An influential group of MPs is calling on the government to refund student rents during the lockdown.
The call has been made by the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Students, which includes peers and MPs from all political parties.
They want the government to deliver a £700 million hardship fund for students in England.
The aim is to deliver financial help to students living in private rented houses or halls.
The group also wants the Government to introduce tenancy break clauses for students.
'Students should find breaking a tenancy agreement much easier'
The group's chairman, Paul Blomfield, said that students should find breaking a tenancy agreement much easier than they do currently, and that landlords should be able to re-let that property more easily to avoid losing income.
Mr Blomfield said: "From the evidence we have received, it should be a priority to provide students with financial assistance and an emergency fund for the full compensation for their rents in underused accommodation because of the lockdown measures."
Students in Wales have already been offered £80 million of extra funding to deal with lockdown hardship by the Welsh government.
For students in England, they have been offered £20 million and this week, the government delivered another £50 million.
The extra money will, the government says, help students struggling with financial pressures including paying for alternative student accommodation and their extra online teaching costs.
The cash will be handed to universities for distribution and they will be able to prioritise those students most in need of financial help.
Money will help student tenants
The money will help student tenants, as well as international students, maintain their accommodation in more than one location.
Michelle Donelan, the universities minister, said: "The additional support will provide tangible, real help for students struggling financially.
"The government welcomes also the decision from many student accommodation providers and universities to offer rent rebates to students who are staying away from their term-time address."
The National Residential Landlords' Association (NRLA) welcomed the move to support student renters financially and urged the government to consider offering help to all tenants.
The NRLA's chief executive, Ben Beadle, said: "Given that students continue to receive maintenance loans along with the new funding, ministers should explain why the support is not being offered to other renters who are struggling as a result of the pandemic."
Package to help tenants repay their arrears
He added that the government needs to develop a package that will enable tenants to repay their arrears that have built-up since the lockdown was introduced last March - just as they are doing for students - and this will help landlords and tenants maintain a tenancy.
Simon Thompson, the managing director of Accommodation for Students, also welcomed the government funding.
He said: "Student landlords have bills to pay and the money to help students who are struggling to pay rent will be welcomed."




