Coin Flip
This episode covers the end of the SAVE student loan repayment plan and what the 7.5 million borrowers affected by its elimination need to do before their 90-day window closes. Host Derek Wu walks through the three plans now available — RAP, IBR, and Tiered Standard — and explains what each one actually costs using a concrete example: a single borrower earning $45,000 with $35,000 in debt. Understanding your options matters because inaction has a specific, measurable cost. Borrowers who do not choose a plan will be auto-enrolled in the Tiered Standard Plan, which has no income adjustment and no forgiveness path. The difference between plans is not abstract — RAP comes in at $150 per month for the example borrower, while IBR lands at $176, and Tiered Standard offers no flexibility at all. But monthly payment is only part of the picture. Derek also breaks down a forgiveness-credit asymmetry that most servicer notifications will not explain: prior payments made on other income-driven plans can transfer into RAP, but RAP payments may not count toward IBR's forgiveness clock. Switching into RAP can also extend a 20-year forgiveness timeline to 30 years. These are one-way decisions with long-term consequences, and the right answer depends on where you already are in the repayment process. * The 90-day clock is personal. Servicers began sending notices on July 1, 2026. The deadline is calculated from your individual notice date, not a single universal cutoff. * Tiered Standard is the default — and the most expensive long-term choice. It offers no income adjustment and no forgiveness, regardless of how long you pay. * RAP offers a $50 government principal match and lower monthly payments, but extends forgiveness eligibility from 20 to 30 years compared to IBR. * Credit portability is a one-way door. Prior IDR payments count toward RAP forgiveness, but RAP payments may not transfer back to IBR's timeline. * One action this week: Log into StudentAid.gov, run the Loan Simulator, and enroll in autopay before September 30, 2026 for a 1% interest rate reduction through June 2028. If you have made a repayment decision after listening, subscribe to Coin Flip for future episodes. If you have a financial choice you are working through, leave it in the reviews — it may be the subject of a future episode.
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