Metadata
Title
Other sources of funding
Category
graduate
UUID
c210608d07424ac788d7a51fea4b011f
Source URL
https://study.ed.ac.uk/postgraduate/fees-funding/funding-studies/other-sources
Parent URL
https://study.ed.ac.uk/postgraduate/fees-funding/tuition-fees/status
Crawl Time
2026-03-11T02:09:42+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Other sources of funding

Source: https://study.ed.ac.uk/postgraduate/fees-funding/funding-studies/other-sources Parent: https://study.ed.ac.uk/postgraduate/fees-funding/tuition-fees/status

Income from work, grants or employer sponsorship can help fund your studies.

Income from work

Many students work while they study. How much you can work, and the type of work you can do, depends on the following:

If you’re a full-time masters student, we recommend that you do not work more than 15 hours per week so that you have enough time for your studies.

If you apply for or receive a scholarship, you might have a contractual limit on the number of hours you can work.

Work restrictions on a Student visa

Typically, if you study full-time on a Student visa you will only be allowed to work a maximum of 20 hours a week during term time. You may need to fit this part-time work in at evenings and weekends.

Working in the UK with a Student visa

Working while studying part-time or online

If you are studying for a part-time or online degree programme, you may have more flexibility around when, where and how much you can work.

Check the average workload for online programmes on the degree finder

Alumni discount

We offer a 10% discount on the tuition fees of most postgraduate degree programmes for:

Tuition fee alumni scholarships

Grants

You may be able to apply for grants from charitable organisations in the UK. You can use the Turn2us Grants Search tool to find grants you may be eligible for.

You do not need to repay grants.

Turn2us Grants Search

Disabled Students’ Allowance

You may be eligible for additional support to cover study-related costs due to disability or long-term illness. You can use the allowance to pay for:

Disabled Students' Allowance

Employer sponsorship

Some employers may provide financial support to employees taking postgraduate degree programmes, recognising the benefits further education provides to their workforce. You may want to approach your employer to see if they will contribute to the cost of the fees for your degree programme.

We have a short guide on approaching your employer for funding. The guide is aimed at postgraduate online programmes, but the recommendations can be adapted for on-campus study.

Requesting funding from your employer

This article was published on 2025-10-07