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An inquiry by MPs into the student loan system in England begins on Tuesday, with evidence from student organisations and experts.
The National Union of Students (NUS) said the inquiry should look at the graduate earnings repayment threshold and interest rates.
But the government said the current student loan system protected lower-earning graduates, with repayments linked to earnings and loans written off at the end of their term.
New research, published separately, suggests that a third of people now think a university degree isn't worth the time and money.
The British Social Attitudes survey has tracked public opinion over key issues, including university education, for decades.
Their research, published on Tuesday, found that 34% of people in 2025 agreed a university education "just isn't worth the amount of time and money" - up from 14% in 2005.
This is the highest level of concern about the value of a degree for 20 years.
At the same time, there has been a decline in those who believe going to university leaves graduates "a lot better off" in the long run, down from 50% in 2005 to 36% in 2025.
Against that background of wider public unease, the Treasury Select Committee of MPs will hear the concerns of graduates about the size of their debts, and the interest rates.
Among those most worried are graduates who took out what are called Plan 2 loans between 2012 and 2023.
Gemma, who now works for a tech company, is one of those graduates who contacted the BBC through Your Voice to share her frustration.
Just after she graduated in 2016, her debt was ÂŁ34,105 - but her latest balance statement shows it's now ÂŁ41,908 because the interest accumulating is outstripping her repayments.
Gemma said her degree was worth it, taking her from a low-income background into a job where she now earns just under ÂŁ50,000 a year, but living with the loan is "draining".
"It feels like I'm constantly chasing a debt that gets bigger over time; it feels like climbing a mountain."
Now 33, she said student loans have contributed to her decision to delay starting a family with her partner because, even though she wouldn't repay during maternity leave, interest would still accrue.
At the end of the 30 years, any unpaid loan will be cleared, effectively by the taxpayer.
The strength of feeling from graduates like Gemma is clear. More than 50,000 people have submitted written evidence to MPs, with many graduates saying they did not understand the terms of their student loans when they signed up.
Graduates in England repay 9% of whatever they earn above a threshold, which is due to be frozen at ÂŁ29,385 from April 2027 for three years, meaning more graduates will start repaying earlier.
The NUS is asking the government to rethink that decision.
The graduate campaign group Rethink Repayment said the repayment threshold freeze was against the original terms of the student loans.
Alex Stanley, from the NUS, said there also needed to be a longer-term "course correction" to avoid a generation not being able to buy a home or start a family.
There is no getting away from the fact that the labour market is challenging, said Vivienne Stern MBE, Chief Executive of Universities UK, but that data shows graduates "are more likely to have a job, earn more and have better health".
She added, "A university education doesn't just benefit the individual. If we want our country to grow, we need more graduates entering the labour market."
The government has defended the decision to freeze the repayment threshold and has capped the interest rate on Plan 2 loans at 6%.
In a statement, it said: "We recognise that some graduates have concerns about the cost of student loan repayments and understand why this is an important issue."
It added that it had raised the graduate repayment threshold since coming into government for the first time in 2021, and brought back some targeted maintenance loans.
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