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Student loan borrowers will have fewer repayment options under GOP megabill

July 2, 2025
04:56 PM
4 min read
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moneyfinancialeducationfinancial servicesmarket cyclesseasonal analysispolicy

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The Senate narrowly passed it massive spending bill on July 1. Here's what it could mean for student loan borrowers if the bill becomes law.

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4 min read

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investment

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July 2, 2025

04:56 PM

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CNBC

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moneyfinancialeducationfinancial servicesmarket cyclesseasonal analysispolicy

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Andrew Harnik | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesThe Senate narrowly passed its spending megabill on Tuesday night

The House is aiming to vote on the bill and send it to President Donald Trump by July 4, but it's un whether Republicans have the votes to pass the bill in its current form

Among numerous visions aimed at reducing federal spending and increasing tax revenue, the bill lays out some major changes for federal student loan borrowers

Most of the changes to student borrowing, such as lower limits on graduate loans, won't impact borrowers who are out of school and currently in repayment

But those taking out loans next summer and after, as well as an estimated 8 million borrowers awaiting further action on the Saving on a Valuable Education income-driven repayment plan, can expect fewer repayment options if the House passes the bill as is

The change to repayment plans could be one of the most impactful visions of the bill for current and future federal student loan borrowers

Two years to choose from two plansThe Senate's bill narrows the number of repayment options currently available to federal student loan borrowers down to just two plans: a standard repayment plan and a new income-driven plan known as the Repayment Assistance Plan

Borrowers on any of the currently existing repayment plans, except the plan, will be able to keep their plans and monthly payments the same

Borrowers whose loans are dispersed on or after July 1, 2026 and those currently enrolled in the plan — who are in an administrative forbearance since federal courts blocked the plan from going into effect in July 2024 — will have only the two repayment plan options

Borrowers on the plan would ly have to choose another plan anyway if federal courts retain the temporary injunction against it

Under the Republicans' legislation, those borrowers will have between July 2026 and July 2028 to choose a new plan

After July 1, 2028, borrowers will automatically be moved into the income-based repayment plan

The new standard plan will give borrowers a fixed monthly payment to have their loans paid off between 10 and 25 years, depending on the size of their loans

The current standard plan has a loan term of 10 years, regardless of the amount borrowed

The Repayment Assistance Plan will calculate monthly payments as between 1% and 10% of a borrower's discretionary income, down from the current offerings that set payments at 10%, 15% or 20% of a borrower's income

One analysis found that borrowers' monthly payments could spike by hundreds of dollars on RAP, compared with what their payments would be on the plan

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