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Student Loan Repayment Plans

6 min read Article Updated 2026-05-04

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Let us be honest. Opening that annual statement from the Student Loans Company (SLC) can feel overwhelming. The numbers are large, the interest seems confusing, and the rules appear to change depending on when you started university.

However, understanding your repayment plan is vital for managing your post-university finances. For most graduates in the UK, it is helpful to view these repayments less like a commercial debt (like a credit card or car finance) and more like a graduate tax. You only pay when you earn enough, and if your income drops, so do your repayments.

This guide breaks down exactly which plan you are on, how much you will pay, and answers the burning question; should you pay it off early?

Which plan are you on?

The UK system is split into several ‘Plans’. Your plan is determined by when you started your course and where you lived before funding. You need to know your plan because it dictates your interest rate and the salary threshold at which you begin repaying.

Graduate reviewing student loan balance on a laptop

Plan 1

Who: Students who started their course before 1st September 2012 (England & Wales).

Repayment Threshold: Currently £26,900 a year.

Write-off: 25 years after the first April you were due to repay.

Plan 2

Who: Students who started between 1st September 2012 and 31st July 2023 (England & Wales).

Repayment Threshold: Currently £29,385 a year.

Write-off: 30 years after the first April you were due to repay.

Plan 4 (Scotland)

Who: Scottish students (regardless of start date) and EU students studying in Scotland.

Repayment Threshold: Currently £33,795 a year.

Write-off: 30 years (or age 65 for older loans).

Plan 5 (New)

Who: Students starting courses from August 2023 onwards.

Repayment Threshold: £25,000 a year.

Write-off: 40 years.

Note: If you have a Postgraduate Loan, this sits separately and is repaid concurrently with your undergraduate loan at a rate of 6% above a threshold of £21,000.

For the definitive check on your specific loan status, you can log in to your account via the official Gov.uk portal.

How are student loan repayments calculated?

Regardless of the total amount you borrowed, your monthly repayment amount is fixed based on your earnings. This is why the “graduate tax” comparison is so popular. Current repayment thresholds for every plan are published on gov.uk/repaying-your-student-loan.

You repay 9% of everything you earn above your plan’s threshold. If you earn below the threshold, you pay nothing.

A Practical Example (Plan 2)

Let us assume you are on Plan 2 with a threshold of £29,385 and you land a graduate job paying £32,295.

  • Annual Salary: £32,295
  • Threshold: £29,385
  • Difference: £2,910 (This is the only amount liable for the 9% charge)
  • Calculation: 9% of £2,910 = £261.90 per year
  • Monthly Cost: £21.83

It is handled automatically via PAYE (Pay As You Earn) by your employer, so the money is deducted from your payslip before it ever reaches your bank account, just like Income Tax and National Insurance.

How are student loan interest rates set?

Interest rates on student loans are a frequent topic of debate in the news. The way interest is applied depends heavily on your plan. The Student Loans Company confirms the current rates on gov.uk.

Young person planning their loan repayment <a href=budget" loading="lazy" decoding="async">
  • Plan 1: Historically lower, usually tracked against the Bank of England base rate or inflation.
  • Plan 2: This has a variable interest rate. While studying, the interest rate is currently 6.2% while studying (RPI plus 3%). After graduating, the rate is between 3.2% and 6.2% depending on your income. (gov.uk)
  • Plan 5: For new students (2023 onwards), the interest rate is set to match RPI inflation only. This means in real terms, the value of the debt does not grow, though the monetary figure will rise.

Should you overpay your student loan?

If you have some spare cash or savings, you might be tempted to pay off your student loan early to clear the debt. For the vast majority of graduates, financial experts suggest this is not the best move.

Why you generally shouldn’t overpay:

  1. It gets written off: If you do not clear the debt within the write-off period (30 years for Plan 2, 40 years for Plan 5), the remaining balance is forgiven. Statistics suggest most graduates will never pay back the full total plus interest.
  2. It does not affect credit allowance: Student loans do not appear on credit files in the same way commercial debt does. Mortgage lenders look at affordability (your monthly take-home pay) rather than the total debt figure.
  3. Money is better used elsewhere: That spare cash is usually better employed in a high-interest savings account, a Lifetime ISA (LISA) for a house deposit, or into a pension pot.

The only exception usually applies to very high earners who are mathematically certain to clear the debt before the write-off period. In that specific scenario, paying early might save on interest accumulation. However, this requires careful calculation.

How should you manage your money as a graduate with a student loan?

Once you understand your student loan deductions, the next step is effectively managing the salary that does land in your account. Budgeting is the first line of defence against post-university financial stress.

Calculator and pen on a financial planning worksheet

We recommend using modern banking tools that allow you to segregate your bills from your spending money. Banks like Starling Bank or Monzo offer excellent ‘pots’ features that help you organise your income the moment you get paid.

What happens if you go abroad?

A common myth is that moving overseas cancels your student loan obligations. This is incorrect. If you leave the UK for more than three months, you must inform the Student Loans Company.

They will assess your repayment threshold based on the cost of living in your destination country. This means the threshold might be lower than in the UK. If you fail to inform them, they may charge you a default fixed amount which is often much higher than what you would pay based on earnings, and they can pursue the debt legally.

Summary

Student loans are a significant part of graduate life, but they need not be a source of anxiety. Remember that your repayments are protected by your income level. If you lose your job or take a lower-paid role, the repayments stop automatically.

Payslip showing student loan deduction highlighted

Focus on your career progression and building your personal savings rather than worrying about the total figure on your annual statement. It is a long-term contribution system, not a standard bank loan.

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Frequently asked questions

When do I start repaying my student loan in the UK?

Under Plan 5 (English students starting from 2023 onwards), you begin repaying the April after you graduate or leave your course, but only once your income exceeds the repayment threshold of £25,000 per year (as of 2026). Repayments are automatic through PAYE - you don't manage them manually. If self-employed, you repay through self-assessment. The loan is written off after 40 years.

How much do I repay on my student loan each month?

You repay 9% of everything you earn above the repayment threshold. For Plan 5 (£25,000 threshold), if you earn £30,000 a year, you pay 9% of £5,000 = £450 per year, or £37.50 per month. If you earn below £25,000, you pay nothing that year regardless of your outstanding loan balance. Your monthly repayment rises automatically as your salary increases.

Does it matter if I never fully repay my student loan?

For most graduates, especially those in lower-earning careers, not fully repaying the loan is the expected outcome - and it doesn't matter financially or credit-score-wise. Under Plan 5, the loan is written off after 40 years. Student loans don't affect your credit score and don't prevent you from getting a mortgage or credit. Think of them as a graduate income contribution rather than a traditional debt.

Can I make voluntary overpayments on my student loan?

Yes, you can make voluntary overpayments to the Student Loans Company at any time. However, financial advisors generally don't recommend this for most graduates, as the loan is written off after 40 years and many graduates never repay it in full anyway. Overpayments are better directed to higher-interest debt, an emergency fund or pension contributions. High earners in stable, well-paid careers may benefit from overpayments - model your individual repayment trajectory first.

📊 2026/27 UK student loan plans compared

Which repayment plan you’re on depends on when and where you started your course. Here are the current official figures – updated for the 2026/27 tax year.

PlanWho’s on it?Repayment thresholdRate above thresholdInterest rateWrite-off
Plan 1Started before Sep 2012 (England/Wales) or pre-Sep 1998 repayment£26,900 / yr9%RPI (~3.2%)25 years / age 65
Plan 2Started Sep 2012, Jul 2023 (England)£29,385 / yr9%RPI + up to 3%30 years
Plan 4Scottish students (all start dates)£33,795 / yr9%RPI (~3.2%)30 years / age 65
Plan 5 ⭐ NEWStarted Aug 2023 onwards (England)£25,000 / yr9%RPI only (~3.2%)40 years
PostgradMaster’s / Doctoral loan£21,000 / yr6%RPI + 3%30 years

⚠️ Plan 5: What’s different for 2023+ starters

  • Lower threshold (£25,000) – you start repaying sooner than Plan 2 students
  • Lower interest – only RPI (no extra 3%), which is fairer long-term
  • 40-year write-off – the longest of any plan; most graduates will repay fully before this
  • Monthly repayment on £28,000 salary: approximately £22.50/month (9% of £3,000 above threshold ÷ 12)

💡 Quick repayment calculator (Plan 5 / Plan 2)

Formula: (Annual salary − threshold) × 9% ÷ 12 = monthly repayment

Annual salaryPlan 5 (£25k threshold)Plan 2 (£29,385 threshold)
£25,000£0/mo£0/mo
£28,000£22/mo£0/mo
£30,000£37/mo£4/mo
£35,000£75/mo£42/mo
£40,000£112/mo£79/mo
£50,000£187/mo£154/mo

Source: Student Loans Company / GOV.UK. Figures correct for 2026/27 tax year. RPI used is approximate – your actual interest may vary.

Reviewed · Editorial standards

Marcus Reid
Written by
Marcus Reid

Marcus read Accounting and Finance at Nottingham and is UniSorted's Graduate Finance Editor. He spent his first year out of uni working out why his payslip was 28% smaller than his salary, which is now the spine of most of his guides. He covers payslips, tax, National Insurance, student loan repayments, credit, and renting after graduation. Contact: marcus@unisorted.co.uk

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