If you leave your course early
If you abandon your course early or are dismissed from it before you have had the final instalment of your student loan in that academic year, the loan continues to be taken into account up until the day before you would have been due your next loan payment or to the end of the quarter (see above) in which you left, whichever is earlier. This means that if your loan payments stop shortly after you leave the course, they are only taken into account (and affect any benefits) for a short period.
To calculate the amount of loan taken into account, start by working out the weekly amount of annual loan, with disregards for books, equipment and travel but without the £10 weekly disregard. Then, subtract this amount of weekly loan for the period from the start of the standard academic year (see here) to the day you left from the amount of loan (minus the £693 disregards) you have been paid so far. The result is then divided over the weeks from when you left to when your next instalment would have been due or the end of the quarter, whichever is earlier.
Example: employment and support allowance
Nick abandons his course on 10 October 2025. He is in the second year of a three-year course. He gets a small amount of ESA during his course (which includes a severe disability premium). His benefit week starts on a Monday. In Nick’s case, he has already been paid £3,420 of his £11,400 loan/bursary (£8,000 maintenance loan, £2,400 special support loan and an independent students’ bursary of £1,000) by the date he leaves. £720 of this is the special support loan, so only £2,700 counts as income.
Step 1: work out weekly amount of annual income
Loan/bursary | £9,000 |
---|
Less disregards (£693) = | £8,307 |
Divided by 43 weeks = | £193.19 |
Step 2: work out amount of annual income before leaving the course
Multiply the weekly annual loan by the number of benefit weeks from the week after the one that includes the start of the standard academic year until the week before the one that includes the day Nick left the course.
£193.19 x 4 weeks (8 September to 5 October) = £772.76
Step 3: work out amount of income ‘left over’ since leaving the course
To do this, add the monthly income instalments paid or due before the date Nick left his course, deduct disregards, and deduct the annual income worked out for the period before leaving.
Loan up to when left the course | £2,700 |
---|
Less disregards (£693) = | £2,007 |
Amount of loan paid taken into account | £2,007 |
Deduct annual loan before leaving (£772.76) = | £1,234.24 |
Step 4: work out weekly amount of ‘leftover’ income for the period it is taken into account
Divide the total amount of leftover loan from Step 3 for the period since leaving the course by the number of weeks from when Nick left to the day before he would have been due his next loan payment or the end of the quarter in which he left, whichever is earlier. Count from the benefit week that includes the day Nick left the course until the benefit week that includes the day before his next loan instalment would have been due had payments continued, or the benefit week that includes the last day of the last quarter for which an instalment was payable whichever is earlier. In Nick’s case, his next loan instalment would have been due on 7 November, and this is before the end of the quarter (31 December).
£1,234.24 ÷ 5 (6 October to 9 November 2025) = £246.85
£246.85 a week is taken into account from 6 October 2025 until 9 November 2025. This is likely to mean that Nick’s ESA ends.
Example: housing benefit
To work out how much loan to take into account for Nick’s HB claim (assuming he is not passported to HB from income-related ESA) after he has left his course, the calculation is slightly different to that for income-related ESA. In Step 2 above, instead of working out the number of benefit weeks up until the week before the one that includes the day Nick left the course, count up until the week that includes the one during which he left the course – ie, there is an extra week in this part of the calculation. Bear in mind that benefit weeks for HB always start on a Monday, and this may not be the same for income-related ESA.
Step 1: work out weekly amount of annual loan
Loan/bursary | £9,000 |
---|
Less disregards (£693) = | £8,307 |
Divided by 43 weeks = | £193.19 |
Step 2: work out amount of annual loan before leaving the course
Multiply the weekly annual loan by the number of benefit weeks from the week after the one that includes the start of the standard academic year until the week that includes the day Nick left the course.
£193.19 x 5 (8 September to 12 October) = £965.95
Step 3: work out amount of loan ‘left over’ since leaving the course
In the same way as in the example for ESA above.
Loan up to when left the course | £2,700 |
---|
Less disregards (£693) = | £2,007 |
Amount of loan to end of term taken into account = | £2,007 |
Deduct annual loan before leaving, from Step 2 (£965.95) = | £1,041.05 |
Step 4: work out weekly amount of ‘leftover’ loan for the period it is taken into account
In the same way as in the example for ESA above.
£1,041.05 ÷ 5 (6 October to 9 November 2025) = £208.21
£208.21 a week is taken into account from 6 October to 9 November 2025.
Nick should consider applying for UC, as no student income is counted for UC once he leaves his course.1para H6152 ADM Note: if you repay the loan, it is still taken into account as income, according to the formula above.2CJSA/549/2003 You could therefore be refused income-related ESA despite having no other money to live on. However, if the Student Loans Company asks you to repay the loan rather than your repaying it voluntarily, arguably the loan should be disregarded as income from the date of the request.3Vol 6, para 30470 DMG