Skip to main content
Student Loans · Plan 1 · 2026/27

UK Student Loan Plan 1 explained (2026/27)

Plan 1 is the original UK income-contingent student loan, covering English and Welsh undergraduates who started before September 2012 plus all Northern Irish students of any cohort. The 2026/27 repayment threshold is £26,065 per year, with repayments at 9% of income above that, and the loan writes off at 25 years from the April first liable to repay (or age 65 for pre-September-2006 starters).

4-minute read

Plan 1 in one paragraph: for 2026/27 you repay 9% of any gross earnings above £26,065. Interest rate is the lower of RPI or Bank Rate + 1%, currently meaning it tracks Bank Rate + 1%. Outstanding balance is written off 25 years after the April you first became liable to repay (or age 65 for pre-September-2006 starters in England and Wales).

Who is on Plan 1?

You're on Plan 1 if any of these apply:

You can check which plan you're on in your Student Loan Company account.

The 2026/27 repayment math

Plan 1 is income-contingent. You repay 9% of every pound you earn above £26,065 per year — or weekly equivalent £501.

Gross annual earningsAnnual repaymentMonthly repayment
£25,000£0£0
£30,000£354£29
£40,000£1,254£104
£55,000£2,604£217
£75,000£4,404£367

Repayments come out of your gross pay through PAYE if you're employed, or via your Self Assessment if you're self-employed.

How interest works under Plan 1

Plan 1 interest is set by HM Treasury formula: the lower of RPI (March of prior year) or Bank of England Bank Rate + 1%. In a high-Bank-Rate environment the Bank-Rate+1% leg can bind; in low-rate environments RPI tends to dominate. Since March 2023, with Bank Rate at 4.75-5.25% and RPI well above that, the rate has been capped by Bank Rate + 1%.

The interest accrues daily on the outstanding balance from the day you take the loan. There is no holiday before graduation — interest accrues throughout study, just not at a punitive real rate.

When the loan is written off

Plan 1 writes off at:

The loan also writes off on death or on permanent disability. Bankruptcy does not write it off — student loan debt survives bankruptcy.

Should I overpay Plan 1?

For most Plan 1 borrowers, the answer is almost certainly no, for the same reason as Plan 5: it works like a graduate tax, not a normal loan. Most borrowers will:

Overpayments only "save you money" if you would otherwise have repaid the loan in full before the 25-year (or age-65) write-off. The clearest case for overpaying:

For everyone else, overpaying Plan 1 is equivalent to paying tax voluntarily on income that wouldn't otherwise have been taxed.

Worked example: £45,000 earner, current Plan 1 balance £18,000

Salary £45,000. Repayment: (45,000 − 26,065) × 9% = £1,704/year via PAYE.

If you stay at this salary in real terms for the next 20 years, you'd repay £1,704 × 20 = £34,080. Add interest at ~5% on a declining balance, and the loan would clear in approximately 12-14 years — before the 25-year write-off.

In that scenario, overpaying could legitimately save money. But change the assumption to "I'll take a 3-year career break" or "I'll go part-time in 5 years" and the math swings back to no-overpay. Use the student loan calculator to model your actual circumstances.

Common Plan 1 mistakes

Sources

Editorial accountability
Open Trust Centre →

Every page is reviewed against the editorial standards, written from primary sources, sourced openly, and corrected publicly. No affiliate revenue. No sponsored content. No paid placements.

Editorial standards Editorial process Corrections policy How we make money Editorial team Methodology