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Martin Lewis issues students six warnings over 'Plan 5' finance loans

According to the Money Saving Expert founder, Plan 5 loans will increase the cost of university by "over 50% for many typical graduates"

Martin Lewis shared important details with students(Image: ITV)

Martin Lewis, founder of MoneySavingExpert.com (MSE), has disclosed six essential points that all applicants for 'Plan 5' student loans should keep in mind. Martin stated that the loans for new higher education students from England in September 2023 mark "the most significant change in student finance in ten years".

The specialist cautioned that Plan 5 loans would raise the university expenses by more than 50% for most average graduates and double it for a small number. In his most Martin emphasized the practical financial implications of these loans, outlining six important points that students should be aware of.

The student loan price tag can be £60,000, but that's NOT the cost

Tuition fees are capped at £9,250 a year (£9,000 in Wales) until the 2025/26 academic year and most places charge the maximum. But you don't need the cash to pay upfront.

First-time º£½ÇÊÓÆµ undergraduates don't usually pay universities or other higher education institutions directly. Fees are paid for you by the Student Loans Company - though the few lucky enough to have the funds to pay upfront can do it without getting a loan.

According to Martin, the price tag isn't what counts - it's what you repay that does. He broke it down and revealed that you only repay when you earn over £25,000 a year –so if you earn less and you don't pay.

He confirmed that the £25,000 threshold is frozen until 2027, when it is 'planned' to increase with inflation. Martin also added that you repay 9% of everything earned above the (currently £25,000) threshold.

The money expert also noted:

  • You only start needing to repay in the April after you leave university. Though Plan 5 loan repayments won't start until April 2026 at the earliest, so if you were to drop out early, your repayments wouldn't start until then.

  • The loan is automatically WIPED after 40 years (or if you die). Unless you've cleared what's owed earlier, you stop paying 40 years after the April you leave university. This means most will be repaying for a good chunk of their working life. The debt is also wiped if you die, so it won't be an added burden to your beneficiaries. It's also wiped if you're permanently incapacitated in a way you'll be permanently unfit to work.

  • You repay automatically via the payroll, just like income tax. Your employer takes the payment via PAYE (pay-as-you-earn) before you get your income, meaning you never need to make payments, therefore you can never miss payments (so no debt collectors). If you're self-employed, then just like income tax you pay it through the self-assessment scheme. In which case, do ensure you put enough money aside to cover it.

  • It doesn't go on your credit file. Therefore it doesn't impact your ability to access credit for other applications (though it can be taken into account when working out affordability).

  • You do still need to repay if you move overseas. The student loan is technically a contract, so the fact that you're no longer in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ doesn't affect that contract.

  • You can volunteer to overpay if you have more cash.

There is a hidden, official parental contribution to living costs

All students under 60, both full-time and part-time (minimum 25% of full study), are eligible for a loan to help with living costs – known as the maintenance loan. For most under-25s, your living loan is dependent on family residual income, which for most people is a rough proxy for 'parental income'.