Conservatives Pledge Relief for Millions on Plan 2 Student Loans
The Conservative Party has made headlines with a bold promise to slash interest rates on Plan 2 student loans, targeting borrowers who started university between September 2012 and July 2023. Led by Kemi Badenoch, the party aims to cap rates at the Retail Prices Index (RPI) inflation figure, eliminating the additional up to 3% 'real interest' that has ballooned debts for many graduates. This move comes amid growing frustration with the current system, where debts often grow despite repayments, and Labour's recent threshold freezes are set to drag more earners into higher payments.
With an estimated 5.8 million affected borrowers, the policy could save individuals tens of thousands over their lifetimes, potentially reshaping perceptions of higher education affordability in the UK. As election debates heat up, this signals a shift toward addressing graduate debt as a barrier to economic mobility.
What Are Plan 2 Student Loans?
Plan 2 student loans, formally known as income-contingent repayment loans under Plan 2, were introduced for English undergraduates starting courses from 2012/13 to 2022/23. These loans cover tuition fees (up to £9,250 annually) and maintenance support for living costs. Repayments kick in the April after leaving university, at 9% of income above the threshold—currently £28,470 yearly, rising to £29,385 from April 2026 before a three-year freeze.
Interest accrues daily: during study at RPI + 3%; post-graduation on a sliding scale from RPI (for low earners) to RPI + 3% (above £51,245, rising to £52,885 in 2026). For 2025/26, RPI is 3.2%, so rates range 3.2%-6.2%. Unpaid balances are written off after 30 years, but high interest means many never repay fully, with debts often doubling.
In Wales, Plan 2 continues; Scotland and NI have different systems. Total UK student debt exceeds £267 billion (March 2025), with Plan 2 forming a large chunk.
The Growing Burden: Why Plan 2 Interest Draws Criticism
Graduates report debts ballooning—e.g., one borrower's balance rose £20,000 to £77,000 despite payments on a solid salary. To match interest, earners need ~£66,000; below that, debt grows. Labour's threshold freeze from 2027 exacerbates this, pulling mid-earners into 9% repayments without inflation adjustment.
~56% of recent cohorts repay fully, but two-thirds won't, costing taxpayers billions in write-offs. IFS notes Plan 2's real interest makes it progressive but punitive for middle earners. Youth unemployment at decade highs and low graduate recruitment amplify calls for reform.
Universities face pressure too, as debt aversion deters applicants from lower-income backgrounds, impacting participation rates.Explore UK higher ed opportunities.
Conservative Proposal: Capping at RPI Inflation
Badenoch's plan: Remove Plan 2's extra 3%, limiting to RPI (e.g., 3.2%). 'Horrified' at the 'scam', she argues it punishes aspiration. Applies retrospectively to 5.8m borrowers.
'Plan 2 student loans... increasingly feel like a scam.' – Kemi Badenoch
Cost: £2bn/year. Thresholds unchanged; repayments still 9% above. Ties into 'New Deal for Young People': boost apprenticeships (£5k subsidy 18-21s), NI savings for homes.
Savings for Borrowers: Real-World Examples
A doctor (£80k debt) saves £58k lifetime, repays fully. £40k debt on £50k salary: £26k saved, 5 years earlier payoff. Mid-earners benefit most; low earners see minimal change (RPI already applies).
- £50k salary: Debt stable now, reduces under cap.
- High earners: Faster clearance, less total paid.
Over 30 years, average borrower saves thousands, easing mental load. For HE, could boost post-grad employability confidence.Career advice for grads.
Funding Reforms: Targeting 'Low-Value' Degrees
To fund, cut 100k places in courses where <25% repay (e.g., some arts). Tories blame Blair's 50% target for 'useless courses'. Redirect to apprenticeships, arguing unis overproduce non-repayers costing £8bn/year taxpayer.
Unis warn of 'catastrophic' numbers cap (Torsten Bell). Could shrink sector, but proponents say focuses resources on high-earning fields like STEM.
Stakeholder Reactions: Mixed Welcome
Badenoch: 'Conservatives only party helping young people'. Shadow Laura Trott opposes withdrawing support but backs quality focus.
Labour: Reeves 'fair'; Powell 'egregious'; Phillipson 'problems, inherited'. Whittome shares debt story. Lib Dems want watchdog.
Students/X: Buzz positive, some note Tories created Plan 2. Unis cautious on places cut.
Implications for UK Higher Education
Relief could lift participation, especially disadvantaged groups deterred by debt. But places cut hits revenue-dependent unis, potentially closures/mergers. Boosts apprenticeships may divert from degrees, reshaping workforce skills.
Plan 5 (2023+) already lower interest (RPI only post-study), shorter real term (40 years). Retrospective Plan 2 fix unique.Find uni jobs UK.
Plan 2 vs Newer Systems: A Comparison
| Aspect | Plan 2 (2012-23) | Plan 5 (2023+) |
|---|---|---|
| Threshold | £29,385 (frozen 3yrs) | £25,000 frozen to 2027 |
| Repay % | 9% | 9% low-med, lower high |
| Term | 30 years | 40 years |
| Interest | RPI+3% now; RPI proposed | RPI only post-study |
Plan 2 harsher interest; Tory fix aligns closer to Plan 5.
Graduate Outcomes and Youth Economy Context
High debt correlates with delayed life milestones, mental health issues. With youth jobless at highs, policy could aid retention in UK workforce vs emigration. Unis see debt aversion hit apps from state schools.
Actionable Advice for Plan 2 Borrowers
- Check SLC account monthly; request refunds if overpaid.
- Overpay if high earner to cut interest.
- Plan voluntary repayments wisely.
- Monitor election; policy retrospective if enacted.
For careers, explore higher ed career advice.
Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Election Battleground
As polls show Tory youth support low, this woos millennials/gen Z. Labour may counter; unis lobby against cuts. Potential £2bn relief vs sector squeeze. Watch Spring Statement.BBC on policy Parliament FAQs
Boost skills via higher ed jobs, rate professors, uni jobs. Check career advice.






