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Financing your studies

Postgraduate student loans in Wales

Find out about postgraduate master’s loans in 2024/25 if you live in Wales – our guide outlines what you need to know.

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CONTENTS

  1. Postgraduate master’s loans and grants in Wales 2024/25

  2. Are you eligible for a master's loan in Wales?

  3. Is your course eligible for master's funding?

  4. Postgraduate finance for EU and international students

  5. How to apply for postgraduate finance in Wales

  6. Repaying your loan

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Postgraduate master’s loans and grants in Wales 2024/25

If you're from Wales and start a master's course in August 2024, you can get a loan of £18,950 – the highest amount available in the UK. However, it can only be used if you're studying a full master's course, not a 'top-up'.

You can use the money for your master's tuition fees or towards your living costs. Some degrees may cost more than the funding you receive. If so, you'll need to find a way to pay the difference.

The postgraduate master's loan is for the whole master's degree course. This applies whether it's a full-time course for one year or a part-time course over four years. Once you've registered on your course, the money is paid to you three times a year.

Number of years of study

F/T or P/T

Maximum master’s loan per year

One

Full-time

£18,950

Two

Full-time

£9,475

Part-time

Three

Part-time

£6,316.67

Four

Part-time

£4,737.50

Until the 2024 academic year, Welsh students also got a grant towards master's study, however government cuts led to its removal. If you're starting a master's course after 1 August 2024, you'll only be able to apply for a loan. You won't have to give details of your household income and will be able to apply for the maximum amount of loan, or as much as you choose to take out.

Postgraduate students aren't eligible for a childcare grant, parents' learning allowance or adult dependent grant, but can still claim Disabled Students' Allowances (DSA) if applicable.

If you're already paying back an undergraduate loan, repayments will only be taken if your income is over the threshold. Your master's loan won't count as income for loan repayments.

Are you eligible for a master's loan in Wales?

You must meet these criteria to qualify for a master's loan from Wales:

  • Be a UK national, Irish citizen or have settled or pre-settled status i.e. without any restriction on how long you can stay in the UK
  • Normally live in Wales. If you moved there for an undergraduate degree then go straight into postgraduate study, that doesn't count
  • Be under 60 years old when you start. If you change to a different course after you turn 60, you'll lose your eligibility for the loan
  • Usually, you must have been living in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man for the three years before your course begins

Residency is a complex area after Brexit and there are exceptions to the above. We outline some of these in our page on student finance eligibility.

Your eligibility also depends on your previous studies and funding:

  • You won't get a master's loan if you had postgraduate funding before, unless you left your course because of illness or bereavement
  • You won't get master's funding if you already have a qualification at the same level or higher. Even if you funded it yourself, or it was from a university outside the UK
  • You won't get a master's loan if you're behind on repayments for any other student loan
  • You also won't get a loan if you currently receive a student loan for another course
  • You won't qualify for a loan if you get public funding for your course, with the exception of social work students in Wales

If you have an undergraduate MA from a Scottish uni, or from Cambridge, Oxford or Trinity College Dublin, these are equivalent to a bachelor's degree and won't affect your eligibility to apply for a master's loan.

On the other hand, if your first degree was an integrated master's (such as MEng, MMath, MPharm) this counts as an equivalent qualification. You won't be eligible for a master's loan.

If you had a loan for a teaching PGCE, this is funded by undergraduate student finance. You will still be able to apply for a master's loan.

Is your course eligible for master's funding?

To be eligible for master's funding, your course must be:

  • A full taught or research-based master's degree
  • Worth at least 180 credits
  • Provided by an eligible university in Wales, England, Northern Ireland or Scotland

This can include MSc, MA, MPhil, MRes, LLM, MLitt, MFA, MEd and MBA courses. Your course can be at any eligible uni in Wales, England, Northern Ireland or Scotland.

Courses that aren't eligible for master's funding from Wales include:

  • Top-up master's degrees
  • Master's degrees integrated into an undergraduate course (undergraduate loan)
  • Master's degrees that are part of a doctoral course (covered by a doctoral loan)
  • Postgraduate certificates and diplomas (a PGCE in teaching is eligible or undergraduate funding)

Postgraduate pre-registration healthcare courses in England may qualify for master's funding from Student Finance Wales if they lead to a master's degree. This includes courses in Nursing, Midwifery or Allied Health Profession subjects. Students from Wales may also be able to apply to the Learning Support funds offered by NHS England.

Intercalated master's

Undergraduate degrees may sometimes offer the chance to take a year out to complete an intercalated master's. Unlike an integrated master's, which is part of an undergraduate degree, an intercalated degree is a separate qualification. It won't be covered by your undergraduate funding, but you can apply for master's finance if eligible. However, you'll need to check how it affects your student finance on returning to complete your ‘lower' degree afterwards.

Distance learning

If studying by distance learning, you'll need to be living in Wales on the first day of the first academic year of your course. After this, you may be able to move elsewhere in the UK and still be eligible for funding. Exceptions are made for students (or those with a dependent relative) in the armed forces who have been posted outside the UK.

Length of course

Courses can be one to two years if studied full-time. Part-time courses can be from two to four years in duration.

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Postgraduate finance for EU and international students

Following Brexit, students from the EU aren't likely to qualify for a student loan from the UK. However, there may be exceptions. For more on Brexit arrangements, see our student finance eligibility page.

International students are also unlikely to get a master's loan. Exceptions may include refugees or others granted the right to remain in the UK without restriction. However, international students studying at postgraduate level may be eligible for scholarships. Check with your university to see what might be available.

How to apply for postgraduate finance in Wales

You can apply online or by post to Student Finance Wales

You only need to apply once, rather than for each year of your course. You don't need a confirmed place as details can be updated later. Apply as soon as you can to make sure you receive funds before your course starts. The last date for application is nine months after the first day of the last academic year of your course.

You'll need evidence of your identity, such as a valid passport. You'll also need three years' evidence of your address.

Repaying your loan

You'll repay your master's loan at the same time as your undergraduate loan, if you have one.

Postgraduate loans in Wales are repaid only if your income is above £21,000 a year, £1,750 a month, or £403 a week. (This is before tax or other deductions.) Unlike undergraduate loans, this threshold does not change each year. You repay 6% of any income above this amount.

For example, if your annual income is £30,000, that's £9,000 more than the annual postgraduate loan repayment threshold. You'll pay 6% of £9,000. This works out as a monthly payment of £45 if you only have a master's loan.

If you have also an undergraduate loan from Wales (Plan 2), you repay this separately. The income threshold is £27,295. If your salary is £30,000, that's £2,705 more than the threshold. You'll repay 9% of £2,705. This works out as a monthly payment of around £25 on top of your £45 master's loan repayment.

The amount you borrow is also charged interest.

Postgraduate loan interest is tied to the cost of living, based on the retail price index (RPI) plus 3%. The RPI value changes each year in September, using the retail price index from the previous March. However after inflation caused high rises in the RPI interest rate in 2022 and 2023, a cap was introduced to keep interest rates in line with the 'prevailing market rate' for personal loans, reviewed each month.

Repayments begin in April the year after you complete your course, but only once you're above the income threshold. After 30 years, if you haven't repaid your master's loan in full, the remaining amount will be written off.

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