Public Poll Exposes Deep Concerns Over Student Debt Fairness in UK Higher Education
A landmark poll has laid bare the widespread belief among the UK public that the student debt system is fundamentally unfair, with two-thirds expressing discontent amid soaring graduate debts and high interest rates. Conducted by Public First for Times Higher Education, the survey of nearly 2,000 adults found 65 per cent deeming the total debt amount unfair, 61 per cent criticising interest rates, and 62 per cent opposing the lack of a lifetime repayment cap. This sentiment underscores mounting pressure on policymakers as universities grapple with enrollment trends and financial viability in the higher education sector.
The findings come at a time when outstanding student loans in England alone stand at £267 billion as of March 2025, projected to balloon to £500 billion by the late 2040s. For the 2024 graduating cohort, average debt upon becoming liable for repayments reached £53,000, highlighting the scale of the burden facing new entrants to the workforce from UK universities and colleges.
Breaking Down the Public First Poll: Key Insights and Demographics
The Public First survey, carried out between 27 February and 2 March 2026, provides granular data on perceptions. Only 7 per cent viewed the total debt as 'very fair', while 37 per cent identified student loans as the biggest financial pressure on young people—ranking behind housing costs (55 per cent) but ahead of groceries (43 per cent). Older voters (over 55) were most sympathetic, with 51 per cent seeing it as the top worry, compared to 27 per cent among 25-34-year-olds who are likely borrowers themselves.
- 65% unfair total debt amount
- 61% unfair interest rates (68% among loan holders)
- 62% unfair no lifetime cap
- 48% unfair 9% repayment rate above threshold
- Fairest aspect: Plan 2 write-off after 30 years
Jonathan Simons, head of education at Public First, noted the public's nuanced grasp: 'People identify fair and unfair bits, but reforms won't change total debt—the biggest concern.'
This data aligns with an Ipsos poll from February 2026, where 54 per cent backed interest-free loans—up 13 points from 2023—amid 76 per cent concern over high debt levels deterring disadvantaged students.
Understanding Plan 2 Loans: The Controversial System Affecting Millions
Plan 2 student loans, applicable to English undergraduates starting between 2012 and 2022, form the bulk of outstanding debt. Borrowers repay 9 per cent of income above the threshold (£27,295 frozen until 2027, rising to £29,385 in 2026/27 then frozen three years), with interest at Retail Prices Index (RPI) plus up to 3 per cent—peaking at 7.9 per cent recently. Debt is written off after 30 years (40 for postgrad).
The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) explains the 'unfairness' debate stems from above-inflation interest causing balances to grow despite repayments—two-thirds of borrowers don't cover interest—and threshold freezes adding £1,000+ annually for median earners. Around 50 per cent of Plan 2 borrowers may never fully repay, shifting costs to taxpayers. As of April 2025, 43 per cent of borrowers up to 2023 cohort were repaying.
For context, a median earner (£35k) repays ~£50/month initially, but freezes could add £22k lifetime cost. High earners repay double tuition fees plus interest, while low earners pay little.Explore career advice to boost earnings and manage repayments.
Escalating Debt Levels and Repayment Challenges for Graduates
Average graduation debt hit £53k for 2024 leavers, with SLC tracking issues—370k borrowers (£13bn debt) lost contact. Voluntary repayments rose, but overpayments exceed £1bn yearly due to confusion. Projections show govt spending £4bn in 2026/27 under reforms vs £11bn current system.
| Cohort | Avg Debt on Repay Start | % Repaying (Apr 2025) |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 | £53k | 42% |
| 2017-18 | - | 60% |
Impacts include delayed homeownership (68% cite repayments) and fertility, per Ipsos.Check scholarships to reduce initial debt.
Political and Expert Calls for Reform Amid Labour Government Review
Martin Lewis' campaign labels threshold freezes 'immoral', clashing with Chancellor Reeves who defends as 'fair'. Over 20 Labour MPs urge action on 'rip-off' rates. Conservatives propose RPI interest cap (£4bn cost/cohort), Lib Dems earnings-linked thresholds.
IFS models: interest cut benefits high earners most; threshold unfreeze aids middle. Public prioritises interest cuts (29%).
Effects on UK Universities and Colleges: Enrollment and Funding Pressures
Despite record UCAS applications (338k UK 18yos, +4.8% Jan 2026), intl decline (6%) exacerbates deficits—1/3 unis in red. Debt deters disadvantaged (73% concern), risking access goals. UnisUK warns £3.7bn policy hit.Read on uni closures risk.
Fees rise to £9,535 (inflation), but real-terms freeze hurts. Explore higher ed jobs for stable careers.
Stakeholder Perspectives: Graduates, Parents, and Policymakers
87% graduates call max interest unfair (MoneySavingExpert survey). Parents (55%) see uni value despite debt. Unions push harmonisation; unis fear enrollment drop.
- Graduates: Balances grow despite reps (2/3 don't cover interest)
- Parents: 73% worry poorer deterred
- V unis: Prioritise monthly relief
International Comparisons and Lessons for UK Higher Education
UK worst globally per some metrics—avg debt 3x US (£44k US federal). Germany tuition-free, Australia income-contingent but lower interest. Reforms could emulate earnings-linked models.IFS reform analysis.
Potential Solutions and Future Outlook for Student Finance
Options: cap interest RPI (£4bn/cohort cost), unfreeze thresholds (£10bn), graduate tax. Labour review promised, but freezes save £5.6bn short-term. Optimism for balanced reform balancing access, uni funding, taxpayer cost.
Prospective students: weigh ROI via Rate My Professor, seek faculty jobs post-grad. For advice, visit higher ed career advice.
Photo by Hugh Whyte on Unsplash
Navigating Student Debt: Actionable Advice for UK Graduates and Applicants
1. Use IFS calculator for projections.
2. Voluntary overpay if high earner.
3. Check UK uni jobs for earnings boost.
4. Scholarships reduce burden.
5. Monitor reforms via SLC.
As debate intensifies, UK higher education faces pivotal changes. Stay informed for opportunities at university jobs.




