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Oxford

A small university city with clear English and easy London access

View schools in this city

7

Courses available

1

Accredited schools

3

Course types

From £849

Per week

Who Oxford suits

Oxford works best for students who want a serious, focused study environment without big-city overwhelm. It’s compact enough to cycle everywhere, prestigious enough to matter back home, and close enough to London for weekend access—but you’re here to study, not party. Classes are motivated, English is clear, and the academic atmosphere keeps you focused. If you prefer calm routines over constant nightlife, Oxford delivers.

Why the English learning works

You’ll mostly hear southern British English—the kind many learners recognise from textbooks and BBC broadcasts—which tends to be clear and approachable. Shopkeepers speak precisely, students articulate carefully. You’ll also hear a mix of international accents, which gives you strong real-world listening practice. This environment helps beginners build confidence and advanced learners refine pronunciation.

The city’s compact scale means learning continues outside class. Walk 15 minutes from any school and you’ll find world-class museums (Ashmolean, Pitt Rivers, Natural History)—all free. Read English descriptions to build vocabulary, attend curator talks to train your ear for formal English, and discuss what you saw over coffee with classmates.

Course choice matches London quality without the sprawl: General English, exam preparation (IELTS/Cambridge), business English and academic routes. Classes typically include several nationalities, making English your only common language. Oxford’s academic culture means students take learning seriously—motivated classrooms where people complete homework and genuinely want to improve.

Ready to study in Oxford?

Daily rhythm

Weekdays often start with morning lessons, a quick stop at the Covered Market for lunch, and an hour in a park or library. Afternoons might include a grammar workshop, museum visit or cycling to Port Meadow. Evenings are low-key: film nights, pub quizzes, bookshop browsing—then home through quiet streets.

Weekends mean easy day trips: London by fast train or coach, the Cotswolds for village walks, Stratford-upon-Avon for Shakespeare, and Bicester Village for designer outlet shopping (around 20 minutes by train, hugely popular with international visitors), or a friendly rivalry hop to Cambridge.

Living areas

  • Jericho: Around 10 minutes’ walk to the city centre; canals, indie cinema, cafés—a calm base near most schools.
  • Cowley Road: Roughly 15 minutes by cycle; global food, music and a livelier evening scene.
  • Summertown/Headington: Around 20 minutes by cycle or bus; residential, green, family-friendly areas with straightforward school routes.

Demand

Summer (July–August) and exam periods get busy—earlier enquiries give more choice. University term times can tighten homestay and residence availability, so planning ahead helps secure your preferred options.

Safety

Oxford is generally considered safe for students. As in any UK city, use normal precautions: watch your belongings, lock bicycles and stay aware at night. The compact centre keeps journeys short and most routes well lit and busy.

Budget

Costs vary by provider, season and course intensity. Always ask for an itemised quote covering lesson hours, enrolment, materials, accommodation type and extras. Oxford typically costs less than London while maintaining high-quality teaching and facilities.

Getting around

Oxford has a walkable city centre with most schools, shops and cafés within comfortable walking distance. Buses and cycle lanes cover the main routes out to residential areas, and cycling is a very common way to travel.

Frequent trains to London take around an hour; coaches are usually cheaper but slower. Services run throughout the day and into the evening, giving easy access to London’s airports, West End theatre and international shopping while you live somewhere calmer, quieter and often more affordable.

Is Oxford right for you?

Oxford is ideal if you want a serious study environment, clear English and a traditional university-city atmosphere without the stress of a huge metropolis. It gives you a strong academic setting and easy London access, but your day-to-day life feels manageable and human scale.

Oxford suits you if you:

  • Prefer walkable, manageable cities to overwhelming metropolises.
  • Value clear daily routines and serious study environments.
  • Want traditional British academic culture and historic architecture around you.
  • Need easy London access without big-city living costs.
  • Prefer a calm, thoughtful atmosphere to constant nightlife.

Consider alternatives if you:

  • Need extensive entertainment and nightlife options → consider Manchester or London.
  • Want maximum diversity, course choice and big-city energy → consider London.
  • Prefer coastal settings and sea air → consider Brighton or Bournemouth.

Prefer the full form? Go to enquiry page

Schools in Oxford

Browse accredited English language schools across Oxford below. Each school profile shows course types, weekly lesson hours, class sizes, facilities and visa support so you can compare clearly. All providers are independently verified, so you can focus on matching your goals and budget.

Compare schools, read profiles and enquire directly—without commission. Schools typically respond within 1–2 working days with availability and a personalised quote.

Not sure Oxford is right for you? Students also compare:

  • Cambridge – Similar academic atmosphere with a slightly different college feel.
  • London – Maximum choice, faster pace and more nightlife, but higher costs.
  • Brighton – Coastal city with creative energy and direct links to London.
  • Bath – Historic, elegant and compact, with a calmer pace and strong academic focus.
International House Oxford

International House Oxford

Oxford

A dedicated summer English centre for young learners, offering English courses and activities in the historic city of Oxford.

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