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Student loans: UK’s highest debt revealed to be £231,000

The highest outstanding student debt in the UK is more than £230,000.

The largest repayment a graduate has made tops £110,000, the figures show, with another loan holder accumulating interest alone of nearly £55,000. The data was released by the Student Loans Company (SLC) following a BBC Freedom of Information (FOI) request. SLC says graduates in England leave university with average debts of £44,940. One student organisation called the figures “truly eye-watering” and the National Union of Students (NUS) suggested they raised questions about the university funding system.

However, the most extreme cases were “highly unusual”, said Ben Waltmann, an economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, adding that the highest debts “won’t be representative at all of most graduates’ experience”.The amount graduates repay and the length of their loan varies from plan to plan, depending on when and where they went to university, and their degree classification. Dr Luke Amos, a junior doctor based in Surrey, said his student debt “became almost a joke when I saw the outstanding balance break the £100,000 barrier.” “You almost become de-sensitised to how big the number is getting, although it still shocks friends and family,” he said.

The 27-year-old – who started a three-year course in 2015, followed by a four-year medical degree – told the BBC: “I have no hope of paying off the loan in full, it would take considerable expense to pay off a penny more than the interest, to make even the smallest dent in the outstanding amount.”It is nearly 15 years since tuition fees were tripled in England. Fees now cost a maximum of £9,250 per year across all UK nations. Debts are written off at the end of loan terms – often 30 years – regardless of how much is owed by that point.

The highest outstanding debt and largest amount of interest and NCR are on ‘Plan 2’ loans, brought in from 2012 by the coalition government. Plan 2 loan holders now pay 9% of their income above £27,295 towards repayments – leading some to characterise the debt as more like a ‘graduate tax’. Dr Amos, who graduated in 2022, added that this tax year had seen him accrue £5,900 in interest on the loan – while he paid off just £1,000 of his more than £103,800 balance. But his debt is less than half of the biggest balance known to the SLC.

In 2021, according to the Guardian, the largest student debt amassed was £189,700. In September 2023, the i newspaper reported that at least 8,000 people on Plan 2 loans owed more than £100,000. The SLC says it does not know what the largest debt a graduate could theoretically accumulate is – or the largest amount one person could repay. It said around 1.5 million loan applications are processed each year, which will include new and returning students.

A spokesperson said: “These exceptional balances are a function of government policy that in certain circumstances exempts specific courses from repeat study restrictions, permits funding for additional years of study, and results in SLC awarding additional years of funding when an individual demonstrates compelling personal reasons.”

Nick Hillman, the director of the Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI), told the BBC the £231,000 debt was “extraordinarily high”. He said he had never “seen figures like this before” in 15 years working in higher education.

On the “penalty interest” (NCR), Mr Hillman added: “There are questions to be asked about such a high figure. It’s not quite having the deterrent effect it is designed to have.”

‘Indictment of our education system’

A spokesperson for website Save The Student described the wider figures as “truly eye-watering”, while the NUS argued the statistics were “an indictment of our education system”.

Chloe Field, its vice president of higher education, said: “The UK cannot pretend that university is accessible to everyone when there is the possibility of students incurring over £200,000 worth of debt.”

She added that student debt “discourages people from working class backgrounds from going to university”.A Department for Education spokesperson said a “sustainable student finance system” fair to students and taxpayers was “vital”.

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