University College London, Imperial and LSE are all above average, at around 14%.
This excludes overseas students, or people who might have fees paid for them by job-related support or through scholarships and bursaries.
The researchers say that universities with higher proportions of self-funding students are often those with a higher proportion of students from private school - suggesting that their families might be continuing to pay for university.
For those who can afford it, there are significant savings.
Interest charges begin to build up as soon as a student begins at university - and about £6,000 can be owed before a student even graduates.
Those paying up front will leave not owing this money - and they will not be part of the repayment scheme paying back loans over 30 years.
This will give self-funders a "serious economic advantage" when they leave university, say researchers.
Reducing interest rates
"This analysis makes a mockery of claims that the current system is progressive, since the wealthiest kids are not even in the system," said Angus Hanton of the think tank.
"The government should treat all students fairly and that means reducing the interest rates charged while at university, reducing fees, reintroducing maintenance grants, and lowering the repayment rate," he said.
Shakira Martin, president of the National Union of Students, says it means that wealthy students can avoid debt and high interest rates, while too many poorer students are struggling "to make ends meet".
"The government's claims that the higher education sector is a level playing field are nonsense, and the scrapping of maintenance grants means that in fact they've squarely placed the extra burden on the poorest in our society," she said.
The government has commissioned a review of student finance in England, with suggestions that it could lower the headline figure for tuition fees.
A Department for Education spokeswoman said the review would be "considering how best to provide value for money, both for students and taxpayers".
She said the loan system was progressive in how repayments were "based on income after graduation, not on the amount borrowed" and that it enabled all students to have funds for studying.
"The student finance system removes financial barriers for those hoping to study but who are unable to self-fund," said the DfE spokeswoman.
"Unlike commercial alternatives, student loans are available to all eligible students, regardless of background or financial history."
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