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Tax year 2026/27  ·  Bank of England base rate 3.75%

Should You Pay Off Debt or Invest? A UK Guide

By Your Name · Updated 2 June 2026 · 6 min read
The short version: clearing a debt earns you a guaranteed return equal to its interest rate; investing offers an uncertain return. So pay off expensive debt before investing, grab any employer pension match first, and keep an emergency fund. For low-interest debt the choice is closer. The pay off debt or invest calculator runs both side by side.

It is one of the most common money questions: you have some spare cash each month, so do you throw it at your debts or put it to work in investments? There is a clear way to think about it.

The core principle

Paying off a debt is really an investment that pays a guaranteed, risk-free return equal to the interest rate you avoid. Clearing a card charging 22% is like earning a guaranteed 22% — something no ordinary investment can promise. Investing, by contrast, might return more over time but carries risk and can fall. So the comparison is simple: the debt's interest rate versus your realistic, after-tax expected return.

A sensible order

The grey area: low-interest debt

Once the expensive debt is gone, the maths gets closer. Investing inside an ISA or pension grows free of tax, which tilts the odds toward investing when the debt rate is low. But debt repayment is certain and investment returns are not, and being debt-free has real value of its own. There is no single right answer — it depends on the rate, your time horizon and how you feel about risk.

Where the line sits

The break-even is straightforward: investing wins only if your expected after-tax return is higher than the interest rate on the debt. When they are equal, the two strategies leave you in exactly the same place — so the decision then comes down to certainty and peace of mind rather than pure numbers.

The bottom line

Emergency fund, then employer match, then expensive debt, then a judgement call between low-interest debt and investing. Run your own rates and time horizon through the calculator before committing either way.

Compare clearing debt against investing over the same budget
Try the pay off debt or invest calculator →

Common questions

Is it worth investing while I have credit card debt?
Rarely. Credit card interest of 20% or more is far higher than the return you can reliably expect from investing, so clearing that debt almost always wins.
Does an emergency fund come first?
Usually yes. A buffer of three to six months of essential spending should normally come before extra debt repayment or investing, so a surprise cost does not push you back into expensive borrowing.
What about a pension with employer matching?
Capturing a full employer match usually beats both, because the match is an immediate, guaranteed boost to your money that no debt rate or investment return can match.
Should I overpay my mortgage or invest?
It depends on your mortgage rate versus your expected after-tax investment return. Overpaying is a guaranteed saving equal to the interest rate; investing might beat it but is not guaranteed, so many people do some of each.
What investment return should I assume?
There is no guaranteed figure. People often model long-run stock-market returns of around 5 to 7% before inflation, but returns vary and can be negative, so treat any projection as a rough guide.

Sources

GOV.UK — Repaying your student loan, House of Commons Library — student loan interest & thresholds. See our full methodology and rates.

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This article is general information for the 2026/27 tax year and not personalised financial advice. Check your own loan details in your student loan account and verify figures against GOV.UK before making decisions.

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