Should You Overpay Your Student Loan? (UK, 2026/27)
If you have a UK student loan and a bit of spare cash, paying it down early feels responsible. For most graduates, though, it is the wrong move — and not for the reason you might expect. A UK student loan behaves far more like a temporary tax than an ordinary debt, and the maths usually means overpaying it is money you would never otherwise have parted with.
Why a student loan isn't really a debt
Three features set it apart from a credit card or a personal loan:
- Repayments depend on your income, not your balance. You pay a fixed slice of what you earn above your plan's threshold. Earn less and you pay less; drop below the threshold and you pay nothing. Whether you owe £5,000 or £50,000, the monthly deduction is identical.
- It gets written off. After 25 to 40 years, depending on your plan, any remaining balance is cancelled — no strings attached.
- It is invisible to lenders and cancelled on death. It never shows on your credit file, and it is wiped if you die rather than passing to your family or estate.
Put together, that makes it behave like a time-limited graduate tax. For most people the size of the balance barely matters; what matters is one question.
The one question that decides it
Will you clear the whole balance before it is written off?
- If no — overpaying is wasted. Your compulsory repayments don't change, and the extra you put in simply reduces a balance that was going to be cancelled anyway.
- If yes — overpaying can genuinely help: it clears the loan sooner, cuts the interest you are charged, and ends the repayments earlier. Even then, it is worth comparing against investing the money instead.
When overpaying is wasted money (most people)
Take a graduate with a £35,000 Plan 2 balance earning £34,000, with interest around 6%. Their compulsory repayment is only about £400 a year, while interest adds roughly £2,100 — so the balance grows, never clears, and is written off after 30 years with a large amount outstanding. Now suppose they overpay £5,000. The balance is still never cleared; all they have done is pay £5,000 toward a debt that was going to vanish. They end up £5,000 worse off, with nothing to show for it.
This is the trap. Because your monthly repayment is fixed by your income, overpaying does not reduce what you pay each month — only clearing the loan entirely stops the deductions. If you were never going to clear it, you have simply given money away.
When overpaying pays off
There are two situations where it makes sense:
- You will clear it comfortably anyway. A graduate with a £20,000 balance earning £60,000 clears the loan around year nine regardless. Overpaying a £5,000 lump sum clears it a couple of years sooner and saves roughly £2,900 in interest — a real, if modest, gain.
- You are on the borderline — and this is the big one. Someone with a £28,000 balance on £48,000 might otherwise drag repayments out to year 25. Adding £200 a month can clear the loan by year nine instead, ending sixteen years of deductions and saving over £20,000 overall. The prize here is not the interest — it is escaping the long tail of repayments.
As a rule of thumb, overpaying is only worth considering if you are confident you will clear the loan before write-off — typically higher earners, smaller balances, those on older plans, or anyone already close to their write-off date.
The 2026/27 numbers
Repayments are 9% of income above the threshold (6% for postgraduate loans). Interest is linked to RPI, which is 3.2% for the year to 31 August 2026; Plan 2 and postgraduate loans are capped at 6% from September 2026 and slide with income, so check your own statement.
| Plan | Threshold | Repay | Interest | Written off |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plan 1 | £26,900 | 9% | ~3.2% | 25 yrs / age 65 |
| Plan 2 | £29,385 | 9% | up to 6% | 30 yrs |
| Plan 4 | £33,795 | 9% | ~3.2% | 30 yrs |
| Plan 5 | £25,000 | 9% | ~3.2% | 40 yrs |
| Postgraduate | £21,000 | 6% | ~6% | 30 yrs |
Write-off periods run from the April after you became due to repay — not from when the loan was taken out — so your own date may be sooner than the full term suggests.
Would the money do more elsewhere?
Even when overpaying technically saves you money, the same cash often works harder somewhere else. Clearing real debt comes first: a credit card at 20% or more dwarfs a 3–6% student loan. After that, an ISA or — especially — a pension with an employer match can beat the student loan's low interest comfortably, since a match is effectively an instant, guaranteed uplift. Our pay off debt or invest calculator runs that comparison for you.
If you do decide to overpay
You can make voluntary repayments at any time through your online student loan account, with no penalty. But one catch matters enormously: voluntary overpayments cannot be refunded. If you pay extra and later realise the loan would have been written off anyway, you cannot get that money back. That is precisely why overpaying "just to be safe" so often backfires.
The bottom line
For most graduates the answer is simple: don't overpay. You will never clear the balance, so anything extra is wasted. Overpay only if you are genuinely confident you will clear the loan before it is written off — and even then, check whether investing the money would leave you better off. The safest move is to run your own figures before parting with a penny.
Try the student loan overpayment calculator →
Common questions
Sources
GOV.UK — Repaying your student loan, House of Commons Library — student loan interest & thresholds. See our full methodology and rates.
This article is general information for the 2026/27 tax year and not personalised financial advice. Check your own loan details in your student loan account and verify figures against GOV.UK before making decisions.