. 

The city of Oxford hosts the highest proportion of students in England and Wales. Nonetheless, not only are basic necessities increasingly expensive, but so are the most stereotypical student activities: from a night out to a simple coffee between lectures. What was once considered a rite of passage within student life is now, for many, a calculated expense, forcing students to weigh up social participation against financial survival in a city that so often feels priced beyond them.

In response to these pressures – and in an attempt to address financial inequality  among students from vastly diverse socioeconomic backgrounds – Oxford offers a range of financial support mechanisms, from bursaries and hardship funds to college-specific grants. These schemes aim to cushion students against the city’s escalating costs – yet questions remain over how accessible, sufficient, and well-publicised this funding truly is, and whether it can effectively narrow the gap between rising prices and the needs of disadvantaged students.

Support often begins at a small, everyday level, from subsidised meals in hall to student-run second-hand sales.  It also extends to more unique forms of assistance, including university-wide scholarships and alumni-funded endowments. Regardless of size, these support mechanisms collectively make a tangible difference to students navigating the city’s high cost of living. 

The price of lunch is an everyday example of this. Starting anywhere from £3.50 to £5, subsidised hall meals (offering soups, salads, and hot main courses) provide a crucial alternative to the inflated cost of groceries in the city. In Oxford, even basic staples come at a premium: a dozen eggs is estimated to cost £3.94, compared to average prices of £2.54 in Colchester, £3.55 in Brighton, and £2.60 in Leicester. Against this backdrop, college dining offers students much appreciated financial relief, softening the impact of Oxford’s high living costs with the option of a warm, well-balanced meal at a low cost. 

However, not only is this often only available within the limited structure of term-time provision, but food is just one of the many pervasive costs in the UK’s “most unaffordable city”. On a wider scale, the financial disparities within Oxford’s diverse student body has led to negative public perceptions of the University. Depicted in popular culture from Emerald Fennel’s Saltburn (2023) right back to Evelyn Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited (1945), Oxford’s wealth gap has long been tied to its stereotype as a bastion of privilege. In recent years, however, the University has made visible attempts to challenge this narrative.

Diversity in Oxford has certainly improved since the era of Johnson and Cameron’s Bullingdon Club, which prompted the University to launch a number of schemes aimed at ensuring all students can feel at home against a backdrop of generational wealth, famous parents, and inherited networks. Yet while these initiatives signal progress, they also raise questions about how far structural inequalities can be addressed within an institution still shaped by historic privilege.

The Crankstart Scholarship exemplifies this. Outlined as providing “a programme of enhanced support to UK residents from lower-income households who are studying for their first undergraduate degree”, the scheme was launched in 2012 after “a generous donation from Sir Michael Moritz, a Christ Church alumnus, and his wife Ms Harriet Heyman”. Since then, Crankstart has undoubtedly been impactful, described by the University as “currently supporting 17% of Oxford University’s full-time UK undergraduate students” with “an annual bursary of between £6150 and £5300” and access to a range of internship opportunities. 

This amount, equivalent to almost 65% of a UK student’s annual tuition fees, is a huge step in the right direction for closing Oxford’s gaping wealth disparities. However, it does not come without its caveats. 

Firstly, some recipients at The Queen’s College have expressed discontent at the linguistic ramifications of the scholarship’s name. ‘Crankstart’, a term associated with sudden or unearned advantage, has been criticised for reinforcing the very narratives of dependency and deficit that widening participation schemes seek to dismantle. The same applies to college-bursary options, like at St Cross College, where donations for a ‘Student Hardship Fund’ are being actively encouraged. 

For some recipients, these labels risk publicly marking students out as beneficiaries of charity rather than merit, creating an uncomfortable visibility within an institution already acutely aware of class distinction. This is a common trope throughout much of Oxford’s support for disadvantaged students, with notable parallels to the impacts of placing individuals on mandatory programmes, like Opportunity Oxford. 

Such unease reflects a broader tension within access initiatives at Oxford: while financial support may alleviate material pressures, the cultural framing of such schemes can inadvertently entrench stigma. Oxford’s names for these schemes also contrasts with the more general framing of support grants at many other universities which place less of an emphasis on charity – such as the University of Sussex’s ‘Sussex Bursary’ and Cardiff University’s ‘Cardiff University Bursary’, both for students with a household income of less than £35,000.

Chloe Pomfret, President of Class Act, described the consequences of this to Cherwell: not only can “it be embarrassing to ask for financial support, particularly when you are raised in a family where talking about finances and asking for help can be a huge taboo”, but many “can feel like they’re not ‘deserving’ of this financial support, because the way these funds are named make you worry others need support more”. 

Pomfret expressed appreciation for Oxford’s overall generosity, describing “for the first time in my life, finances weren’t my primary concern as it funded my rent and food”. However, she also pointed out the importance of support for “students who appear financially able to support themselves on paper, but in reality, are ineligible for Crankstart and other generous bursaries”.

Indeed, the eligibility criteria for many schemes tend to rely on broad socioeconomic indicators that cannot fully capture the complexity of disadvantage. Students whose circumstances fall outside prescribed thresholds – such as those from families with fluctuating incomes, precarious employment, or non-traditional forms of hardship – may find themselves excluded despite facing comparable financial and cultural barriers. This reliance on generalisation risks reducing lived experience to administrative categories, thereby undermining the very inclusivity these initiatives seek to promote.

For example, the Crankstart Scholarship is offered to students whose household income is £32,500 or less, versus other Oxford bursaries’ criteria which rises to £50,000. However, this framework assumes that “household income” is a transparent, and meaningful measure of a student’s lived financial reality. In practice, many students may be financially independent from their families or receive inconsistent support, rendering household income an imprecise indicator of need. 

Moreover, the model fails to account for the sudden and often destabilising changes in circumstances that can happen at any point during a university career, such as parental job loss, illness, bereavement, or shifts in caring responsibilities. By relying on static thresholds assessed at the point of entry, the scheme risks overlooking students whose financial vulnerability emerges or intensifies after admission, thereby limiting its capacity to respond to the dynamic nature of student hardship.

These limitations are further illuminated at the college level, where financial support mechanisms are often narrower in scope and more symbolically charged. scholarships grounded in fixed eligibility criteria and externally funded charitable structures can struggle to respond to evolving student needs. Concerns around opaque funding sources, limited transparency, and external political influence have shifted attention away from students’ lived experiences and towards the broader symbolism such support carries within such a hotly contested institutional environment. As a result, financial aid does not only risk becoming insufficiently flexible, but also entangled in political and symbolic debates that restrict its capacity to address the dynamic realities of student vulnerability in Oxford.

To escape this politicisation, one should perhaps look beyond the city. Across the country, charities exist to support individual students with their higher education endeavours. On a local level, many of these organisations function to assist families, schools, and community-run projects, while also giving out grants and one-off payments to students applying for top universities. 

One-such organisation is The Magdalen and Lasher Charity, which operates in Hastings. Founded in the thirteenth century but now concerned with “the prevention and relief of poverty…among persons living in or near the Borough of Hastings”, the Charity also supports low-income students attending high-ranking universities like Oxford and Cambridge. Residents of Hastings who attend these institutions may be awarded a sum of up to £250 per academic year during the course of their degree, making a meaningful difference to those struggling with the expenses of studying in an expensive city. 

However, in order to access this support, students have to make a formal application, which does somewhat reduce accessibility. Like many Oxford grants, charities like Magdalen and Lasher are often underpublicized, reliant on referral from social services and schools to reach beneficiaries. In addition, the requirement to be “in need, hardship, or distress” can be somewhat ambiguous, and may discourage many prospective applicants who do not feel they fit this description. But each of these charities does have money to give; although time-consuming and often hard to locate, they are certainly a significant funding alternative that makes a huge difference to student lives.

The same can be said inside Oxford, as once again a lack of publicity leads to available funds not being utilised. Lincoln College’s Student Financial Support Grant is an example of this, described by one second-year student as “very much an under-utilised pot of money”, adding: “College has the money, but could do a lot more in terms of advertising it.” They told Cherwell that the grant paid for a new laptop after a two-week processing period, noting that “the up-to two week wait can be a little bit difficult for students needing urgent funds, but otherwise Lincoln is very generous”. 

Cases like this underline a recurring issue across Oxford: financial support may exist in theory, but without visibility, speed, and clarity, it risks arriving too late or not at all. For students navigating sudden hardship – like a broken laptop, an unexpected rent increase, or a loss of family income – timing can be extremely decisive, particularly given Oxford’s restrictions on paid employment during term time, which limit students’ ability to respond to financial shocks through part-time work.

One attempt to address this gap is the Reuben Scholarship, a university-wide scheme designed to support students from households with lower incomes throughout their degree. Unlike many college-specific funds or externally affiliated awards, the Reuben Scholarship is centrally administered and framed explicitly as sustained financial support rather than short-term crisis intervention. It is also processed by department rather than requiring applicants to apply directly through Reuben College, a key distinction from many other funding options at Oxford, whether centralised or college-based. 

This centralisation is significant because it mitigates the inequities created by the college-by-college funding model, under which levels of financial support vary widely depending on a college’s historical wealth and endowment.The Reuben Scholarship therefore represents a partial corrective to structural inequalities embedded within the collegiate system, although it does not eliminate the broader issue of unevenly distributed financial security across colleges.

While certainly levelling the playing field, still the familiar tensions remain. There is little publicity of the Reuben Scholarship, and like many access initiatives, eligibility is still tied to income-based thresholds that struggle to capture the full complexity of students’ lived realities. While its scale and centralisation mark a shift towards a more coherent university response slightly different to Crankstart and college funding, it nevertheless operates within the same structural constraints that shape Oxford’s broader approach to student support.

Taken together, Oxford’s many bursaries, scholarships, hardship funds, and charitable grants reveal a system rooted in good intentions but fragmented in execution. Financial assistance is often generous, yet inconsistently publicised. This, alongside frequently slow or inflexible implementation, makes funding options impactful, but symbolically loaded in ways that can reproduce stigma rather than dismantle it. 

As the national cost of living continues to rise and student hardship becomes ever more dynamic, the challenge for Oxford is not simply to provide support, but to ensure it is visible, adaptable, and tuned into the realities of student life not just at the point of entry, but throughout their time at the University.

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