Postgraduate loans
English domiciled students
Student loans for Masters degrees are available up to help with course fees and living costs
Key features include:
- The loans are available for both taught and research Masters programmes.
- The loan is non-means tested (not dependent on household income).
- Students aged under 60, on the first day of the academic year may be eligible for Masters loans.
- Please check the Student Finance authority website for information about residency criteria.
- Loans are only available to students studying their first Masters degree.
- Postgraduate loans are available for one year full-time, two year part-time and three year part-time Masters courses, where there is no equivalent full-time course.
- The loan is paid in three instalments during the academic year, directly to you – month one (33%), month four (33%) and month seven (34%).
- Loans are subject to accrue interest from the point that the first instalment is released.
- Repayments are income-contingent and made concurrently with undergraduate loans. Repayment arrangements can differ depending on which plan you are on. Please check the terms and conditions of the loan before taking it out.
Applications can be made via the Student Finance England website.
Welsh domiciled students
Student Finance Wales offer postgraduate loans and grants up to £18,430 for Welsh domiciled students studying master’s level courses at any UK university. Key features include:
- The loans are available for both taught and research Masters programmes.
- The loan and grant are means tested.
- Students aged under 60, on the first day of the academic year will be eligible for Masters loans.
- In order to be eligible you will need to be a UK national for at least 3 years and ordinarily resident in Wales (not solely for educational purposes), or an EU citizen.
- Loans are only available to students studying their first Masters degree.
- Postgraduate loans are available for all one year full-time, two year part-time and three year part-time Masters courses, where there is no equivalent full-time course.
- The loan is paid in three instalments during the academic year, directly to you – month one (33%), month four (33%) and month seven (34%).
- Loans will be subject to an interest rate of RPI+3%.
- Repayments are income-contingent and made concurrently with undergraduate loans. Rates are set at 6.1% of annual income over £21,000.
Applications can be made via the Student Finance Wales website.
Northern Irish domiciled students
Student Finance Northern Ireland offer loans for Northern Irish domiciled students studying postgraduate courses at any UK university. Key features include:
- The course fee loan is available for Taught and Research Masters degrees, Postgraduate Diplomas, Postgraduate Certificates.
- Postgraduate loans are available for full-time and part-time courses over one, two or three year’s duration.
- Repayments are income-contingent and made concurrently with undergraduate loans. Rates are set at 9% of annual income over £20,195 (this equals £1,683 per month or £388 per week).
| Course length |
Year 1 |
Year 2 |
Year 3 |
|
Up to 1 year
|
£5,500
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
|
2 years
|
£2,750
|
£2,750
|
n/a
|
|
3 years
|
£1,833
|
£1,833
|
£1,834
|
Applications can be made via the Student Finance Northern Ireland website.
Scottish domiciled students
Student Awards Agency Scotland (SAAS) offer postgraduate loans of up to £10,000 for Scottish domiciled students studying at postgraduate diploma or masters level. Key features include:
- Tuition fee loan up to £7,000 and a non-means tested living cost loan of £4,500 split equally across study years.
- Available for all eligible one year full-time taught postgraduate students.
- Postgraduate loans will be added to a student’s existing undergraduate loan and repaid as a single loan balance.
- There is no provision for part-time study undertaken outside Scotland.
Applications can be made via the Postgraduate funding - Full Time - SAAS website.
Repayments
UK Postgraduate Loan Repayments Compared:
| Country |
Threshold |
Rate |
Interest |
Existing Balance |
Cancellation |
|
England
|
£21,000
|
6.1%
|
RPI+3%
|
Separate
|
After 30 years
|
|
Wales
|
£21,000
|
6.1%
|
RPI+3%
|
Separate
|
After 30 years
|
|
Scotland
|
£25,375
|
9%
|
1.5%
|
Combined*
|
After 35 years
|
|
Northern Ireland
|
£20,195
|
9%
|
1.5%
|
Combined*
|
After 25 years
|
*If you have both undergraduate and postgraduate loans under tthe Plan 1 student loan repayment scheme, your debts will be combined.
For further information visit the Find A Masters website.
Access to Learning Fund
UK students are eligible to apply for financial support from the University's Access to Learning Fund if they can demonstrate the need for such assistance. Applications can only be made once you have registered as a student.
Disabled Students Allowances (DSAs)
DSAs are grants to help students meet the extra costs of studying they may face as a direct result of a disability or a specific learning difficulty. They are available for postgraduate students whether full or part-time, are not means-assessed (i.e. do not depend on your household income) and do not have to be repaid. The amount you receive depends on your individual circumstances and - if you are part time - the intensity of your course.
You will need to show your authority written proof of your disability from an appropriate medical professional. If you have a specific learning difficulty, such as dyslexia or dyspraxia, the local authority may ask you to have an independent assessment carried out to establish this, which you will have to pay for, although you may ask Harper Adams for help towards it through our Access to Learning Fund.
To apply you may either:
- Ask your local education authority to post you an application form, or
- Download the application form DSA1 and the information booklet 'Bridging the Gap' from www.direct.gov.uk
Other sources of funding
Postgraduate funding is not straightforward and may involve some research on your part. The following is a list of suggestions, but you may well find others, depending on your contacts and area of interest.
- Scholarships available through the Development Trust at Harper Adams University.
- UK Research Councils (various councils catering for different subjects - UK students only).
- Specialised funding schemes appropriate to rural/land-based study.
- Charities and trusts.
- Funding through employment including sponsorship by employers, research and graduate teaching assistantships, part-time work, part-time study or research.
- Other forms of finance including personal savings, parental/family contribution or loan, Career Development Loans, bank loan, grant from a trust or charity, access funds.
International students should contact The British Council or their country's education ministry for advice on alternative sources of funding.
Students from Republic of Ireland
Visit Tuition fees paid for third level education (revenue.ie) to see if you qualify for tax relief for tuition fees paid for third level education.