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Reverse student loan threshold freeze and scrap RPI, MPs urge

Parliamentary inquiry finds loans were mis-sold to students and tells government it cannot continue to ignore 鈥榖roken鈥 system

Published on
July 7, 2026
Last updated
July 7, 2026
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The government has a 鈥渕oral obligation鈥 to reverse the student loan repayment threshold freeze made in last year鈥檚 budget, MPs have said, after finding that loans have been promoted to students in 鈥渄eeply problematic鈥 ways.聽

A from the House of Commons鈥 Treasury select committee, published on 7 June, describes the student loan system as 鈥渦nfair鈥 and warns that the government must fix it to avoid further disillusionment among students and graduates.聽

Recommendations include abandoning the use of the Retail Prices Index (RPI) to calculate loan interest rates, ensuring parity between the amount students and the state contribute towards the cost of a degree, and to explicitly warn all new loan holders that the terms can be changed retrospectively.聽

Most strikingly, the committee has called on the Treasury to reverse the three-year freeze to the repayment threshold imposed in last year鈥檚 autumn budget.

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It noted that successive governments have frozen the repayment threshold 鈥渄espite repeated commitments鈥hen the loans were taken out that that would not happen鈥.聽

鈥淚t is not common for a Treasury select committee, made up of MPs from the three largest parties, to agree that a specific budget measure announced by a chancellor must be reversed,鈥 said Meg Hillier, chair of the Treasury committee. 鈥淥ur report is a signal to the Treasury and the Department for Education that this can no longer be ignored. Patience has run out.鈥

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The latest repayment threshold freeze is expected to raise 拢255 million next year, rising to 拢355 million in the 2029-30 fiscal year.聽

鈥淭he government has a moral obligation to deliver this modest fiscal reversal not only to maintain students鈥 trust in government, but to honour the terms and conditions under which those loans were sold to students,鈥 the report says.

Hillier added: 鈥淚mportantly, I believe it would go a long way to repairing the damage done to the trust between graduates and those responsible for overseeing the student loans system.鈥

The report accuses previous governments of mis-selling the loans, noting that both the Department for Education and the Student Loans Company produced promotional materials that 鈥渄id not fully reflect鈥 the costs of student loan repayments for higher earners or 鈥渟ufficiently communicate that government can retrospectively change the terms and conditions of the loans鈥.聽

It later concludes that the ways in which student loans have been promoted and communicated were 鈥渄eeply problematic鈥.聽

The report recommends ensuring that any future promotional materials are compliant with Financial Conduct Authority rules, even though the government has exempted student loan policies from consumer protection laws.聽

The committee went on to criticise current ministers for describing the student loan system as 鈥渂roken鈥 but not attempting to remedy it聽because of other financial pressures.

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鈥淚t is untenable for the government to state publicly that the system is broken and unfair, but not take the necessary steps in successive budgets to fix it,鈥 the report says.聽

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鈥淎lthough balancing the books today is important, the government cannot always choose the politically convenient option of loading additional fiscal burdens on to younger generations while hoping that young people will not notice the extra weight for decades to come.鈥

The committee鈥檚 survey, which asked for opinions on the student loan system, received 52,000 responses 鈥 one of the largest ever responses to a select committee survey. The group also heard from experts and reviewed formal evidence submissions.聽

The report says the loan system 鈥渋s layering stress on to people in their 20s and 30s in a way that did not apply to previous generations鈥, adding that the country 鈥渘eeds the younger generation to be the engine room of Britain in the years to come鈥.聽

The committee called for a rebalancing of how much of a student鈥檚 degree is funded by the individual versus the state, noting that students today 鈥渃ould be paying as much as 95 per cent of the cost of their higher education鈥.聽

MPs said the government should return the balance to a 50:50 split in the long term.聽聽

Lewis Wilson,聽the National Union of Students鈥 new vice-president for higher education (England), said student debt was 鈥済rowing by 拢1,000 a second鈥.

鈥淵oung people have been mis-sold mortgage-sized debts that politicians can raise repayments on at the drop of a hat. The government has acted like a loan shark while we struggle to even pay our rent 鈥 there is of course a clear, moral obligation to fix student loans.鈥

He said there was a 鈥渉uge opportunity鈥 for a new Labour administration to deliver 鈥渋mmediate fixes鈥 in the next budget by raising the repayment threshold and lowering the repayment rate.

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But 鈥渇undamental reform鈥 was also needed by the end of the parliament, Wilson said, calling for a system that is 鈥渏ust, fair, and affordable for all鈥.

helen.packer@timeshighereducation.com

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