Personal tools
You are here: Home questions Is it possible to pursue a claim against the unenforceability of student loans?
Document Actions
  • Send this page to somebody
  • Print this page
  • Add Bookmarklet

Is it possible to pursue a claim against the unenforceability of student loans?

I took my student loan out in 1998 and therefore it does not fall under the Consumer Credit Act (I believe student loans fell under the Higher Education Act from 1998 onwards). Would it still be possible to pursue a claim against the unenforceability of such a loan as it is still a form of consumer lending?

Unfortunately you would not be able to pursue a claim as Income Contingent loans are not regulated by the Consumer Credit Act.

We hope this information answers your question and that you found our free service fast, comprehensive and useful. We answer questions on any legal matter so please tell anyone else who you think might benefit from our free assistance.

It would also be a good idea to bookmark http://www.lawanswers.co.uk in case you need free advice on any other legal question.

Please come back to us if you have any other legal matter we can assist with in future.

Important! Ask your own free questions... Questions are answered accurately at the time they are posted but the law can change or your circumstances may differ in an important but not obvious way from those mentioned. For fast, free and up-to-date personal legal advice direct to your inbox about your own individual case ask Law Answers your own free legal question.


credit cruncher from moneylawyer.co.uk
about moneylawyer's free credit agreement checking service

by Maria Mason last modified 2008-09-24 17:13

This site conforms to the following standards:

law answers network homeAsk Law Answers your own free legal question.