April 26, 2026

Maximize Office Insights

Easier Work, Maximum Results

Aussie with $60,000 HECS debt reveals why he isn’t paying it off faster with extra payments

Aussie with ,000 HECS debt reveals why he isn’t paying it off faster with extra payments
Noah Capozza
Noah Capozza decided to divert his extra money into a share portfolio rather than pay down his HECS and the money to be made can be staggering. (Source: TikTok/Link Wealth)

A financial advisor has revealed why he isn’t trying to pay off his huge HECS debt faster by making additional payments. While it might make sense to chuck extra cash at your HECS to pay it off sooner, Noah Capozza believes he will be in a better financial position by putting his money elsewhere.

The Melbourne resident has taken that approach with his $60,000 loan, especially after it grew by nearly $2,000 this year due to indexation. The Link Wealth financial advisor told Yahoo Finance he would rather direct his leftover money towards investing.

“The idea behind that is the average rate of return on the share market, which, over the last 100 years, is 9 per cent year-on-year,” he said.

Comparatively, he said the rate of HECS indexation should be in the 2-3 per cent range.

The average HECS debt is $27,600, and your employer has to send a percentage of your salary towards that loan every pay cycle, which is based on how much you earn.

If you’re on the average salary of $102,742 per year, 5.5 per cent of your pay, which is roughly $5,650 per year or $470 per month, would go towards HECS.

If you put no additional money into that loan, it would take nearly 59 months, or close to five years, to pay it off.

Do you have a story? Email stew.perrie@yahooinc.com

If you put $500 per month on top of your employer’s contributions, that loan would be paid off in a little more than 28 months or two and a third years.

Those two time frames are tricky because they don’t take into account the yearly indexation that hits in June, which can increase the loan by hundreds or even thousands of dollars.

In Capozza’s case, his HECS went up by $1,800 this year alone.

But the average 8-10 per cent rate of return on the share market isn’t guaranteed, something people must weigh up.

Even if your money can be invested in a high-interest savings account, which recently offered returns of about 5 per cent, your money could be growing faster than your HECS debt.

Victoria University found recently that the average amount of time it takes to pay off a HECS debt is 9.9 years. Capozza said money invested instead of repaid should generally grow faster than the HECS debt.

“You can just let it grow and compound over time,” Capozza told Yahoo Finance.

“It could provide you with the opportunity to either pay your HECS off or have other opportunities that will come up later down the track.”


link