Investment & Finance

How Rachel Reeves made it harder to pay off student loans

Changes to the student loans system quietly announced in the last budget have provoked a loud and angry response that has woken up Westminster to what anyone who did a degree in the 2010s, and their parents, already knew.

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  • March 17, 2026
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Changes to the student loans system quietly announced in the last budget have provoked a loud and angry response that has woken up Westminster to what anyone who did a degree in the 2010s, and their parents, already knew.

The debt burden is rising, squeezing young workers as they approach their earning prime.

With around five million people affected, the backlash is likely to grow from next month, when borrowers get the final slice of inflation-linked relief from payments before a three-year freeze on the earnings threshold kicks in, following its announcement by Rachel Reeves in November.

Here, Sky News explains the problems, who is affected and what options there may be to help resolve the difficulties.

Where the problem began…

At the heart of the controversy are Plan 2 student loans, introduced in 2012, when maximum annual tuition fees tripled to £9,000. They were offered until 2023.

Around five million students have a Plan 2 loan and the scheme accounts for around 80% of the £240bn student loan book in England.

Repayments are collected like tax and set at 9% of income above an income threshold – just over £29,000 from April.

Interest accrues on the outstanding debt at the rate of the RPI measure of inflation (not the usually cheaper CPI favoured in other calculations by government), currently 3.2% plus up to 3%, depending on income – far more expensive terms than the previous Plan 1 loans.

After 30 years, if the debt is not cleared, the balance is written off.

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