New Payment Plans for Student Loans
New Payment Plan for Student Loan
Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, a new Standard Repayment Plan became one of the two primary repayment options for new federal Direct Loans first disbursed on or after July 1, 2026. The other option is the new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP), which is income-based.
Here is how the new Standard Repayment Plan works:
Total Federal Loan Balance Repayment Term
Less than $25,000 10 years
$25,000–$49,999 15 years
$50,000–$99,999 20 years
$100,000 or more 25 years
The payments are:
• Fixed (they do not change overtime)
• Designed to fully repay the loan by the end of the repayment period
• Generally, have a minimum payment of $50 per month unless the remaining balance is smaller.
Example Monthly Payments
These are rough estimates, assuming a 6.5% interest rate:
Loan Amount Repayment Term Approximate Monthly Payment
$20,000 10 years $227
$35,000 15 years $305
$60,000 20 years $447
$120,000 25 years $810
The actual payment will depend on your interest rate and total loan balance.
Who Uses the New Standard Plan?
The new Standard Plan generally applies to:
• Students who take out their first federal Direct Loan on or after July 1, 2026
• Borrowers who do not choose RAP when entering repayment are generally placed into the Standard Plan by default.
Existing Borrowers
If your federal loans were made before July 1, 2026, you are treated differently. You may be able to remain in certain existing repayment plans for a transition period and eventually choose among the available options for your loans, depending on your loan type and eligibility. The phase-out of older plans occurs over time rather than immediately.
Important point to emphasize for families:
• Before July 1, 2026: borrowers had numerous repayment plans (Standard, Graduated, Extended, SAVE, PAYE, ICR, IBR, etc.).
• After July 1, 2026 (for new borrowers): the choices are greatly simplified to two plans:
1. Tiered Standard Repayment Plan (fixed payments over 10–25 years)
2. Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) (income-based)
This simplification is one of the most significant student loan changes in decades and is likely to affect how families think about borrowing for college.
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de How to Find Money For College!