Student loans: a guide to terms and conditions 2023 to 2024 (2024)

Table of Contents
1. What’s this guide about? 1.1 Further information 2. Your loan contract 3. Who does what? 3.1 Student Loans Company (SLC) 3.2 HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) 3.3 Your employer 3.4 Sharing information 4. Your responsibilities 4.1 You need to provide complete and correct information 4.2 You need to repay your loan 4.3 Loan liabilities 4.4 Maintenance Loans 4.5 Postgraduate Master’s Loan and Postgraduate Doctoral Loan 4.6 Tuition Fee Loans 4.7 Grant and loan overpayment 5. Which repayment plan are you on? 5.1 Repayment plan 1 - If you started your course before 1 September 2012 5.2 Repayment plan 2 - If you started your course between 1 September 2012 and 31 July 2023 5.3 Postgraduate Loan - If you started a postgraduate Master’s course on or after 1 August 2016 or a Doctoral course on or after 1 August 2018 5.4 Repayment plan 5 - If you start an undergraduate or postgraduate course after 1 August 2023 5.5 Repaying if your income is below the threshold 5.6 Making extra repayments 5.7 What if I have more than one plan type? 5.8 How much interest you’ll be charged 6. How you’ll repay 6.1 What happens when you’re employed 6.2 How employers know how much to deduct from your pay 6.3 What happens if you change jobs 6.4 What happens if your employer goes out of business or doesn’t pay your deductions to HMRC 6.5 What happens if you’re self-employed 6.6 If you’re employed and self-employed 6.7 What happens if you travel or work overseas 6.8 Fixed repayment rate 6.9 When your loans will be cancelled 6.10 What happens if you don’t make repayments 6.11 Coming to the end of repaying your loan 6.12 If you’ve paid back too much 6.13 Getting a refund 7. What to do if you’re not satisfied 7.1 Complaints 7.2 Appeals 8.1 If you live in England 8.2 If you’re an EU student 8.3 HM Revenue & Customs FAQs

Student loans: a guide to terms and conditions 2023 to 2024 (1)

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1. What’s this guide about?

This guide is for students who take out a student loan for an undergraduate, postgraduate, Higher Education (HE) Short Course Loan or Initial Teacher Training course. It explains what you’re committing to when you take out a loan.

It’s important you read this guide carefully as it contains information about the current terms of your loan. Please save a copy.

You’ll find full details of the conditions for getting student loans in the relevant Student Support Regulations.

The conditions for repaying your student loan are included in the Education (Student Loans) (Repayment) Regulations 2009, as amended. You’ll find full details of the conditions for getting a Postgraduate Master’s Loan in the Education (Postgraduate Master’s Degree Loans) Regulations 2016, as amended.

You’ll find full details of the conditions for getting a Postgraduate Doctoral Loan in the Education (Postgraduate Doctoral Degree Loans and the Education (Student Loans) (Repayment) (Amendment) (No. 2) etc.) Regulations 2018 as amended.

You can read these regulations online at www.legislation.gov.uk or order them from The Stationery Office by calling 0333 202 5070 or going to www.tsoshop.co.uk

The regulations may change from time to time, which means the terms of your loan may also change. This guide will be updated to reflect any changes, so you should make sure you have the most up-to-date version.

1.1 Further information

If you still have questions about the terms of your loan after reading this guide, go to www.gov.uk/repaying-your-student-loan

A separate guide to terms and conditions is available for Advanced Learner Loans. You can download it from www.gov.uk/advanced-learner-loan

2. Your loan contract

When you take out a student loan you must agree to repay your loan in line with the regulations that apply at the time the repayments are due, subject to the regulations being amended from time to time.

Your loan contract is with the Secretary of State for Education in England. The Student Loans Company Limited (SLC), which is a non-profit government organisation, is acting as an agent on their behalf.

3. Who does what?

3.1 Student Loans Company (SLC)

SLC is responsible for:

  • paying the loans for English, Welsh, Northern Irish, Scottish and EU students

  • managing your account, including adding interest, applying repayments collected through the UK tax system and refunding any over-repayments

  • collecting repayments from overseas repayers

  • answering questions about your loan

3.2 HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC)

HMRC collects student loan repayments from employers through the UK tax system. If you’re self-employed, you’ll repay through Self Assessment when you complete your tax return.

3.3 Your employer

Your employer collects student loan repayments on behalf of HMRC directly from your salary at the same time as tax and National Insurance.

If you have any questions about how your repayments are collected through the tax system, you should speak to your employer.

3.4 Sharing information

HMRC can legally give SLC information about your repayments, but they won’t give SLC any information about your tax arrangements, as these are confidential.

Also, neither your employer nor HMRC will receive any details about your student loan, other than that you have a loan and the repayment threshold that applies to you (see section 5 for details).

4. Your responsibilities

4.1 You need to provide complete and correct information

When you apply for a loan, you must give us complete and accurate information, so that we can collect repayments when they’re due. You must tell SLC about any changes to these details:

  • during the application process

  • while you’re at university or college

  • until you’ve repaid your loan in full

If you don’t give SLC accurate and up-to-date information, you may have to pay a penalty charge or repay the loan and any interest and penalties in one lump sum.

If you have a Plan 2 loan (see section 5) and don’t keep in touch with us, or don’t let us know of any changes to your personal details, an interest rate of RPI plus 3% will normally be applied to your loan whatever your income.

You must also let SLC know if you:

You must provide your National Insurance number (NINO) when you apply. SLC can’t process your application without this, unless you’re an EU student who doesn’t have a NINO. EU students who do have a NINO should provide it when they apply. SLC will confirm the NINO with the Department for Work and Pensions to avoid fraudulent applications.

HMRC will also need these details so that they can collect your repayments. If you don’t have a NINO or you’ve lost it, you should call the National Insurance helpline on 0300 200 3500.

Repayments collected by your employer will be shown on your payslip. You should keep a record of these repayments so you know how much of your loan you’ve paid back.

If you enter into a loan agreement with SLC before you turn 18 years old, you’ll be asked to ‘ratify’ the agreement(s) once you turn 18. To ratify your loan means you will formally declare that you entered into the loan agreement. If you don’t do this, you won’t be able to get any more student finance after you turn 18. Once you’re 18 or over, you’ll ratify any loan agreement that you entered into before you turned 18 when you agree to the terms and conditions for any further student finance.

4.2 You need to repay your loan

By law, you must repay your loan in line with the loan contract and the regulations. For most people, repayments will be collected through the UK tax system by employers taking amounts from their salary through the Pay as You Earn (PAYE) system. If you’re self-assessed, for example if you’re self-employed, you’ll make repayments through Self Assessment at the same time you pay tax. If you live abroad, you’ll repay your loan directly to SLC. Section 6 describes this process in more detail.

4.3 Loan liabilities

Becoming ‘liable’ for all or part of your loan means that any payments paid to you or to your university or college will be added to your loan balance. This means that when you’ve finished or left your course, you’ll need to start repaying that amount and the interest that has accrued. Undergraduate part-time and Postgraduate Master’s students may be required to start repaying their loan before they’ve finished or left their course. You’ll be liable for any loan paid to you regardless of whether you finish your course or gain a qualification.

4.4 Maintenance Loans

Maintenance Loans are paid directly to you at the start of each term. You’ll become liable for each instalment once it’s paid.

4.5 Postgraduate Master’s Loan and Postgraduate Doctoral Loan

The Postgraduate Master’s Loan and Postgraduate Doctoral Loan are paid directly to you at the start of each term. You’ll become liable for each instalment once it’s paid.

4.6 Tuition Fee Loans

If you’re a full-time student, you’ll become liable for a percentage of the tuition fee being charged at the start of each term. Once your university or college have confirmed your attendance on the course your Tuition Fee Loan payments will be made to them. After payments are made you will be liable for repayment of them.

If you’re a part-time student, you’ll be liable for a percentage of the tuition fee being charged after you’ve been on your course for two weeks and your university or college have confirmed your attendance on the course. Once your university or college have confirmed your attendance on the course your Tuition Fee Loan payments will be made to them. After payments are made you will be liable for repayment of them.

You’ll become liable for future instalments at the start of the second and third terms of your course, as shown in the table below. You’ll remain liable for this amount even if you withdraw, transfer or suspend your studies at a later date.

When you become liable How much you’re liable for
At the start of term 1 25% of the tuition fee
At the start of term 2 50% of the tuition fee
At the start of term 3 100% of the tuition fee

If you’re a HE Short Course Loan student, you’ll be liable for the tuition fee being charged after you’ve been on your course for two weeks and your university or college have confirmed your attendance on the course. Once your university or college have confirmed your attendance on the course your Tuition Fee Loan payments will be made to them. After payments are made you will be liable for repayment of them.

4.7 Grant and loan overpayment

Your student finance payments are made at the start of each term to help with costs for the full term ahead.

If, for any reason, your entitlement for the academic year is reassessed and reduced, this could result in youbeing paid too much grant and/or loan. This is what we call an ‘overpayment’.

Example

You’re getting a Maintenance Loan of £6,000, which will be paid over 3 terms.

You’ll be paid £2,000 at the start of term 1.

You’ll be paid another £2,000 at the start of term 2.

You leave your course during term 2, meaning you aren’t entitled to the full £2,000 you’ve alreadybeen paid.

This means you’ve now been overpaid and need to pay some of it back.

You’ll normally need to repay your loan overpayment separately and earlier than the rest of your loanbalance. This also applies if you’re already having repayments taken from your salary or your tax return.

A loan or grant overpayment is when you’ve been paid money that you’re no longer entitled to because of a change in your circ*mstances. This means it now needs to be paid back.

In some cases, loan and grant overpayments can be recovered from future student funding.

Based on government regulations, the SLC has a legal responsibility to recover any loan or grantoverpayment.

5. Which repayment plan are you on?

How and when you repay your loan will depend on when you started your course.

How much you repay depends on your income, not what you borrow. You should let your employer know which repayment plan applies to you so they take the right amount.

5.1 Repayment plan 1 - If you started your course before 1 September 2012

You’ll be due to start repaying your loan the April after you finish or leave your course.

You’ll only start making repayments if your income is over the repayment threshold, which is currently £22,015 a year, £1,834 a month or £423 a week in the UK.

If your income falls below the repayment threshold, your repayments will stop and only restart when your income is over the threshold again.

You can also make additional voluntary repayments to SLC at any time.

You’ll repay 9% of your income over the repayment threshold, which is currently £22,015 a year, £1,834 a month or £423 a week in the UK. If your income changes, either rising or falling, your repayment amounts will automatically change to reflect this.

Income each year before tax Monthly income before tax Approximate monthly repayment
£22,015 £1,834 £0
£23,000 £1,916 £7
£24,000 £2,000 £14
£27,000 £2,250 £37
£30,000 £2,500 £59

5.2 Repayment plan 2 - If you started your course between 1 September 2012 and 31 July 2023

If you’re a full-time student, you’ll be due to start repaying your loan the April after you finish or leave your course.

If you’re studying a HE Short Course Loan, you’ll be due to start repaying your loan the April after your course end date. You should contact your university or college to find out what this is.

If you’re a part-time student, you’ll be due to start repaying your loan the April after you finish or leave your course, or the April four years after the start of your course (even if you’re still studying), whichever comes first.

You’ll only start making repayments if your income is over the repayment threshold, which is currently £27,295 a year, £2,274 a month or £524 a week in the UK. If your income falls below the repayment threshold, your repayments will stop and only restart when your income is over the threshold again.

You can also make additional voluntary repayments to SLC at any time.

You’ll repay 9% of your income over the repayment threshold, which is currently £27,295 a year, £2,274 a month or £524 a week in the UK. If your income changes, either rising or falling, your repayment amounts will automatically change to reflect this.

Income each year before tax Monthly income before tax Approximate monthly repayment
£27,295 £2,274 £0
£28,000 £2,333 £5
£29,500 £2,458 £16
£31,000 £2,583 £27
£33,000 £2,750 £42

5.3 Postgraduate Loan - If you started a postgraduate Master’s course on or after 1 August 2016 or a Doctoral course on or after 1 August 2018

If you’re a Master’s student, you’ll be due to start repaying your loan the April after you finish or leave your course.

If you’re a Doctoral student, you’ll be due to start repaying your loan the April after you finish or leave your course, or the April four years after the start of your course (even if you’re still studying), whichever comes first.

You’ll only start making repayments if your income is over the repayment threshold, which is currently £21,000 a year, £1,750 a month or £403 a week in the UK. If your income falls below the repayment threshold, repayments will stop and only restart when your income is over the threshold again.

You can also make additional voluntary repayments to SLC at any time.

You’ll repay 6% of your income over the repayment threshold, which is currently £21,000 a year, £1,750 a month or £403 a week in the UK. If your income changes, either rising or falling, your repayment amounts will automatically change to reflect this.

Income each year before tax Monthly income before tax Approximate monthly repayment
£21,000 £1,750 £0
£22,000 £1,833 £4
£23,500 £1,958 £12
£25,000 £2,083 £19
£27,000 £2,250 £30
£30,000 £2,500 £45

5.4 Repayment plan 5 - If you start an undergraduate or postgraduate course after 1 August 2023

Repayment plan 5 is a new repayment plan, being introduced for students starting undergraduate and Advanced Learner Loan courses on or after 1 August 2023. You won’t be expected to make repayments to your plan 5 student loan until April 2026 at the earliest, even if you leave your course early.

You’ll only start making repayments if your income is over the repayment threshold. The repayment threshold for the 2026-27 tax year will be £25,000 a year, £2,083 a month or £480 a week in the UK. If your income falls below the repayment threshold, your repayments will stop and only restart when your income is over the threshold again.

You can also make additional voluntary repayments to SLC at any time.

You’ll repay 9% of your income over the repayment threshold, which is currently £25,000 a year, £2,083 a month or £480 a week in the UK. If your income changes, either rising or falling, your repayment amount will automatically change to reflect this.

Income each year before tax Monthly income before tax Approximate monthly repayment
£25,000 £2,083 £0
£28,000 £2,333 £22
£29,500 £2,458 £33
£31,000 £2,583 £45
£33,000 £2,750 £60

5.5 Repaying if your income is below the threshold

If you’re employed and your annual income is below the repayment threshold, you could still make student loan repayments if your income goes above the weekly or monthly threshold at any time. For example, if you work extra hours or get a bonus, this could take your pay above the threshold for that week or month.

You can get a refund of these repayments at the end of the tax year, but only if your annual income was less than the annual repayment threshold for your loan. This doesn’t happen automatically, so you’ll need to contact SLC if you’d like a refund.

5.6 Making extra repayments

You can make voluntary repayments at any time.

However, any voluntary repayments you make won’t affect the amount you repay through the tax system. So, if you’re employed, your employer will still have to take the usual amount from your salary.

If you’re overseas, making additional voluntary repayments will not affect the amount that you’re required to repay each month.

If you repay through Self Assessment, you’ll still have to repay the amount due based on your income for the year.

You can’t get a refund of any amounts you repay voluntarily, unless you’ve finished paying off your loan and have repaid too much.

Find out how you can make voluntary repaymentsat www.gov.uk/repaying-your-student-loan

5.7 What if I have more than one plan type?

If you have more than one type of loan, you’ll repay them at the same time, as long as your income is over the repayment threshold.

Here are some examples of how it could work based on the current UK thresholds.

Plan 1 and Plan 2 loans

If your monthly income is between £1,834 and £2,274, you’ll only make repayments towards your Plan 1 loan. However, if your monthly income is more than £2,274, your repayments will be spread across your Plan 1 and 2 loans.

You’ll only repay 9% of your monthly income over £1,834 – you won’t have to repay another 9% towards your second loan.

Plan 2 and Postgraduate Loan

If your monthly income is between £1,750 and £2,274, you’ll make repayments towards your Postgraduate Loan only. If your monthly income is over £2,274, you’ll also make repayments towards your Plan 2 loan.

You’ll repay 9% of your monthly income over £2,274 towards your Plan 2 loan and 6% of your monthly income over £1,750 towards your Postgraduate Loan.

You can find more information on how repayment works if you have more than one plan type at www.gov.uk/repaying-your-student-loan/what-you-pay

5.8 How much interest you’ll be charged

You’ll be charged interest on your loan from the day we make your first payment to you or to your university or college until it’s been repaid in full or cancelled. We calculate the interest daily and apply it to your balance each month – this is known as ‘compound interest’. The interest rate you’ll be charged depends on which repayment plan you’re on.

The interest rate is based on the Retail Price Index (RPI), which is a measure of inflation.

It measures changes to the cost of living in the UK.

You can find the most accurate and up-to-date information on interest rates at www.gov.uk/repaying-your-student-loan

Repayment plan 1

The interest rate will be the RPI of the previous March, or 1% above the highest base rate of a nominated group of banks (Bank Base Rate), whichever is lower. The interest rate is set on 1 September each year, although it can change during the year too.

Repayment plan 2

The interest rate is based on RPI and will vary depending on your circ*mstances.

Your circ*mstances Interest
Full-time students – while you’re studying until 6 April after you finish or leave your course. Normally RPI plus 3%
Part-time students – while you’re studying and until 6 April after you finish or leave your course, or 6 April four years after the start of your course, whichever comes first. Normally RPI plus 3%
From the April after you finish your course until the loan is repaid in full. Interest will be based on your income. If your income is £27,295 or less, your interest will be RPI. If your income is between £27,296 and £49,130, your interest will be RPI plus up to 3%, depending on your income. If your income is over £49,130, your interest will normally be RPI plus 3%
If you don’t keep in touch with us, or fail to advise us of changes to any of your personal details. Normally RPI plus 3% will be applied to your loan, whatever your income, until you contact us.

Postgraduate Loan

You’ll be charged interest from the day we make the first payment to you until your loan is repaid in full or cancelled. Interest will normally be charged at RPI plus 3%.

Repayment plan 5

The interest rate will normally be set at RPI only.

6. How you’ll repay

Repayments will be collected through the UK tax system if you’re employed or through Self Assessment if you’re self-employed.

6.1 What happens when you’re employed

If you’re an employee paying UK tax, your employer will take repayments from your pay, along with tax and National Insurance. You will see the deductions on your payslip.

SLC will tell HMRC when you’ve finished or left your course and give them details such as your name and National Insurance number. HMRC will check to see if you’re working and if you are, they’ll tell your employer that you have a loan (but not how much you owe).

You should also inform your new employer that you have a student loan.

6.2 How employers know how much to deduct from your pay

HMRC will provide guidance to employers, including the repayment thresholds for each plan type, so they know how much to take from your pay.

If your pay is above the repayment threshold for your loan, your employer will take repayments and pass them to HMRC. HMRC will send this information to SLC, who’ll then update your account.

SLC will make sure the correct amount of interest is charged to your account, so you won’t be charged any extra interest even if your repayment details take some time to reach SLC.

It’s important to understand repayments taken by your employer will be worked out on individual pay periods – not on your total income for a whole year. By pay period, we mean how often you get paid. So if you’re paid monthly, repayments will be calculated and deducted each month. This means that if your income varies each month, you could pay back more some months than others.

6.3 What happens if you change jobs

When you change jobs, your previous employer may give you a P45 with a ‘Y’ in the student loan box. If your income is above the repayment threshold, your new employer will start to make student loan deductions from your pay. If you don’t have a P45, your employer may ask you to fill in a starter checklist, which has a tick box to show that you have a student loan. You must either tick the box or advise your new employer you have a student loan.

If your repayments don’t start when they should, you should let your employer know. If the problem continues, you should contact SLC with your new employer’s details, such as their name and address, their PAYE Reference and your payroll number. This information can be found on your payslip, P60 or by speaking to your payroll department. If you’re self-employed, HMRC will be able to tell you how you should repay. If you’re working outside the UK for more than 3 months, please see section 6.7 for information on how to make repayments.

6.4 What happens if your employer goes out of business or doesn’t pay your deductions to HMRC

As long as you have evidence that deductions have been taken, such as your payslips, SLC will credit the full amount of the repayments to your account.

6.5 What happens if you’re self-employed

If you’re self-employed, you’ll send HMRC a tax return each year under the Self Assessment (SA) system. How much you repay will be taken as part of your SA bill for tax. The student loan repayment will be based on your taxable income (including things like occupational pensions) over the threshold for your loan.

6.6 If you’re employed and self-employed

If you’re employed and self-employed at the same time, you may have to make some loan repayments when you complete your tax return, as well as those taken by your employer.

You can claim credit in your tax return for any student loan amounts your employer has already taken during the year so you don’t repay too much.

Like PAYE, the SA system will work out your loan repayments based on your income above the threshold for your loan. Any SA payment will be due on 31 January following the tax year of your assessment. You can find information on how to fill in your SA return in the guidance and booklets provided by HMRC.

If you pay UK tax and you get a Self Assessment tax return, you should use this to declare student loan repayments. You must fill this form in correctly and return it on time. You must also pay your tax and student loan repayment on time.

If you don’t do this, you may have to pay interest and financial penalties. This is because student loans will be treated in the same way as tax for the purposes of this form.

6.7 What happens if you travel or work overseas

If you’re out of the UK tax system due to being overseas, or you plan to leave the UK for more than 3 months at any point after you finish or leave your course (whether this is temporarily or because you will live in another country), you’ll make repayments directly to SLC. You must let SLC know before you leave the UK. If you don’t, they can charge penalties on your loan and where necessary, ask you to repay the full amount of loan plus interest and penalties in one lump sum.

SLC will ask for details of your income and will work out how much you should repay each month. They’ll change your income into pounds sterling and tell you the amount you need to repay each month in pounds sterling. You’ll be responsible for any costs involved in converting the currency and you’ll have to pay any fees your bank charges to transfer funds to SLC.

As you would in the UK, you’ll repay 9% of your income over the repayment thresholds for plan 1, plan 2 and plan 5 loans and 6% of your income over the threshold for Postgraduate Loan. But because of differences in living costs, the repayment threshold SLC applies in another country could be different from the UK threshold.

6.8 Fixed repayment rate

If you don’t give SLC details of your income, you may be charged a fixed amount depending on where you live, which may be higher than the repayment amount due based on your actual income. If you don’t repay this amount, SLC may take legal action against you.

6.9 When your loans will be cancelled

There are circ*mstances where your student loan may be cancelled and you’ll never have to pay it back, such as if you die before you pay the loan off or if you become disabled and permanently unfit for work.

Your loan will also be cancelled after a certain period of time if you’ve not already paid it off in full. The length of time depends on the rules at the time you took out your loan.

Loan cancellation may not apply to you if you’re in breach of any repayment obligations.

Repayment plan 1

If you took out the loan before 1 September 2006, your outstanding loan balance plus any interest will be cancelled when you reach the age of 65.

If you took out the loan on or after 1 September 2006 but before 1 September 2012, your outstanding loan balance plus any interest will be cancelled 25 years after the April when you first became due to start making repayments.

In both cases, you must have made all repayments due based on your income until that date. If not, in some cases, SLC may recover any amounts you still owe up to that date.

Repayment plan 2

Any loan plus interest remaining 30 years after you’re due to start making repayments will be cancelled.

You must have made all repayments due based on your income until that date. If not, in some cases, SLC may recover any amounts you still owe up to that date.

Postgraduate Loan

Any loan plus interest remaining 30 years after you’re due to start making repayments will be cancelled.

You must have made all repayments due based on your income until that date. If not, in some cases, SLC may recover any amounts you still owe up to that date.

Repayment plan 5

Any loan plus interest remaining 40 years after you’re due to start making repayments will be cancelled.

You must have made all repayments due based on your income until that date. If not, in some cases, SLC may recover any amounts you still owe up to that date.

6.10 What happens if you don’t make repayments

By law, you must repay your loan in line with the loan contract and regulations. If you don’t make repayments, SLC have the right to take legal action to recover your debt. This means SLC can get a court order to make you repay the total debt plus interest and penalties in a single payment.

This can be enforced through the courts as a civil debt, whether you’re in the UK or living abroad, and you’ll be responsible for all costs, including legal costs.

6.11 Coming to the end of repaying your loan

If you’re within 4 to 23 months of repaying your loan, you should change to repaying by Direct Debit. We recommend changing to Direct Debit so you don’t repay more than you owe and have to get a refund.

You need to keep us up to date with your contact details. This will allow us to contact you about setting up a Direct Debit.

You can update your details online at www.gov.uk/sign-in-to-manage-your-student-loan-balance

6.12 If you’ve paid back too much

We’ll try to contact you if you’ve repaid more than you owe, so it’s important that your contact details are kept up to date.

Make sure your address, email address, and mobile number are correct on your account by logging in at www.gov.uk/repaying-your-student-loan

Repayment plan 1

If you have a credit balance when your loan has been repaid in full, interest will accrue at the rate of RPI or 1% above the Bank Base Rate, whichever is lower.

Interest will accrue at RPI or 1% above the Bank Base Rate for a maximum of 60 days from the date we let you know about a refund you may be due. Interest will stop accruing after 60 days or from the day you are refunded, whichever comes first.

Repayment plan 2

If you have a credit balance when your loan has been repaid in full, interest will accrue at the rate of RPI unless a Prevailing Market Rate cap is in effect.

Interest will accrue at RPI for a maximum of 60 days from the date we let you know about a refund you may be due. Interest will stop accruing after 60 days or from the day you are refunded, whichever comes first.

Postgraduate Loan

If you have a credit balance when your loan has been repaid in full, interest will accrue for a maximum of 60 days from the date we let you know about a refund you may be due. It will accrue at RPI plus up to 3% unless a Prevailing Market Rate cap is in effect. Interest will stop accruing after 60 days or from the day you are refunded, whichever comes first.

Repayment plan 5

If you have a credit balance when your loan has been repaid in full, interest will accrue at the rate of RPI unless a Prevailing Market Rate cap is in effect.

Interest will accrue at RPI for a maximum of 60 days from the date we let you know about a refund you may be due. Interest will stop accruing after 60 days or from the day you are refunded, whichever comes first.

6.13 Getting a refund

If you’re due a refund and you haven’t claimed this, we may try to refund your bank account directly.

7. What to do if you’re not satisfied

7.1 Complaints

If you’re not satisfied with the level of service you’ve received, you should contact SLC to register a complaint. You can do so by:

  • calling 0300 100 0601

  • emailing [email protected]

  • writing to: Customer Relations Unit, Student Loans Company, 10 Clyde Place, Glasgow, G5 8DF

If you’ve used this procedure and are still not satisfied, you can have your complaint reviewed by an Independent Assessor.

7.2 Appeals

If you think a decision we’ve made in relation to your funding application is wrong, you have the right to appeal. An appeal is a formal request to Student Finance England asking us to review our decision on your entitlement to student finance.

If you wish to appeal against our refusal to award you student funding or you disagree with how we’ve calculated your funding you can appeal by:

  • downloading an appeals template from www.gov.uk/student-finance and sending the completed form to us by email or post using the following addresses

  • emailing [email protected]

  • writing to: Formal Appeals, Memphis Building, Lingfield Point, PO Box 226, Darlington, DL1 9GA

If you’ve used this procedure and are still not satisfied, you can have your appeal reviewed by an Independent Assessor.

If you want more information about repayment, go to www.gov.uk/repaying-your-student-loan or call 0300 100 0611.

8.1 If you live in England

You can go to www.gov.uk/student-finance or you can phone Student Finance England on 0300 100 0607 (textphone 0300 100 0622) between 8am and 8pm Monday to Friday, and between 9am and 4pm on Saturday.

8.2 If you’re an EU student

You should call Student Finance Services on 0141 243 3570.

You can also write to them at: Student Finance Services, PO Box 89, Darlington, County Durham, United Kingdom, DL1 9AZ

8.3 HM Revenue & Customs

Once you’ve started to repay your loan, if you have any questions about how your repayments are collected through the tax system, you should speak to either your employer or contact HMRC using the numbers listed at www.hmrc.gov.uk/local

Student loans: a guide to terms and conditions 2023 to 2024 (2024)

FAQs

Is my student loan going to be forgiven? ›

If you have loans that have been in repayment for more than 20 or 25 years, those loans may immediately qualify for forgiveness. Borrowers who have reached 20 or 25 years (240 or 300 months) worth of eligible payments for IDR forgiveness will see their loans forgiven as they reach these milestones.

Why are my student loan payments not due until 2024? ›

To help borrowers successfully return to repayment in October 2023, we created a temporary on-ramp period through Sept. 30, 2024. This 12-month on-ramp period protects borrowers from the worst consequences of missed, late, or partial payments, including negative credit reporting for delinquent payments.

What is the student loan limit for 2024? ›

Independent undergraduates and dependent students whose parents are unable to obtain PLUS Loans: $57,500 (including up to $23,000 subsidized). Graduate and professional students: $138,500 (or $224,000 for certain medical training) including undergraduate borrowing (including up to $65,500 subsidized).

Who qualifies for student loan forgiveness in 2024? ›

Borrowers with only undergraduate debt would qualify for forgiveness if they first entered repayment 20 years ago (on or before July 1, 2005), and borrowers with any graduate school debt would qualify if they first entered repayment 25 or more years ago (on or before July 1, 2000).

How to get 100% student loan forgiveness? ›

Borrowers with federal Perkins loans can have up to 100% of their loans canceled if they work in a public service job for five years. In many cases, approved borrowers will see a percentage of their loans discharged incrementally for each year worked.

What happens to student loans in July 2024? ›

Payments on Undergraduate Loans Will Be Cut in Half

Starting in July 2024, payments for borrowers with only undergraduate student loans will be cut in half.

What happens if I don't pay my student loans for 7 years? ›

Do student loans go away after 7 years? While negative information about your student loans may disappear from your credit reports after seven years, the student loans will remain on your credit reports — and in your life — until you pay them off.

What happens if I haven't paid my student loan in 20 years? ›

Unpaid student loans do not simply disappear. Federal student loans can be forgiven after 20 or 25 years of repayment under an income-driven repayment (IDR) plan. But any remaining balance forgiven might be considered taxable income.

Will my taxes be taken for student loans in 2024? ›

Important note: As part of the Fresh Start Program, borrowers with eligible defaulted loans are receiving certain relief measures, including tax refunds (and child tax credits) not being withheld. This relief will continue through at least September 2024.

Why are student loans so hard to pay off? ›

1. Interest. When you take out student loans, you don't just repay the exact sum you borrowed. For example, if you take out $20,000 in student loans, you're generally going to end up spending well more than $20,000 by the time your student debt is paid off due to accrued interest.

Do student loans affect credit scores? ›

How student loans affect your credit score. Student loans are a type of installment loan, similar to a car loan, personal loan, or mortgage. They are part of your credit report, and can impact your payment history, length of your credit history and credit mix. Paying on time could help your score.

What is the 7 year rule for student loans? ›

Both federal and private student loans fall off your credit report about seven years after your last payment or date of default. You default after nine months of nonpayment for federal student loans, and you're not in deferment or forbearance.

What is the 10 year rule for student loans? ›

If you work full time for a government or nonprofit organization, you may qualify for forgiveness of the entire remaining balance of your Direct Loans after you've made 120 qualifying payments—i.e., 10 years of payments. To benefit from PSLF, you need to repay your federal student loans under an IDR plan. New to PSLF?

What is the fafsa limit for 2024? ›

There are no FAFSA income limits, meaning there's nothing stopping even the richest college students from submitting a FAFSA. Thanks to the so-called "Simplified FAFSA" unveiled for the 2024-25 academic year, filling out the form is faster and easier than ever.

What is the deadline to apply for student loan forgiveness? ›

Many student loan borrowers have an opportunity to receive full student loan cancellation or more credit towards cancellation. The U.S. Department of Education will conduct a one-time adjustment this summer , but you may need to take steps to qualify. The deadline to act is June 30, 2024. Here's what you need to know.

What is the new student loan forgiveness plan? ›

The Administration's new plan would cancel debt for all borrowers with only undergraduate student debt who entered repayment 20 or more years ago and cancel loans for borrowers with any graduate student debt that first entered repayment 25 or more years ago.

Is there a form to fill out for student loan forgiveness? ›

Complete the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) Form With the PSLF Help Tool. Use the PSLF Help Tool to confirm you're eligible and fill out and submit your PSLF form. We are working to process PSLF forms as we continue the transition to an upgraded borrower experience.

What will happen if all student loans are forgiven? ›

Broad student loan debt forgiveness may help boost the national economy by making it more affordable for borrowers to participate in it. Due to a combination of family income, generational wealth, and other factors, student loan debt is disproportionately held by Black borrowers compared to their White counterparts.

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