This page has information about the grants, loans, scholarships and bursaries that are available for full-time undergraduate students from England starting their course from September 2012
Website: Directgov - Student Funding
Booklet: Facts and Figures 2012
Students starting in September 2012 can apply online for their loans, grants and bursaries by visiting direct.gov.uk/studentfinance
Phone Student Finance England on 0845 300 50 90 for help and advice, or if you would prefer to apply on a paper form.
Your personal eligibility for student finance depends on whether you comply with nationality, residency, age and previous study rules.
Factsheet: Student Finance Eligibility
Factsheet: UKCISA Residence Factsheet
Ready Reckoner: Quick Start Guide
Are you an Independent Student?
If you are an independent student then your student support is assessed on your own unearned income, and not your parents household income
Factsheet: Independent Student?
Are you a European Union student who can get help with living costs ?
Many students from other countries in the European Union can take out a tuition fee loan. Some EU students can also get help with living costs
Website: Students from other EU Countries
Has your parents' income fallen this year?
Student Finance England will usually look at your parents’ residual income for the financial year 2010-11. But if your parents’ residual income has fallen by 15%, they can ask Student Finance England to look at their likely income for the current financial year. Phone SFE on 0845 300 50 90 for details.
Form: Current Year Income Assessment Form
Guide: How you are Assessed and Paid
The Tuition Fee Loan is not income-assessed, so you can usually borrow up to the amount of your tuition fees each year; the loan is paid directly to your Higher Education Institution.
Website: Student Finance England
Maintenance Loan
The Maintenance Loan is for help with living costs
35% of the loan is income-assessed
The loan is also reduced by half of the amount that you receive in Maintenance Grant. So, for example, a student who receives £1500 Maintenance Grant will have their maximum Maintenance Loan amount reduced by £750.
Maintenance Grant
The Maintenance Grant is income-assessed
It is worth up to £3,250 per year. Full grant is paid where household income is less than £25,000 and a partial grant between £25,000 and £42,600
Special Support Grant
The Special Support Grant is income-assessed and worth up to £3,250. The amount of Special Support Grant that you receive will not reduce the amount of Maintenance Loan that you can receive. Income from the Special Support Grant is not counted for means-tested benefits.
The Special Support Grant is paid instead of the Maintenance Grant, if the student would be eligible for Income Support or Housing Benefit, because:
a) The student is a lone parent who is responsible for a child or young person aged under 20 (i.e. aged 19 or younger) who is a member of the student's household and in full-time non-advanced education.
b) The student is a lone foster parent of a child or young person aged under 20 (i.e. aged 19 or younger).
c) The student has a partner who is also a full-time student and one or both of them are responsible for a child or young person aged under 20 (i.e. aged 19 or younger) who is in full-time non-advanced education.
d) The student qualifies for a Disability Premium or Severe Disability Premium.
e) The student has been treated as incapable of work for a continuous period of at least 28 weeks (two or more periods of incapacity separated by a break of no more than 8 weeks count as one continuous period).
f) The student is deaf and qualifies for Disabled Students' Allowances.
g) The student is waiting to go back to a course having taken approved time out because of an illness or caring responsibility that has now come to an end for a period not exceeding one year.
h) The student is from abroad and entitled to an Income Support urgent cases payment because they are temporarily without funds for a period of up to six weeks.
i) The student is aged 60 or over.
Factsheet: Students with children or adult dependants
Parents Learning Allowance
This is to help with course-related costs if a student has dependent children. They can get up to £1,508 a year depending on their income.
Website: Help for students with children
Childcare Grant
This will help with childcare costs for dependent children aged under 15 at the beginning of the academic year - or under 17 if they have special educational needs - in registered or approved childcare.
Website: Help for students with children
Adult Dependants' Grant
The grant of up to £2,642 a year should help any student who has an adult who depends on them financially. The amount the student can receive depends on their income and the income of their husband, wife or partner and that of any dependants.
Website: Adult Dependants' Grant
Disabled Students' Allowances (DSAs) are grants to help meet the extra course costs students face because of a disability. You may get DSAs if you have a disability, ongoing health condition, mental-health condition or specific learning difficulty like dyslexia. DSAs can help pay for:
•specialist equipment you need for studying like computer software
•non-medical helpers, such as a note-taker or reader
•extra travel costs you have to pay because of your disability
•other costs such as photocopying or printer cartridges
You don’t have to pay DSAs back and they’re not counted as income when working out whether you get benefits or Tax Credits.
More information and how to apply:
Website: Disabled Students' Allowance
Booklet: Bridging the Gap
National Scholarship Scheme
FAQs: Leeds Met's National Scholarship Scheme
Outstanding Achievement Scholarship
Website: Scholarships
Leeds Met Carnegie Sports Scholarships
Website: Carnegie Scholarships
Leeds Met Bursary
2010 and 2011 starters who get the full Maintenance Grant could be eligible for the Leeds Met Bursary.
FAQs: Leeds Met Bursary
At Leeds Met the following undergraduate courses attract NHS Bursary Funding:
BSc (Hons) Nursing
BSc (Hons) Dietetics
BSc (Hons) Physiotherapy
BSc (Hons) Clincal Language Sciences
It is planned that new NHS students starting a course (outside London) from September 2012 will get up to:
£4,395 Bursary (£3,351 if living with parents)
£2,324 Maintenance Loan (£1,744 if living with parents)
£1,000 Grant
Tuition fees are paid by the NHS
The Bursary amount will depend on whether you live with your parents, your household income and how many weeks a year you study.
The Maintenance Loan amount will depend on whether you are living with your parents. Apply separately to Student Finance England for the Maintenance Loan
The Grant of £1000 will be available to all eligible students.
There will also be help with placement travel costs, additional allowances for students with disabilities and dependants.
Information about the planned scheme is available on the Department of Health website:
Review of NHS Student Support
A Bursary of £4,575 (outside London) will be available to students studying BA(Hons) Social Work.
The Bursary is not means-tested and will be paid in addition to all the full-time student support available from Student Finance England.
For more information see the NHSBSA website:
Link: NHSBSA
The Access to Learning Fund provides additional financial help towards the essential costs associated with being a student. Pick up an application form from a Helpzone desk.
Website: Access to Learning Fund
It may be possible to get some extra help with living expenses or course costs from a Trust Fund or Charity. Whether you can get help will depend on your individual circumstances and the aims of the Trust Fund or Charity.
You can carry out a search on the websites below to find details of organisations that may be able to help.
Family Action
Website: Family Action Trust Search
Turn2us
Website: Turn2Us Grants Search
Student Loan Repayment for courses starting from September 2012
Full-time and part-time students who start their course after 1 September 2012 will not begin paying back their student loan until the April after they finish their course and only when they earn more than £21,000 year.
What you repay is based on your earnings, 9% of what you earn over £21,000 is deducted from your salary by Revenue & Customs. For example, if you earned £25,000 a year, then you would repay £30 per month from your salary. (This is currently subject to parliamentary approval.)
Website: Student Loan Repayment 2012
Student Loan Repayment for courses starting before September 2012
Website: Student Loan Repayment 2011