As you would expect of a university with a community of 16,507 students (excluding partner colleges) and on average 1,520 staff during the 2020/21 academic year, our income and expenditure fall within a wide variety of categories.
We’re committed to being transparent about that in order to inform current and future students, and the wider public, and you can find a breakdown of this below. For more in-depth detail, you can download our financial statement for the year ending 31 July 2021 (pdf 691kb).
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How the university is funded
In 2020/21, we received £162.4 million, £134.3 million of which came from tuition fees. The rest of our income came from funding council or research grants, commercial activities, and endowment and investment income. This is a full breakdown of our funding sources across the year:
2020/21 spending chart
We use our income to fund a wide range of activities to support our students’ experience. This includes the development and maintenance of our buildings and facilities, running each of our four faculties, providing student accommodation, bursaries, student wellbeing and support, and library, IT and academic services.
Not surprisingly, we invest a lot in people, from academic staff based in our faculties, such as lecturers and tutors, to those responsible for monitoring academic quality and staff in our professional services, who oversee the management and development of the university, as well as staff supporting student wellbeing.
Select each segment from the pie chart for a brief explanation of each category — you also find more detailed definitions below.
Running academic faculties — Paying for staff and facilities within our faculties | £58.4³¾ |
Providing library, IT and academic services — The resources that help you learn | £22.7³¾ |
Administration and central running costs — Organisational running costs | £12.1³¾ |
Providing student bursaries and scholarships — Helping people with their learning | £8.8³¾ |
General education expenditure — Marketing, fundraising and alumni | £6.6³¾ |
Providing staff and student facilities — Student Services (additional learning support, careers, frontline services), Sport¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ, Student Union grant, student hardship payments, day nursery | £11.4³¾ |
Maintaining buildings and facilities — Keeping property up to date | £20.4³¾ |
Providing residences and catering — Housing and catering | £7.2³¾ |
Undertaking research activities — Research support costs | £4.7³¾ |
Pension adjustment and subsidiaries — Accounting adjustment related to the pension liability | £14.8³¾ |
Running academic faculties
This covers all expenditure directly incurred by, or on behalf of, academic departmentsÌý– in other words, money invested in developing and delivering our broad range of undergraduate and postgraduate degreesÌýand other courses.
There are four faculties across ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵÌý– the ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ University Business School, Faculty of Health & Social Sciences, Faculty of Media & Communication and Faculty of Science & TechnologyÌý– with each comprising between four and six departments.ÌýRunning these accounted forÌý34.9% of the university’s expenditure in 2020/21 atÌý£58.4³¾.
Providing library, IT and academic services
Our expenditure on academic services includes running learning resource centres and our libraries on our Talbot and Lansdowne campuses.
On Talbot, The Sir Michael Cobham Library is home to our largest collection of printed resources, in addition toÌýmultimedia and electronicÌýresources. ThisÌýincludesÌýaÌýsubstantialÌýcollection of e-books and e-journalsÌýthat can be accessed via our virtualÌýlearningÌýenvironment and mobile app.Ìý
On Lansdowne, theÌýWeston Library in ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ Gateway Building housesÌýresources mainly for the Faculty of Health & Social Sciences and postgraduate students within the ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ Business School.
This category also covers expenditure to support research activities and global engagement, as well as promoting service excellence. The £22.7³¾ spent in 2020/21 included investing in the provisionÌýand maintenance of IT equipment and computer networks for our community of students and staff.
Administration and central running costs
This category accounts for expenditure on the functions at the core of running the university, including Human Resources, Finance and the Office of the Vice-Chancellor (OVC).
The university employed more than 1,500 people in 2021 across academic and professional support roles. Our Human Resources department holds a diverse range of responsibilities for ensuring our staff work in an environment that champions equality, professional development and excellence for the benefit of everyone at ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ.
The OVC works closely with the University Executive Team (UET) and the University Leadership Team (ULT) to support a range of corporate activities within ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ to ensure the smooth running of the university.ÌýIt is made up of the Vice-Chancellor, John Vinney, members of the UET, and those who support them. The OVC also includes other central functions working across ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ, such as business continuity and policy and public affairs.
Find out more about our governance
Providing student bursaries and scholarships
We offer a range of non-repayable financial support to students.
ThisÌýincludes a selection of scholarships for both undergraduate and postgraduate students, recognisingÌýacademic, sporting or musical achievements.
The bursaries we provide for eligible students include the Care Leavers, Social Work, ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ Maintenance and Student Carer’s bursary. This financial support comprisedÌý£8.8³¾ (5.3%) of the university’s expenditure in 2020/21.
Undergraduate fees and funding Postgraduate fees and funding
General education expenditure
Accounting for £6.6³¾ (3.9%) of our expenditure in 2020/21, a wide range of university activities come under the umbrella of ‘General education’.
This includes community engagement activities and education events, working with our alumni community of ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ graduates, summer schools that offer young people aÌýflavour of university life, and engaging with local schools.
This expenditure also covers our marketing and student recruitment activity and the Open Days we hold throughout the year. Furthermore, it accounts for student administration costs and our work on widening participation and enacting our Access and Participation Plan.
Our work with schools and collegesÌýDownload our Access and Participation Plan (pdf 584kb)
Providing staff and student facilities
¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ is a sizeable community within the local area, comprising more than 18,000 people across our students and staff.
A community of that size does, of course, present a wide variety of needs. That’s where this £11.4³¾ expenditure comes in. It covers student services such as Unibuses, additional learning support (ALS), career support, advice services such as Ask¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ and health & wellbeing.
The facilities and services offered by Sport¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ also fall under this category, as do emergency loans for students who experience delays in receiving government funding, and our chaplaincy and day nursery provision.
Visit our Sport¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ pages Explore our Students section
Maintaining buildings and facilities
We’ve invested in some major developments across our campuses over the past decade. Most recently, that includes the ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ Gateway Building on our Lansdowne Campus and the Poole Gateway Building on our Talbot Campus.
The former is the home of the Faculty of Health & Social Sciences, offering 10,000 square metres of space and providing a unified base for the faculty’s education, research and office activities, which previously tookÌýplace across several buildings in the Lansdowne area. Meanwhile, Poole Gateway houses a variety of production facilities, including two television studios, a green screen studio, a sound stage, music studios, computer labs and production suites.
These state-of-the-art additions to ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ are part of a modern and varied estate, and our expenditure of £20.4³¾ in 2020/21 coveredÌýcosts such as maintenance, rent, cleaning and repairs across all of our buildings and infrastructure.
It also accounts for energy costs, and you’ll notice our investment in energy-saving measures across our campuses – including the extensive use of solar panels to generate 5% of our electricity use, with the aim to generate 10% of our energy from renewables by 2025.
Explore our campuses Sustainability at ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ
Providing residences and catering
We work with a number of private accommodation partners to offer ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ students a range of halls of residence across ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ and Poole, as well as leasing and operating the Student Village on our Talbot Campus.
This £7.2³¾ expenditure accounts for our investment into running for this provision, including energy, maintenance andÌýoperationalÌýcosts.
It also covers our investment in catering services provided on campus.
Undertaking research activities
Our academic community is involved in a diverse range of research across areas such as healthcare, tourism, disaster management, culture and creative industries, and protecting endangered species and ecosystems.
You can visit our research section to discover more about the extent and impact of our academics’ projects. You’ll also find details of the many funding bodies that support this work, such as research councils, charities, government bodies, the European Commission and industry partners.
The £4.7³¾ expenditure in 2020/21 is the direct cost of this funded research.
View our research projects Explore what makes ¶¹ÄÌÊÓƵ different
Pension adjustment and subsidiaries
This final category is an accounting entry required predominantly for the Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS), one of the largest public sector pension schemes in the UK.
Loan servicing refers to interest payable on bank loans.