Investment Guide

Student Housing 2026: Record Capital, a €466 Billion Supply Gap, and Policy-Hostage Demand

By Abhii Dabas
July 10, 2026
7 min read
Sign in·
Student Housing 2026: Record Capital, a €466 Billion Supply Gap, and Policy-Hostage Demand

Introduction

Purpose-built student accommodation entered 2026 with the strongest capital formation in its history. UK PBSA investment hit £2.1 billion across just 20 deals in Q1 2026 — the best start to a year in a decade — while European PBSA investment reached €10.2 billion in 2025, the second-highest figure ever recorded. The supply case is genuinely extraordinary: JLL estimates €466 billion of investment is needed by 2030, roughly 23 times historical run-rates, with completions running 79% below the rate at which students are being added. But the sector carries two risks that headline numbers obscure. Demand is policy-hostage, with UK student visa applications down 31% in January 2026. And in the United States — the most mature PBSA market — per-bed pricing has already fallen from $91,750 to $68,300 in a single year. This analysis maps where the risk-adjusted returns genuinely sit.

The Bull Case: Record Capital Against a Structural Supply Deficit

  • Capital Formation at a Decade High:
    Knight Frank reports UK PBSA investment reached £2.1 billion in Q1 2026 across only 20 transactions — the strongest opening quarter in ten years, and a volume concentrated in a handful of large portfolio trades rather than broad-based deal flow. The defining transaction was Unite Students' acquisition of Empiric for approximately £720 million, bringing 7,700 beds across 68 assets under single ownership. The UK PBSA market is now valued at £84.8 billion. Consolidation at this scale signals that institutional buyers are pricing the sector as core income infrastructure rather than opportunistic development.
  • The Supply Deficit Is Structural, Not Cyclical:
    JLL calculates that European PBSA requires €466 billion of investment by 2030 to meet demand — approximately 23 times the historical rate of capital deployment — while current completions are running 79% below the pace at which students are being added to the system. Provision rates expose the gap by market: the UK supplies purpose-built beds to roughly 40% of students, Germany and France around 20%, Spain 16%, and Italy just 10%. In absolute terms, Paris faces a shortfall of roughly 195,000 beds and London around 180,000. This is a deficit that cannot be closed inside a decade even under optimistic build assumptions.
  • Income Performance Has Outpaced Inflation and Held Occupancy:
    BONARD data shows European PBSA occupancy of 98% in 2024, with rent growth of 6.5% in 2023 and 5.4% in 2024, outpacing inflation in ten of fifteen tracked countries. JLL reports Continental European rents grew 9% across 2025/26 against 2.1% inflation. Prime UK yields currently sit near 4.50% net initial yield in London and 5.25–5.50% in the regions. That 75–100 basis point regional spread, set against near-full occupancy and inflation-beating rental growth, is the clearest expression of value in the European sector today.

Where the Markets Diverge: Spain, the UK Regions, and a Repricing United States

  • Spain Is the Most Capitalised Undersupplied Market in Continental Europe:
    Spain supplies roughly 117,000 purpose-built beds against 622,000 students requiring accommodation — a provision rate below 20% — while foreign student enrolment has risen 77% over the past decade. Institutional capital has responded decisively: CPP Investments acquired the Livensa platform from Brookfield for €1.2 billion. But investors must note what the pricing already reflects. Spanish prime PBSA yields of approximately 4.5% sit only about 120 basis points above domestic sovereign bonds at 3.3%, meaning a substantial portion of the undersupply thesis is already embedded in the entry price.
  • The United Kingdom: Regional Spread Over Prime London:
    The London yield of roughly 4.50% NIY prices a 180,000-bed shortfall in the most supply-constrained student market in Europe, but leaves little room for yield compression to drive returns. Regional UK assets at 5.25–5.50% NIY carry a 75–100 basis point premium against a national provision rate of only 40%. Given that both London and the regions face genuine structural undersupply, the regional spread is compensation for perceived liquidity rather than for materially weaker fundamentals — which is precisely the kind of mispricing institutional capital is now consolidating to capture.
  • The United States Shows What Maturity Actually Looks Like:
    The US market is the sector's most institutionalised — Blackstone holds interests across more than 190 properties and roughly 140,000 beds, and KKR acquired 19 assets comprising over 10,000 beds from BREIT for $1.64 billion. It is also where the income story is visibly decelerating. Yardi Matrix reports May 2026 preleasing at 78% with average rent of $933 per bed, up just 1.7%, and leasing-season rent growth of 0.9% against 5.9% only two years earlier. Most striking, per-bed sale pricing has fallen to $68,300 year-to-date in 2026 from $91,750 in 2025 — a decline of roughly 25% in twelve months.

The Risks the Headline Numbers Hide

  • Demand Is Hostage to Visa Policy, Not Demographics:
    The single largest risk to PBSA underwriting is that its demand base is set by immigration policy rather than by population. UK international enrolment has fallen 6.1% to 685,565, and January 2026 student visa applicants dropped 31% year-on-year to 19,800. The signal is easily misread, because domestic demand moved the other way: UCAS undergraduate applications hit a record 124,830, up 5.1%. Application demand and visa conversion have decoupled. An investor underwriting to enrolment growth without modelling visa policy is underwriting the wrong variable.
  • Australia Illustrates the Policy Lever Directly:
    Australia has set its 2026 international student planning level at 295,000, raised from 270,000, and has explicitly tied institutional allocations to the provision of student accommodation. This is a market where the government now sets both the size of the demand pool and the reward for building supply against it. For investors, this is double-edged: the policy currently favours accommodation providers, but it demonstrates that a single legislative decision can reset the demand base for an entire national market within one admissions cycle.
  • Development Is Broken on Viability, Which Is Bullish for Standing Assets:
    The reason the €466 billion supply gap will not close is not absent demand but broken development economics. Construction cost inflation has pushed the rents required to make UK regional schemes viable beyond what the market will bear, and Unite has publicly indicated little prospect of meaningful new supply. The investment conclusion is uncomfortable but clear: the same viability crisis that makes ground-up development IRRs unattractive is what protects the income and pricing power of standing, well-located assets. Buy the stabilised asset; be sceptical of the development pro-forma.

Investment Strategy: How to Own the Supply Deficit Without Owning the Policy Risk

  • Underwrite Visa Policy as a Primary Variable:
    Model international enrolment as a policy variable with explicit downside scenarios, not as a demographic trend line. The UK's 31% fall in January 2026 visa applications and Australia's legislated planning levels both demonstrate that a national demand base can be reset administratively. Markets with strong domestic student demand — evidenced in the UK by record UCAS applications — offer a partial hedge against international policy shocks, and should be preferred over assets wholly dependent on overseas enrolment.
  • Favour Standing Assets Over Development, and Regions Over Prime:
    The clearest risk-adjusted opportunity in 2026 is stabilised regional UK stock at 5.25–5.50% NIY, where a 75–100 basis point spread over London compensates for liquidity rather than fundamentals, against a 40% national provision rate and 98% sector occupancy. Development exposure should be underwritten conservatively: the cost inflation that has stalled new supply is precisely what supports existing income, and an investor cannot simultaneously benefit from the supply deficit and solve it profitably.
  • Treat the United States as the Forward Indicator, Not the Benchmark:
    The US market's trajectory — rent growth falling from 5.9% to 0.9% and per-bed pricing down roughly 25% in a year — is the most useful available data on what happens to PBSA returns once institutional capital fully arrives and the supply deficit narrows. European investors should read it as a preview rather than a divergence. The correct posture is to capture the current European income spread while it exists, underwrite modest terminal-value assumptions, and avoid extrapolating today's 9% Continental rent growth into a decade-long hold.

This content is AI-generated and may contain errors. Figures are indicative and subject to change. Do your own due diligence and seek independent legal and financial advice.

Author
Abhii Dabas
Abhii DabasFounder & CEO, INTRIC Global

Abhii Dabas is the Founder and CEO of INTRIC Global, the cross-border property intelligence platform for serious investors. He advises high-net-worth buyers on international real estate strategy and has evaluated residential markets across more than 40 countries. Student housing is the clearest case in global real estate of a sector where the demand story and the returns story have quietly come apart.

Share this article

Share this insight with others

Share

Share this article with others

Found this useful? Send it to someone who should read it.

Share

Continue with INTRIC

Where to go next

NRI Property Investment in 2026: London vs Dubai for Indian Buyers

Read next · Investment Guide

NRI Property Investment in 2026: London vs Dubai for Indian Buyers

Membership and partnership approval required. Property availability and exclusive access subject to membership tier and KYC/AML checks.

Copyright © 2026 INTRIC. All Rights Reserved.