If you’re starting at RMIT University’s City (Melbourne CBD) 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.
City (Melbourne CBD) is at 124 La Trobe Street, Melbourne. The closest station is Melbourne Central (campus is across the road), on the all city loop lines line(s); every CBD tram is a five-minute walk; trams 19, 57, 59 run Elizabeth Street; trams 1, 3, 5, 6, 16, 64, 67, 72 run Swanston Street.
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 RMIT 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 RMIT 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 City (Melbourne CBD): door-to-door from the inner suburbs (Carlton, North Melbourne, Fitzroy) 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.
- RMIT Swanston Library runs extended hours including 24-hour access during exam periods — 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 RMIT 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 City (Melbourne CBD) survives on three things: a cheap-enough share house in a 30-minute commute zone (North Melbourne (older blocks), Brunswick, Brunswick West), 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 RMIT University and the cheapest gyms near RMIT University.
Jack Carver writes about Melbourne for MELBZ.