Federal student loan repayment resumed in 2023 after a 3-year pause — and the landscape changed significantly. New repayment plans, modified forgiveness rules, and court challenges to SAVE have created genuine complexity. This guide simplifies the decision tree.
The repayment plan landscape in 2026
| Plan | Payment | Forgiveness | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard (10-year) | Fixed, highest payment | None needed | Paying off fast, high income |
| IBR (Income-Based) | 10-15% of discretionary income | 20-25 years | Low income vs high debt |
| SAVE (REPAYE replacement) | 5-10% discretionary income | 10-25 years | Subject to legal challenges in 2026 |
| PAYE | 10% discretionary income | 20 years | Pre-Oct 2007 borrowers |
| ICR | 20% discretionary or 12-yr fixed | 25 years | PLUS loans, Parent PLUS |
The PSLF decision tree
Public Service Loan Forgiveness forgives remaining federal loan balance after 10 years (120 payments) of working for a qualifying employer. Qualifying employers: federal, state, local government; 501(c)(3) nonprofits; certain public service positions.
The math works strongly in your favor when: your debt-to-income ratio is above 1.5x (i.e., $75,000 in debt on a $50,000 salary). Below that ratio, aggressive payoff on standard plan often beats PSLF.
Refinancing: when it makes sense and when it doesn't
Never refinance federal loans to private if: you're pursuing PSLF, your income is low relative to debt (income-driven plans will be cheaper), or you have any uncertainty about employment stability.
Consider refinancing to private if: you have high-interest federal loans (6.5%+), stable high income, no interest in forgiveness, and you can qualify for rates under 5.5%. In 2026, top private refinance rates for strong credit: 4.8–6.2%.
🎓 Student loan payoff calculator
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