Coin Flip

Coin Flip

Your Student Loan Just Got Harder. Here's the One Decision That Actually Matters.

13 min · 22 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Your Student Loan Just Got Harder. Here's the One Decision That Actually Matters.

Descripción

With 7.5 million borrowers receiving servicer notices starting July 1, this episode breaks down exactly what the end of the SAVE plan means for your federal student loan repayment — and what you need to do before the government makes the choice for you. The repayment landscape has changed significantly. New borrowers are now limited to two options, older plans like PAYE and ICR are on a sunset timeline, and anyone who was auto-enrolled in SAVE is now on a 90-day clock to select a replacement plan. This episode covers how to read that deadline, how to choose the right plan for your situation, and why the stakes are especially high for anyone pursuing Public Service Loan Forgiveness. * The SAVE plan ended March 10. Borrowers who paid nothing under SAVE now face balance-based payments under the default auto-enrollment option — often a more expensive outcome. * A three-question framework helps narrow the choice between RAP, IBR, and the Tiered Standard Plan, each suited to a different borrower profile and forgiveness timeline. * The Tiered Standard Plan disqualifies PSLF borrowers. Auto-enrollment into this plan stops the forgiveness clock with no warning letter — a silent but serious risk for nurses, teachers, and social workers. * studentaid.gov is currently showing glitches. PAYE is not appearing as an option for some eligible borrowers, likely connected to significant staff reductions at the Education Department. * A new employer eligibility rule takes effect July 1 and is currently being challenged in court by several cities. Affected nonprofit workers should submit employment certification before the deadline. If you have federal student loans, act before July 1. Log into your servicer account, review your options, and do not wait for the auto-enrollment default. The website may be glitchy — the deadline is not.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Coin Flip!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

9 episodios

Portada del episodio Your Student Loan Just Got Harder. Here's the One Decision That Actually Matters.

Your Student Loan Just Got Harder. Here's the One Decision That Actually Matters.

With 7.5 million borrowers receiving servicer notices starting July 1, this episode breaks down exactly what the end of the SAVE plan means for your federal student loan repayment — and what you need to do before the government makes the choice for you. The repayment landscape has changed significantly. New borrowers are now limited to two options, older plans like PAYE and ICR are on a sunset timeline, and anyone who was auto-enrolled in SAVE is now on a 90-day clock to select a replacement plan. This episode covers how to read that deadline, how to choose the right plan for your situation, and why the stakes are especially high for anyone pursuing Public Service Loan Forgiveness. * The SAVE plan ended March 10. Borrowers who paid nothing under SAVE now face balance-based payments under the default auto-enrollment option — often a more expensive outcome. * A three-question framework helps narrow the choice between RAP, IBR, and the Tiered Standard Plan, each suited to a different borrower profile and forgiveness timeline. * The Tiered Standard Plan disqualifies PSLF borrowers. Auto-enrollment into this plan stops the forgiveness clock with no warning letter — a silent but serious risk for nurses, teachers, and social workers. * studentaid.gov is currently showing glitches. PAYE is not appearing as an option for some eligible borrowers, likely connected to significant staff reductions at the Education Department. * A new employer eligibility rule takes effect July 1 and is currently being challenged in court by several cities. Affected nonprofit workers should submit employment certification before the deadline. If you have federal student loans, act before July 1. Log into your servicer account, review your options, and do not wait for the auto-enrollment default. The website may be glitchy — the deadline is not.

22 de jun de 202613 min
Portada del episodio The Fed Held. So What Does That Mean for Your Savings?

The Fed Held. So What Does That Mean for Your Savings?

This episode of Coin Flip breaks down what the Federal Reserve's latest rate decision means for your savings — covering the hold at 3.50%–3.75%, the leadership transition to new Fed chair Kevin Warsh, and the concrete steps savers can take right now while rates remain elevated. Host Derek Wu walks through three areas in plain terms: what drove the most divided Fed vote in over thirty years, what Warsh's hawkish track record signals about the rate path ahead, and why the gap between big-bank savings accounts and high-yield alternatives is too large to ignore. With online banks currently offering up to 4.21% APY versus roughly 0.01% at most national banks, the difference on $10,000 is roughly $400 a year against almost nothing — and that window is already showing early signs of narrowing. * The Fed held rates for the third straight time in 2026, but the shift away from an easing bias in committee language is the signal worth watching. * Kevin Warsh became Fed chair on May 22, with his first meeting on June 17. His hawkish history suggests the "higher for longer" environment may persist, though markets are now pricing a hike as more likely than a cut. * High-yield savings accounts are paying up to 4.21% APY at online banks — versus the national average near 0.01% at big institutions. Seven accounts have already lowered their APY since early May. * The CD versus high-yield savings decision comes down to two questions: is your emergency fund already covered, and can you leave the money untouched for 12–24 months? Yes to both points toward a short-term CD; otherwise, stay liquid. * Moving idle cash is the one unambiguous call in an otherwise uncertain rate environment — Derek frames it as the rare financial decision that is not a coin flip. If this episode helped you make a decision, subscribe for the next one. Have a money choice you're stuck on? Leave it in the reviews — it may be the next topic we flip a coin on.

15 de jun de 202611 min
Portada del episodio Your Cash Is Earning 4% Right Now. That Changes June 17.

Your Cash Is Earning 4% Right Now. That Changes June 17.

This episode of Coin Flip frames the June 17 FOMC meeting as a personal-finance deadline rather than a macroeconomic spectator event. With Polymarket pricing a 99% chance of no rate change, host Derek Wu shifts the focus to what actually matters: the dot plot and economic projections that will signal when savings rates might begin to fall. Top high-yield savings accounts are currently paying up to 4.10% APY, according to Bankrate, while the FDIC national average sits at 0.38%. That gap is the real story, and this episode is built around helping you act on it before the conversation shifts. Derek walks through three connected topics: how to read the June 17 meeting as a cash-management signal, how to size an emergency fund based on your actual financial situation rather than a universal rule, and how to decide whether a CD or a high-yield savings account makes more sense for money you won't need immediately. The episode closes with a two-step checklist you can complete this week. * The dot plot matters more than the rate decision. A hold on June 17 is nearly certain, but the economic projections released alongside it will shape expectations for when and how fast rates fall. * Emergency fund sizing is situational. The three-to-six-month rule is a starting point. Stable income, a working partner, freelance fallback options, and industry volatility all affect the right number for your household. * Every dollar of your emergency fund belongs in a high-yield account. Parking cash at a traditional bank earning the 0.38% national average while top accounts offer 4.10% APY is a recurring, avoidable cost. * The CD decision comes down to one question. If you have a defined timeline and money you will not need before that date, a CD or CD ladder can lock in today's rates before the Fed signals cuts. If liquidity matters, a high-yield savings account stays the better fit. * A CD ladder is the practical middle ground. Staggering maturity dates across multiple CDs gives you rate protection on a portion of your cash without surrendering access to all of it at once. If you have a money decision you are working through, leave it in the reviews. It may be the next coin flip.

8 de jun de 202613 min
Portada del episodio Pay Down Debt or Invest? The Math on $1.28 Trillion Worth of Bad Timing

Pay Down Debt or Invest? The Math on $1.28 Trillion Worth of Bad Timing

This episode of Coin Flip tackles one of the most common financial crossroads: should you pay off credit card debt or put money into investments? Host Derek Wu grounds the conversation in the numbers, starting with the $1.28 trillion in credit card balances Americans are currently carrying and the average APR of 21% that makes that debt so costly to hold. Derek makes the case that credit card debt is a math problem, not a moral one. Most balances are covering essentials like groceries, rent, and healthcare, not discretionary spending. From there, the episode walks through a clear decision framework, explains two important exceptions to the pay-it-off rule, and covers practical options for listeners in the gray zone, including balance transfer cards and the avalanche versus snowball payoff methods. The episode closes with a straight look at rewards cards and exactly when cash back and travel points are worth pursuing. * Paying off a 21% APR card is the equivalent of a guaranteed 21% return, which no index fund reliably matches. * Two exceptions apply: capture your full employer 401(k) match before aggressively paying down debt, and keep a small cash buffer so you do not reload the card. * Balance transfer cards can change the math for mid-range APRs, shifting the question from whether to pay versus invest to whether you can lower the cost of the debt first. * Both the avalanche and snowball methods outperform making minimum payments, and the right one is whichever you will actually stick with. * Rewards cards only deliver free money if you pay in full every month. At 21% APR, the interest wipes out any 1 to 2% cash back gain within weeks. The episode ends with a single clear action: find your APR tonight, apply the threshold, and make the call. Subscribe to Coin Flip for more decision-focused personal finance, and leave a review if there is a money choice you want covered next.

5 de jun de 202613 min
Portada del episodio Your Student Loan Clock Starts July 1. Here's Exactly What to Do Before It Does.

Your Student Loan Clock Starts July 1. Here's Exactly What to Do Before It Does.

This episode of Coin Flip breaks down what 7.5 million student loan borrowers enrolled in the SAVE plan need to do before the roughly September 30, 2026 deadline. The SAVE plan was struck down by a federal court in March 2026, and anyone who misses the window to switch plans will be automatically moved to Standard Repayment, which carries the highest monthly payments of any available option. Host Derek Wu walks through the three repayment plans now available to SAVE borrowers, explains how each one calculates monthly payments differently, and provides a practical decision framework to help listeners identify the right fit based on their income, family size, and forgiveness timeline. He also covers a separate hard deadline that Parent PLUS loan holders cannot afford to miss. * RAP (Repayment Assistance Plan) launches July 1 and uses a sliding income-based formula, with built-in interest cancellation and a $50 monthly principal match guarantee. * IBR (Income-Based Repayment) is the primary alternative for most existing SAVE borrowers, with a July 2028 enrollment deadline and a broader definition of family size that can lower payments for some households. * Tiered Standard Plan may result in lower total repayment costs for borrowers who can handle fixed monthly payments and are not pursuing forgiveness. * The IDR application backlog exceeded 576,000 requests as of February 2026, meaning borrowers who act now are more likely to be processed before the deadline than those who wait. * Parent PLUS loan holders face a July 1 consolidation deadline, after which they permanently lose access to income-driven repayment options. If you have questions about a financial decision you are facing, leave a note in the reviews. Subscribe to Coin Flip so you have the information you need before the next deadline arrives.

1 de jun de 202614 min