Student loans and grants in the United Kingdom are primarily provided by the government through the Student Loans Company (SLC), a non-departmental public body. The Student Loans Company is itself divided into Student Finance England, Student Finance Wales, Student Finance NI and the Student Awards Agency for Scotland. Most undergraduate university students resident in the United Kingdom are eligible for student loans. In addition, some students on teacher training courses may also apply for loans.
In the years following World War II, most Local Education Authorities (LEAs) paid students' tuition fees and also provided a maintenance grant to help with living costs; this did not have to be repaid. The Education Act 1962 made it a legal obligation for all LEAs to give full time university students a maintenance grant.
The Student Loans Company (SLC) was founded for the 1990/91 academic year to provide students with additional help towards living costs in the form of low-interest loans. In its first year, the SLC gave loans to 180,200 students This represented a take up rate of 28% of eligible students, with a average loan of £390.
In 1997, a report by Sir Ron Dearing recommended that students should contribute to the costs of university education. The Labour government under Tony Blair passed the Teaching and Higher Education Act 1998 which introduced tuition fees of £1,000 to start in the 1998/9 academic year. In addition, maintenance grants were replaced with repayable student loans for all but the poorest students. The total loans provided by the Student Loans Company increased from £941 million in the 1997/8 academic year, to £1.23 billion in the next year, when tuition fees took effect.
In January 2000, the Scottish government, which consisted of a coalition between Labour and the Liberal Democrats, decided to abolish tuition fees for Scottish students studying at Scottish universities. In a similar vein, the Welsh government gives Welsh students studying at Welsh universities a tuition fee grant, reducing the amount owed.
The Higher Education Act 2004 increased tuition fees from £1,000 to £3,000. By the 2005/6 academic year, the Student Loans Company was providing £2.79 billion in loans to 1,080,000 students.
The Student Loans Company currently employs 1,894 people in the two Glasgow offices and at sites in Darlington and Colwyn Bay, Wales.
In late 2009, the Student Loans Company was heavily criticized by universities and students for delaying in processing applications.
Students must meet two eligibility requirements: personal eligibility and course/institution eligibility. Personal eligibility principally concerns the student's residency status. To achieve course/institution eligibility, the student must be studying for an undergraduate degree at a UK degree-awarding institution or other verified higher education establishment. In addition, students on some teacher, youth and community worker courses are also eligible for Student Loans Company support.
All full-time students are entitled to a tuition fee loan which covers the full cost of the tuition fee. For the 2009/10 academic year, universities are entitled to charge up to £3,225, except in Scotland where the students do not pay for tuition. In the 2010/2011 academic year, the tuition fee will increase to £3,290.
All eligible students are also entitled to a maintenance loan, which is designed to help pay for living costs whilst at university. All students are entitled to a set amount, with those living at home entitled to less and those living at universities in London entitled to more. For the 2009/2010 academic year, the maintenance loan was set at £2,763 for students living at home; £4,998 for students living in London; and £3,564 for students living at universities elsewhere in the UK.
Students from low-income households may apply for their loan to be increased. For the 2009/2010 academic year, students living at home were entitled to an extra £1,075 (bringing the total loan to £3,838); students living in London were entitled to an extra £1,940 (bringing the total loan to £6,928); and students living elsewhere in the UK were entitled to and extra £1,386 (bringing the total loan to £4,950). The precise threshold for qualifying as a low-income household varies depending on which country of the UK the student resides in, and is set between two bands, with very poor students receiving the full extra money and less-poor students receiving only a partial extra amount.
As well as being entitled to an increased loan, students from low-income households are also entitled to a maintenance grant, which does not have to be repaid. Like the extra maintenance loan, the precise threshold for qualifying as a low-income household varies depending on which country of the UK the student resides in, and is set between two bands, with very poor students receiving the full grant and less-poor students receiving only a partial grant. For the 2009/2010 academic year, students from England and Wales were entitled to a grant of up to £2,906; students from Scotland £2,105; and students from Northern Ireland £3,406.
The Student Loans Company provides other grants, such as the Special Support Grant which is available for students on benefits. However, the tuition fee loan, maintenance loan and maintenance grant are by far the most common assistance that the Student Loans Company provides.
Universities themselves are legally obliged to give a non-repayable bursary to students in receipt of a full maintenance grant.
Prior to the 1998/9 academic year, repayment was made using a 'mortgage-style' system of 60 monthly installments which began when the student was earning over a certain threshold (£27,050 for the 2009/2010 financial year). This system was criticized because no matter what the size of the loan, it had to be repaid within the 60 monthly installments.
All loans from 1998/9 onwards are repaid under the Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) scheme. This involves the loans being repaid directly out of the student's wages, at a rate of 9% for everything earned over £1,250 a month (unless the student earns under £15,00 in that year, in which case they may claim the money back). Repayments continue until either the loan is paid off, the payments have been continuing for 25 years, or the student turns 65.
† On 4 December 2008 the Bank of England base rate was cut to 2%. As the student loan interest rate can never be more than 1% above the Bank of England base rate, the student loan interest rate was cut to 3%. The rate was cut again for the same reasons in January, February and March.
†† A clause in the Higher Education Act allows the government to set its own interest rate if inflation is very low. The government set an interest rate of 0% to avoid negative interest which would have been set if the RPI figure of -0.4% was used.
The introduction of tuition fees in 1998 was the subject of heated political opposition. The then-leader of the Liberal Democrats Charles Kennedy described it as "one of the most pernicious political acts that has taken place" and pledged to abolish them.
Further controversy ensued when the government decided to raise tuition fees in 2004, despite the Labour party's manifesto pledge in the 2001 general election stating that it "will not introduce top-up fees and has legislated against them". The Higher Education Act 2004 was passed by 316 to 311, with 71 Labour MPs rebelling against the government. It was the tightest victory of Tony Blair's premiership until the government was defeated in November 2005 over plans to detain terror suspects for 90 days.
In the summer and autumn of 2009, many students experienced delays in being assessed for and granted student loans and grants. As courses began in September and October 2009, the Student Loans Company said that up to 116,000 students would have to begin the term without their funding in place. By 10 November 2009, there were still 70,000 applications waiting to be processed and 3 out of 4 universities were using their own emergency funds to help affected students. Chair of the student group Unions 94 Michael Payne branded the situation "inexcusable" and the Million+ group of universities said the failures were "very disappointing".
An inquiry into the problems was set up, chaired by Professor Sir Deian Hopkin. The inquiry reported on 9 December 2009. It found the Student Loans Company processing system had faced problems with lost documents, failures with equipment and difficulties with the online application system, and at peak times only 5% of phone calls were answered. The inquiry also claimed that some members of the Student Loans Company's board of directors
For additional information, visit the Student Aid Web site. To understand how these loans are calculated and ... Notification that your government loan has arrived: Once your government ...
National Student Loan Service Centre; Debt Reduction Grants; Up-front Provincial Grants ... This page and all contents are copyright, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, all ...
Student loan borrowers may choose a lender ... For a Direct Stafford Loan, the entire fee goes to the government to help ... section of this Web site. Can my Stafford Loan ever be ...
... may be eligible for the Teacher Loan Repayment program. Visit the Mississippi Office of State Student Financial Aid web site ... (The federal government's jobs site is located at www ...
Partner Organizations; Site Map ; Proactive Disclosure ... loan programs, which are partly funded by federal government transfers. You manage and repay your student loan to your ...
Government Student loans – What you should know ... The school’s web site 8. Any complaints filed with the Better Business Bureau ...
... schools, lenders, and government agencies. NSLDS provides information about any federal loans in your name. You can access the National Student Loan ... your use of the linked site.
Federal Direct Student Loan Program (FDSLP) loans ... Program you will obtain your federal student loan funds directly from the U.S. government ... Beyond Financial Aid | Site Map | About ...
... on your student loan ... owns your loan, your loan guarantor, and the federal government ... on your loans, see the Department of Education’s Default Resolution Group Web site.
Federal Student Loans(Government Student Loans) ... Web: www.CollegeStudentLoans101.info ... Contact Us Privacy Statement Loan Resources Site Map