The accounts I have pay no interest, but my savings are a bit more than "a few K".
In which case you have nothing to worry about.
Just send them the details and move on.
The accounts I have pay no interest, but my savings are a bit more than "a few K".
Didn't graduate. Left uni in 2003.
I mostly don't want them to know how much money is in my account. They are asking for 3 months of bank statements. Perhaps a letter from my bank to say I haven't received BACS payments since March would suffice?
[FnG]magnolia;28144362 said:You seem to have been happy taking their money![]()
Pay back what you owe from your savings, be done with it and move on.
[FnG]magnolia;28144413 said:I'd be very surprised indeed if the company charged with making provision for student aid in the form of loans do not have very good lawyers. It's unlikely that the terms are anything other than actionable against the lendee.
e: that was in response to cheesboy's post and also the general view whereby the OP thinks he's been done wrong by even though I'd bet a large sum of money he has not read the terms he signed.
... I doubt you have much to worry about...
Sorry but you dropped out of your course so the rules are slightly different for you. In theory they can ask for the full balance back from after your leaving date. There is a formula in their terms and conditions that shows you how to work out what percentage you can 'keep' which all depends on your actual leaving date.
Good news is that even if your savings easily outstrip the value of the loan its doubtful they will ask you to pay until you are back earning over the threshold. They're just checking that you aren't a secret millionaire.
[FnG]magnolia;28144477 said:Why don't you save 50 k and just pay it off?
It wasn't mis-sold to you. You gladly thought "wahey money to spend in freshers week" and signed the paper work...like all students do. If you have savings then just pay off what you can. You have to pay it back at some point unless you're one of these people that just doesn't want to pay back the money...you got...as a loan....regardless of where you got it.
The worst part is, SLC is not a govt body - it's a private company. I would provide that info to HMRC but I'm not at all happy providing this info to the SLC.
Well, just got off the phone with them.
They say I need to provide bank statements for all accounts and these must show the current balance of those accounts. I asked if I could blank out the balance (to just show transactions) and they said that would be rejected!
Sounds like you are planning not to do well to avoid paying off a loan.
But the SLC could see that this is enough to repay the loan, and frankly I don't think I should have to tell them how much money I have.
The terms of the loan repayment were that I wouldn't pay anything unless I was earning 15k.
As for the antagonists in this thread: imagine a mortgage. When you take out a mortgage you agree repayments, and both sides stick to it. The bank doesn't suddenly say "Right we'll have all our money back now, thanks." So why should this be different?