Last Updated:
July 3rd, 2026
Education is supposed to be where young people find their footing, so it can feel jarring to learn how common addiction has become in schools and universities.
For many students, the pressure and the social world they step into arrive at once and substances can slip in as the thing that helps them cope.
This page is written for students, parents and staff. It looks at what addiction in education actually looks like and where to turn for help before a problem becomes entrenched.
What addiction looks like in education
When most people picture student addiction, they think of heavy drinking on a night out. That happens but the reality is broader and much of it doesn’t look dramatic at all.
Alcohol is still the most common, woven so far into student culture that problem use can pass for normal.
Drug use sits alongside it, with cannabis the most widespread and with stimulants and prescription medication used to push through deadlines and exams.
Vaping has become almost universal in some groups and behavioural addictions around gaming and gambling are rising fast among this age group.
What ties these together is how easily they hide. A student can be using regularly while still handing work in and showing up to lectures, which is exactly why the problem so frequently goes unnoticed until it’s well established. Friends assume it’s under control, family are too far away to see it day to day and the student can convince themselves that anyone coping this well couldn’t really have a problem.
Why these years carry real risk
The student years stack up several risks at the same time, which is part of why addiction takes hold so readily during them. It helps to look at the main drivers one by one.
That gap means the pull toward something that feels good in the moment can outweigh the ability to stop and think it through and it makes this age group more vulnerable to regular use becoming dependence.
Spotting the signs of addiction
Addiction in a student is easy to miss because the early signs look so similar to ordinary stress or a tough adjustment period. What matters is noticing several changes together, especially when they mark a clear break from how the person used to be.
Some of the signs worth watching for:
- Attendance dropping off without a clear reason
- Grades slipping after a period of doing fine
- Pulling away from friends they were close to
- Becoming secretive about where they’ve been
- Money problems that seem out of character
If you’re a parent or a member of staff, the way you raise any of these matters as much as the fact that you raise it. Coming at it as a welfare concern rather than an accusation keeps the conversation open.
Questions worth asking yourself
If you’re a student reading this and wondering whether your own use has crept past where you meant it to, a few plain questions can help you see it more clearly:
- Have you tried to cut down and found you couldn’t stick to it?
- Do you use a substance to get through stress rather than for the social side of it?
- Has your use started to affect your attendance or your work?
- Do you feel uneasy at the thought of a week without it?
This isn’t a diagnostic test and a yes to one of these doesn’t label you with anything. But if a few of them landed, that’s usually reason enough to have a conversation with someone who understands this properly.
What each person can do
The right next step depends on who you are and what you’ve noticed, so it’s worth taking each in turn.
If your situation feels like it needs more than that, you can also call us directly to talk through the options, with no pressure attached.
Why acting early matters
Stepping in sooner rather than later does change outcomes. The approaches that work best for young people are delivered over several sessions rather than as a single conversation and they reduce both substance use and the problems that come with it.
The developing brain is what makes timing so important. Because the brain is still maturing through the student years, regular use during this window can interfere with that development. Stepping in early gives the brain its best chance of recovering without lasting harm.
Waiting for things to get worse is the most common mistake and the most costly one. If you or someone you know is struggling, reaching out now beats waiting for a crisis to force the decision.
How Banbury Lodge can help
If anything on this page has raised concerns, whether for yourself, your child or a student you work with, Banbury Lodge can help.
We provide addiction treatment in a supportive setting, which includes detox where it’s needed, therapy and aftercare planning that supports recovery beyond your time with us. The focus is on dealing with the reasons behind the use rather than the use alone.
You don’t have to have it all worked out before you reach out. Contact Banbury Lodge today for a confidential conversation, with no pressure and no obligation.


