Student loan forgiveness overhauled by Trump policies: what borrowers must do now

By Jordan Keller

New federal rules reshaping income-driven repayment plans will determine whether — and how quickly — millions of student borrowers can see their balances wiped out. With the court-ordered end of the Biden-era SAVE plan and the rollout of a replacement this summer, borrowers face choice points that could change monthly bills and the timeline to forgiveness.

Which plans still lead to cancellation: IBR and RAP

The long-standing Income-Based Repayment model remains one of the few IDR options that still culminates in forgiveness. Under the updated terms, borrowers who took out loans on or after July 1, 2024, will pay about 10% of their discretionary income; those with earlier loans will pay roughly 15%. Forgiveness arrives after about 20 years for newer borrowers and 25 years for older ones.

Separately, the new Repayment Assistance Plan — known as RAP — is scheduled to accept enrollees starting July 1. RAP ties monthly bills more directly to earnings, with required payments typically between 1% and 10% of income and a $10 minimum each month.

There’s an important trade-off: RAP’s forgiveness timeline is much longer. Borrowers must generally make payments for 30 years to qualify for loan cancellation under RAP, compared with the 20-to-25-year window under other IDR plans. That means people must weigh smaller monthly payments against a much longer wait for relief.

Other plans, deadlines and transitions

Some existing options will remain temporarily available but no longer end in forgiveness. The Income-Contingent Repayment plan (ICR) and Pay As You Earn (PAYE) can still be chosen while they exist, but both have lost their path to automatic cancellation under the new rules. Their primary appeal now is potentially lower monthly payments.

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If you’re enrolled in ICR or PAYE and they provide the lowest payment for you, experts say you can stay in them until they expire on July 1, 2028. After that date, switching into IBR or RAP should allow you to count past payments toward eventual forgiveness.

Key timelines to keep in mind: borrowers who take out loans after July 1, 2026, will have two choices only — RAP or a modified Standard Repayment Plan that no longer offers forgiveness. And the court decision that ended the administration’s SAVE plan earlier this year cleared the way for these changes.

A faster route: PSLF and other targeted programs

For many, waiting decades for IDR forgiveness is not acceptable. The federal Public Service Loan Forgiveness program (PSLF) remains the quickest federal pathway for eligible public-sector and nonprofit employees: cancellation after roughly 10 years of qualifying service and payments.

“If you qualify for PSLF, the choice of IDR plan matters less — PSLF focuses on qualifying payments and employment,” said Nancy Nierman of the Education Consumer Assistance Program. In short: if you’re on track for PSLF, prioritize a plan that minimizes payments while ensuring each payment counts for PSLF certification.

Teachers and other professionals should also review targeted programs such as Teacher Loan Forgiveness — which can forgive up to $17,500 for eligible educators — and the growing number of state-level forgiveness or repayment assistance programs.

  • Who is most affected now: Current borrowers on IDR and anyone considering a new federal loan before July 1, 2026.
  • What changes immediately: The SAVE plan is no longer in effect; RAP opens July 1; some programs (ICR, PAYE) will expire by July 1, 2028.
  • Payment comparisons: IBR — roughly 10% or 15% of discretionary income, forgiveness after 20–25 years. RAP — 1%–10% of earnings with $10 minimum, forgiveness after 30 years.
  • Shorter path to relief: PSLF — about 10 years for qualifying public-service workers; still the fastest federal option.
  • Numbers to know: An estimated 12.5 million borrowers were enrolled in IDR plans in early 2026; about 42 million Americans hold student debt totaling more than $1.6 trillion, per public analyses.

Quick comparison of key programs
Program Payment formula Forgiveness timeline Best if…
IBR ~10% (loans ≥7/1/24) or ~15% (older loans) 20 years (newer) / 25 years (older) You want a defined path to forgiveness and moderate monthly bills
RAP 1%–10% of earnings; $10 minimum 30 years You prefer the lowest possible monthly payment and can wait longer for forgiveness
PSLF Varies; must be qualifying payments ~10 years for qualifying public-service employees You work full-time for a qualifying employer and want faster cancellation

What borrowers should do now

Policy shifts and court rulings have introduced real timing risks. Financial planners and debt counselors urge borrowers to review options now rather than wait.

  • Confirm which plan you’re enrolled in and whether your servicer has accurate documentation of payments.
  • If you work in government or a qualifying nonprofit, verify PSLF eligibility and submit employer certifications regularly.
  • Compare projected monthly payments across IBR, RAP, and remaining plans — and factor in how long you’re willing to wait for forgiveness.
  • Keep careful records of payments, income recertification, and any communications with your loan servicer.
  • Look up state- and profession-specific forgiveness programs; many states maintain separate benefits that can supplement federal options.

Experts stress that small administrative details often determine whether a payment counts toward forgiveness. With the RAP rollout and other deadlines approaching, borrowers should monitor official guidance from the U.S. Department of Education, reach out to certified counselors if needed, and consider switching plans only after confirming how past and future payments will be credited.

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