Mounting student loan debts

Labour MP Nadia Whittome has taken to X to expose the crippling nature of the UK’s student loan system. Despite being in the top 5% of UK earners, Whittome reveals that she has managed to pay off just £1,000 in six years of repayments. This situation highlights the persistent challenge posed by student loans in the UK.

I left university in 2019 with £49,600 of debt. A few months later, I became an MP and have since received a salary that puts me in the top 5% in the country. 6 years on, the repayments from my salary have brought this total to down to £48,600 – just £1,000 less.

This isn’t an… https://t.co/bN3mEDGCGl

— Nadia Whittome MP (@NadiaWhittomeMP) January 15, 2026

Student loans: Can’t make a dent, but paying anyway

Whittome has underscored the realities of the student finance system, with interest rates so high that even some of the highest earners cannot make a dent in their student debt, leaving many with lingering student loans for years.

The post reads in full:

I left university in 2019 with £49,600 of debt. A few months later, I became an MP and have since received a salary that puts me in the top 5% in the country. 6 years on, the repayments from my salary have brought this total to down to £48,600 – just £1,000 less.

This isn’t an issue for me – I give away a big chunk of my salary anyway – but if MPs are barely making a dent in their student loan debt after 6 years of repayments, what chance do other graduates have?

We recently wrote about how the UK student loans crisis defies basic economic logic, with Willem Moore pointing out that debts are rising so fast for students that they effectively live in a ‘debt prison’ that they will never escape.

Whittome’s post comes in response to an X post by ITV political correspondent Shehab Khan, which highlighted the aspirational impacts of wealth inequality and also implicitly links back to issues around student loans.

For those asking why this is now being spoken about so much. I’d guess two reasons.

  1. The interest rate rose rapidly recently as it was tied to inflation

  2. Those with these huge debts are now finally being elected MPs and getting senior jobs in newsrooms, think tanks etc.

— Shehab Khan ITV (@ShehabKhan) January 14, 2026

Khan’s post read:

I left uni around 10 years ago with a debt of £45,000.

After 10 years of continual payments adding up to thousands and thousands of pounds my debt is…£45,500.

My peers with rich parents who could afford the fees upfront won’t be paying 9% of their salary for 30 years.

For those asking why this is now being spoken about so much. I’d guess two reasons.

  1. The interest rate rose rapidly recently as it was tied to inflation

  2. Those with these huge debts are now finally being elected MPs and getting senior jobs in newsrooms, think tanks etc.

The ‘Plan II’ debt trap

It is important to note that workers with student debt are affected differently depending on when they completed their degree. Students who graduated between 2011 and 2023 fall under the ‘Plan 2’ repayment system. This means they are subject to higher interest rates — currently around 6.2%, roughly 3% above inflation. Khan points out that those impacted by the current student loans model are now reaching more influential positions, bringing this back-breaking issue into sharper public focus.

I’ve just checked my student finance for a nice depressing read.

I also left uni 10 years ago (first to come under Plan 2 🙃), with a debt of just under £40,000.

After a decade of repayments, it’s now reached… £48,905!

In 2025-26, 70% of my repayments were wiped out by… https://t.co/Gg6ugOftfc

— Sienna Rodgers (@siennamarla) January 14, 2026

Martin Lewis discussed the issue on his YouTube channel:

Hamstrung futures

The aspirations of UK students should improve the prospects of future workers, not only uplift those who are already incredibly wealthy while the working class continue to struggle to repay their student loans.

As Khan pointed out, the wealthiest are exempt from this impossible noose around students’ necks, leaving the burden of student loans primarily on those less privileged.

This is what happens when everything gets privatised: student loans, water, royal mail, railways, energy networks. https://t.co/OKJ4JgbXHx

— Mark Todd (@MarkTodd_pol) January 15, 2026

Featured image via the Canary/Unsplash

By Maddison Wheeldon


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