Tag Archives: travel

Melbourne vs Sydney Uni Life: What No One Tells You

Today’s post is a Guest Post from a reader, which I thought would be worth sharing.

When I was weighing up whether to study in Melbourne or Sydney, I assumed the choice would be all about rankings, glossy brochures, and which city looked better on Instagram. Both are global cities. Both have beaches (yes, Melbourne technically does, but you’ll hear the debate about St Kilda beach until the end of time). Both have big universities with sprawling campuses.

What I didn’t realise is that your uni city isn’t just where you go to class. It becomes your environment, your community, your backdrop for some of the most formative years of your life. The little details, rent prices, weather, the way people talk to each other on public transport matter more than you think. They shape how you feel, who you meet, and even how you grow.

I’ve studied in Melbourne, but I’ve spent a fair amount of time with friends in Sydney, swapping stories and living in each other’s worlds for short bursts. Comparing the two has been eye-opening, and what I’ve learned is that the differences aren’t just surface-level.

So, here it is. No sugar-coating, no PR spin. The costs, the culture, the good, the bad, and the in-between. This is what no one tells you about Melbourne vs Sydney uni life.


The Brutal Reality of Costs

Sydney is expensive. Painfully so. It’s the kind of expensive where you’ll scroll through rental listings and wonder if a windowless cupboard counts as a “studio apartment.” If you want to live anywhere remotely close to the city or eastern suburbs, be prepared to pour most of your paycheck into rent.

I stayed with a mate in Sydney who was paying nearly $400 a week for her half of a shoebox apartment in Glebe. My rent in Melbourne? Half that, with an actual living room and a kitchen where you could open the fridge without smacking into the wall.

Melbourne is hardly cheap, but it’s manageable. You can live in a share house within tram distance of the city without needing three side hustles. Groceries are about the same, but eating out feels less punishing. There are hidden gems – dumpling spots in Chinatown, $12 laksa in the CBD, Vietnamese rolls in Footscray, where you can get full without your bank account crying.

Sydney does offer higher casual wages, especially in hospitality, and there’s more demand for casual staff. My Sydney friends working in cafes or retail definitely earn more per hour than I did in Melbourne. But the problem is, it all gets eaten up by rent anyway. You might make more, but you’ll also spend more just to exist.


Culture: The Invisible Divide

It’s hard to describe, but the cultural “feel” of the two cities is completely different. And this is where your uni experience shifts without you even noticing.

Melbourne is slower, but in the best way. It’s a city that rewards wandering. You’ll stumble into laneway cafes, watch a busker outside Flinders Street Station who’s actually pretty good, or end up at a pop-up art show because your mate dragged you along. Students spend hours sprawled on the South Lawn at Melbourne Uni, sipping coffee and arguing about politics like they’re auditioning for Q&A.

Sydney has this energy that feels almost electric. Everyone’s moving with purpose, even if they’re just heading to Woolies. The city runs on ambition. Students there are sharper, faster, and sometimes more competitive. It’s infectious; if you thrive on that hustle, you’ll find yourself running at a higher gear. But it can also be exhausting. There’s less space to just sit and breathe without feeling like you’re “falling behind.”

Melbourne students often joke that Sydney is “all show,” while Sydney students counter that Melbourne is “too smug.” There’s some truth to both. Sydney dazzles you with the harbour, the skyline, and the beaches. Melbourne wins you over slowly, with its art, food, and culture that creeps under your skin until you can’t imagine living anywhere else.


Uni Life: Two Different Worlds

Sydney’s unis feel bigger, flashier, and more hierarchical. Walk onto USyd’s sandstone campus and it feels like stepping into a movie set. It’s beautiful, but also intimidating. Societies are active and networking is everywhere. People dress sharper. There’s a quiet but noticeable divide between students who came from private schools and those who didn’t.

UNSW feels a little more “corporate” — future lawyers, engineers, consultants, all moving quickly toward their careers. It’s exciting, but it can feel transactional. My Sydney mates often mention the pressure: everyone’s already talking about grad roles in second year.

Melbourne unis, on the other hand, feel more laid back. Melbourne Uni still has its prestige, but the vibe is less cutthroat. Students sit on the grass with cheap coffee, debating ideas more than careers. RMIT has a practical, creative energy — you’ll see design students sketching on laptops next to engineering students with toolkits. Monash has its own insulated world out in Clayton, where you basically live on campus and the community becomes tight-knit.

The downside in Melbourne? Cliques form fast. Arts kids with arts kids, engineers with engineers. If you don’t make an effort to branch out, you might stay in your bubble.


The Vibe of Each City

Sydney wins hands down on natural beauty. Waking up near Coogee Beach or catching a ferry across the harbour before class feels like a movie scene. If you need water, sand, and sun to keep you sane, Sydney is unbeatable.

Melbourne, though, is built for students. It’s cheaper to get around, public transport actually works once you figure out Myki, and the city is crammed with cafes and libraries where you can study for hours without being told to move along. The weather is… chaotic, sure. Four seasons in one day isn’t a myth. But the cultural life makes up for it: free galleries, night markets, live music, and community events.

Sydney’s vibe can feel like “make it or break it.” Melbourne’s vibe feels like “find your people and grow with them.”


The Emotional Side

This is the part no one talks about when you’re 18 and just looking at glossy uni rankings. Your uni city doesn’t just shape your resume, it shapes your identity.

My Sydney friends are resilient. They’re ambitious, sharper, and quicker to grab opportunities. But they also talk about loneliness. Sydney is beautiful, but it can be isolating. Everyone’s busy. Everyone’s chasing something. If you fall behind, it feels like no one’s waiting for you.

Melbourne has given me space to breathe. It’s less about competition and more about connection. I’ve built friendships here that feel more like family. There are still moments where I wonder if I’ve missed out by not being in Sydney’s “big pond,” but I also know I’ve grown in ways I might not have if I were always running.


So, Which is Better?

The truth? Neither. It depends on who you are.

If you thrive in high energy, love beaches, and want to be surrounded by driven people who’ll push you, Sydney will shape you in ways Melbourne can’t. If you want community, culture, and the freedom to figure yourself out without constant pressure, Melbourne will feel like home.

Both cities will challenge you, both will change you. But the way they do it is different.

For me, Melbourne was the right choice. It taught me balance. It let me grow at my own pace. It gave me people who genuinely cared, not just contacts for LinkedIn. Still, when I sit by Sydney Harbour on a sunny day, I get it. I see the magic.

At the end of the day, it’s not about which city ranks higher or has prettier photos. It’s about whether you find your rhythm, your community, and a version of yourself you can be proud of. That’s what no one tells you when you’re making the decision. And maybe that’s something you only learn once you’ve lived it.

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Gems on Campus: Best Study Spots at UniMelb

Finding the perfect study spot can make all the difference when it comes to productivity and focus. At the University of Melbourne, there’s no shortage of classic go-to libraries and bustling student lounges, but the campus also hides a treasure trove of secret nooks and scenic corners that deserve some love. Whether you’re a crammer by night or a daylight studier, we’ve rounded up the best hidden gems to smash out those assignments or simply romanticise your study sesh.


1. Baillieu Library Basement

🧠 Vibes: Cosy, old-school academia

Everyone knows Baillieu is the OG library of UniMelb – but the real MVP is the basement. Tucked away below the main floors, this underrated haven is where serious study energy thrives. Think vintage wooden desks, dim lighting, and the gentle hum of concentration. Bonus points if you snag a seat in one of the windowless study nooks – perfect for going full hermit mode.

📍 Pro Tip: BYO snacks and keep a sneaky stash of chocolate bars to fuel your marathon sessions.


2. South Lawn

🌿 Vibes: Nature therapy meets study grind

When Melbourne turns on that rare sunny charm, South Lawn is the ultimate outdoor study spot. Picture yourself sprawled under a shady tree, laptop out, the smell of freshly cut grass wafting through the air. It’s practically an Instagram flat-lay waiting to happen. Just don’t fall into the trap of napping under the sun – we’ve all been there.

📸 Pro Tip: Head there in the morning for peak serenity before the lunchtime picnickers roll in.


3. Old Quad

🏛️ Vibes: Harry Potter meets Melbourne chic

If you’re the kind of person who thrives in aesthetic environments, the Old Quad courtyard will have you romanticising your degree in no time. With its sandstone archways, trickling fountains, and the occasional distant church bell ringing – it’s giving European summer, but make it Melbourne.

🍵 Pro Tip: Grab a coffee from Standing Room before you settle in.


4. Law Library

⚖️ Vibes: Silent, serious, studious

Non-law students, listen up – this is your invitation to infiltrate the hallowed halls of the Melbourne Law School. The Law Library is criminally underrated by the wider student population. With endless rows of books, individual study carrels, and near-religious silence, it’s the perfect spot to grind out those word counts.

🚨 Pro Tip: Pretend you’re working on a groundbreaking legal case even if you’re just doing first-year psych notes.


5. Eastern Resource Centre (ERC)

📚 Vibes: Retro futurism meets low-key productivity

The ERC is that weird, brutalist building everyone forgets about – which is exactly why it’s one of the quietest study spots on campus. The top floors have some of the best natural light on campus, and the desks by the windows offer a solid view of the city skyline. It’s a little bit vintage, a little bit dystopian, and weirdly charming.

🎧 Pro Tip: Plug into a lo-fi beats playlist and channel your inner cyberpunk academic.


6. Arts West Building

🎨 Vibes: Modern, light-filled, Instagrammable

Arts West is what happens when a Pinterest board meets campus architecture. With floor-to-ceiling windows, study pods, and scattered cushions, this is the spot if you’re after a little natural light therapy while you study. Plus, the building’s design basically screams “I’m an intellectual but also aesthetically aware.”

📍 Pro Tip: Head to the upper floors for the best quiet nooks.


7. Giblin Eunson Library

💸 Vibes: Corporate chic meets productivity temple

Located in the Faculty of Business and Economics, the Giblin Eunson Library feels like the kind of place where finance bros and future CEOs get stuff done. But don’t be intimidated – this library has some of the comfiest study booths on campus, plus plenty of power points for those long-haul sessions.

Pro Tip: Treat yourself to a coffee from Seven Seeds nearby as your pre-study ritual.


8. The Spot

🏙️ Vibes: Corporate minimalist with a side of caffeine

The Spot isn’t just for commerce kids – it’s for anyone who wants a chic, modern study space with strong coffee game. There are quiet study rooms, plenty of seating, and a café downstairs to keep the caffeine flowing. If you’re a fan of clean lines and industrial aesthetics, this one’s for you.

📍 Pro Tip: The rooftop terrace is one of the best-kept secrets on campus.


9. Graduate House

🎓 Vibes: Mature, peaceful, low-key exclusive

If you’re a postgrad or know someone who can sneak you in, Graduate House is like UniMelb’s members-only club for studious types. With plush armchairs, hushed vibes, and free tea and coffee, it’s the kind of place where you half expect to bump into a professor writing their magnum opus.

🍷 Pro Tip: They do wine nights on Thursdays if you need a little post-study debrief.


10. Union House

🍔 Vibes: Nostalgic, communal, slightly chaotic

Union House is chaotic good energy at its finest. While everyone else is fighting for a seat at Castro’s Kiosk, head upstairs to the quieter lounge areas. There’s something weirdly comforting about the old couches and mismatched tables – like a relic of student life that refuses to die.

🍕 Pro Tip: Power through your readings, then reward yourself with a cheeky kebab from Zambrero downstairs.


Final Thoughts

Whether you’re after serious silence or scenic vibes, UniMelb’s hidden gems offer something for every type of studious soul. Next time you’re on campus, ditch the crowded libraries and explore these underrated spots – your WAM (and Instagram feed) will thank you.

Happy studying! 📚✨

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