I want to explain why you will often hear me encouraging people to avoid taking out student loans or pay them off as fast as possible if they have them. My suggestion is more controversial than I realised, and I’m often taken to task for my view, particularly by more mathematically minded people. Over almost eight years of talking with people from all walks of life about money, I have found that student loans keep coming up in conversations with former students. The simple reason is that what is considered a relatively innocuous decision to take on interest-free student debt has far wider-ranging implications than those borrowers ever realised at the outset. I kōrero with many people, and the word that keeps coming up regarding student loans is simple: REGRET. The reason they now have regret is that the debt had impacts on their life that they never foresaw.