If you’re starting at Deakin University’s Burwood campus and want the version no one in the orientation week tells you, this is it. The first-year survival guide for 2026 — what to do in the first month, what to budget, and the mistakes most people make.
Burwood is at 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood. The closest station is no station; closest is Box Hill (10-minute bus or 25-minute walk), on the Belgrave, Lilydale lines via Box Hill line(s); tram 75 from the CBD runs to the Burwood campus terminus (a 50-minute ride from the city).
The honest version up front: first year is the highest-attrition year of an Australian university degree. Around 25% of first-year university students nationally don’t return for second year (Australian Department of Education data). The students who survive aren’t necessarily the smartest — they’re the ones who lock in the basics quickly.
Week 1 — What Actually Matters
Forget half the orientation pitch. The five things you actually need in week 1:
- Set up your myki and link to a concession — you can’t do this without student ID, so the order matters: enrol → student card → concession myki application → done.
- Find your tutorial rooms before tutorials start — campus maps don’t account for building re-numbering or COVID-era room changes. Walk it once.
- Lock in a study spot — the library is the obvious one, but the second-best spot (a quiet faculty common room, a specific cafe with reliable wifi) is where the real work gets done.
- Join two clubs maximum — every first-year over-commits in week 1 and stops attending by week 4. Pick two: one for social, one for skill or interest.
- Find one cafe that becomes your regular — the social geography of your year forms around it.
The Money Reality
Realistic 2026 weekly budget for a Deakin University first-year living in a share house:
- Rent — $220–$320 (cheap suburb) to $350–$450 (inner)
- Groceries — $75–$120 (the cheap end requires actual cooking)
- Transport (myki concession) — around $45–$50 per week with the daily cap
- Phone, streaming, internet share — $30–$40
- Coffee, lunch, social — $80–$200 (this is where the variation actually happens)
- Total — $450–$1,100 per week depending on where you live and how often you eat out
Centrelink Youth Allowance for a student living away from home is around $455 per fortnight (Services Australia, 2026 — confirm at servicesaustralia.gov.au). It does not cover the realistic budget by itself; assume you’ll need 12–16 hours of casual work as well.
The big-cost mistake first-years make: textbooks. Most subjects don’t require new editions. Second-hand textbooks (Facebook Marketplace, the Deakin University student union sale boards) run 30–60% of new prices. The library has reserve copies of most prescribed texts.
Transport — The Costly Mistake
The mistake almost every first-year makes: not bothering with the myki concession and paying full fare for the first three months. The concession is free to apply for; full-fare myki tap-on is $5.40 daily cap, concession is $2.70 — that’s $1,000+ over a year.
For commute reality at Burwood: door-to-door from the inner suburbs (Burwood, Box Hill, Mont Albert) is 20–35 minutes; from middle suburbs it’s 35–55 minutes; from outer suburbs anything past 75 minutes one-way is unsustainable for most students.
Study — What Actually Works
The honest study advice that works at every Australian university:
- Three regular study days per week, fixed times, in the same place — beats sporadic 6-hour binges every time
- Recordings get watched — they don’t get watched. Treat live tutorials as the actual learning, not the video. The students who skip class and “watch the recording later” are the ones who fail.
- Form a study group of 2–3 people in week 3 — by week 8 it’s too late; everyone’s locked in.
- Deakin University Library at Burwood runs 24-hour access during exam periods; standard semester hours 08:00–22:00 — the late-night library is where the real exam prep happens
Social — Don’t Skip the Boring Stuff
The first-year friendship pattern that actually works:
- Same-tutorial people — show up, sit in the same area, swap numbers in week 2
- Same-club people — see above
- Share-house people — this is the social anchor; pick housemates carefully
- Mature-age friends — the under-rated cohort; mature-age students often run study groups and know how the assessment system works
The social setup that doesn’t work: trying to maintain three separate friendship clusters from school plus uni plus work. By week 8 you’ll have abandoned two of them.
Health and Wellbeing
The Deakin University student health centre is included in your services-and-amenities fee. Bulk-billed GP appointments, mental-health referrals, and a counselling service. The waiting list for counselling is 3–6 weeks during semester — book the moment you suspect you’ll need it.
Beyond the campus service:
- Headspace — free youth mental health, drop-in centres in most inner-Melbourne suburbs
- Lifeline (13 11 14) — 24/7 crisis line
- Beyond Blue — phone and chat, 24/7
The Common Mistakes
Across thousands of first-year stories, the same mistakes show up:
- Skipping the first 4 weeks of lectures — the assumption that recordings will catch you up. They don’t.
- Pulling all-nighters before exams — sleep beats marginal study time, every time
- Trying to live alone — the loneliness of a 1-bedroom share-house room in a new city wrecks first-year retention
- Ignoring physical fitness — gym time is mental-health time at this age
- Not asking for help — the academic-skills service, the counselling service, the careers service all exist because students need them; using them is normal
What This Means for You
First year at Burwood survives on three things: a cheap-enough share house in a 30-minute commute zone (Box Hill (older blocks), Burwood East, Forest Hill), 12–16 hours of casual work to top up Youth Allowance, and a study routine that gets locked in by week 4. Ignore the orientation glitter; nail the basics in the first month and the rest of the year is manageable.
For more, see the commute-time guide for Deakin University and the cheapest gyms near Deakin University.
Tom Hartigan writes about Melbourne for MELBZ.