Upcoming Deadlines: Critical Dates for Student Loan Borrowers

⏰ Upcoming Deadlines for Student Loan Borrowers

Critical dates you cannot afford to miss in 2025-2028 as federal student loan programs undergo historic changes

The Months and Years Ahead

The federal student loan landscape is undergoing the most significant transformation in decades. Between tax law changes, program eliminations, and new repayment options, borrowers face multiple critical deadlines that will permanently affect their repayment options, forgiveness eligibility, and tax liability. Missing these deadlines could cost you thousands of dollars or lock you out of affordable repayment plans forever.

Dec 31, 2025
Tax-Free Forgiveness Ends
Jul 1, 2026
Parent PLUS Deadline & RAP Launch
Jul 1, 2028
ICR/PAYE/SAVE Eliminated
8M+
Borrowers Must Act

Most Critical Action Items

  • Parent PLUS borrowers: Consolidate and enroll in IBR by June 30, 2026, or lose access to income-driven repayment forever
  • SAVE borrowers seeking forgiveness: Switch to IBR before December 31, 2025, to avoid tax liability on forgiven amounts
  • All borrowers on SAVE/PAYE/ICR: Understand your transition options before July 1, 2028, when these plans are eliminated
  • Anyone expecting IDR forgiveness: Complete forgiveness requirements by December 31, 2025, to avoid federal income tax on forgiven amounts

Critical Deadline Timeline

Interest Resumes for SAVE Borrowers

After a period of 0% interest during SAVE forbearance, interest begins accruing again on all loans in SAVE forbearance. Payments are still not required, but balances will grow.

  • ~7 million borrowers affected
  • Interest accrues but payments not required
  • Forbearance time doesn't count toward forgiveness
  • Borrowers can switch to IBR to resume progress
Action Recommended
August 1, 2025

🔥 Tax-Free Forgiveness Ends / Tax Bomb Returns

The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 made student loan forgiveness tax-free at the federal level through December 31, 2025. Starting January 1, 2026, forgiveness under IDR plans will be considered taxable income at the federal level.

  • Critical: Eligibility date (not discharge date) determines tax treatment
  • If you qualify for forgiveness in 2025, no federal tax even if processed in 2026
  • IBR, PAYE, ICR forgiveness all tax-free if eligible by 12/31/2025
  • Starting 1/1/2026: forgiven amount added to taxable income
  • PSLF and Teacher Loan Forgiveness remain tax-free after 2025
  • Average tax bill after 2025: $12,000+ for $57,000 forgiven (22% bracket)
  • Could push borrowers into higher tax brackets
CRITICAL DEADLINE
Dec 31, 2025 / Jan 1, 2026

🔥 Parent PLUS Consolidation Deadline

Final deadline for Parent PLUS borrowers to consolidate their loans and preserve access to income-driven repayment. This is the most critical deadline for Parent PLUS borrowers.

  • Must consolidate by June 30, 2026
  • Parent PLUS borrowers can now enroll directly in IBR after consolidation
  • IBR: 15% of discretionary income with 25-year forgiveness
  • Failure to consolidate permanently locks you out of all IDR plans
  • New Parent PLUS loans after 7/1/2026 only eligible for Standard Plan
  • Taking any new loan after 7/1/2026 disqualifies ALL loans from IDR
NO SECOND CHANCES
June 30, 2026

RAP Plan Launches & Old Plans Sunset for New Borrowers

The Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) becomes available. New borrowers and existing borrowers who take out new loans will only have access to RAP and the new Standard Plan.

  • RAP: 1-10% of AGI with $10 minimum payment
  • 30-year forgiveness timeline (vs. 20-25 years under old plans)
  • SAVE, PAYE, ICR closed to new enrollments
  • Parent PLUS loans NOT eligible for RAP
  • Warning: Taking ANY new loan after this date converts all loans to new repayment rules
New Era Begins
July 1, 2026

Forbearance & Deferment Restrictions Begin

New loans disbursed after this date face significant restrictions on forbearance and deferment options.

  • Economic hardship deferment eliminated for new loans (LOSS)
  • Unemployment deferment eliminated for new loans (LOSS)
  • Forbearance limited to 9 months maximum every 24 months (LOSS)
  • Loan rehabilitation minimum increases to $10 (from $5) (LOSS)
  • Can rehabilitate loans twice (vs. once per lifetime previously) (WIN)
New Loans Only
July 1, 2027

🔥 SAVE/PAYE/ICR Eliminated - Must Transition

All borrowers currently on SAVE, PAYE, or ICR must transition to either IBR or RAP by this date. The Department of Education will automatically enroll borrowers who don't choose into RAP or the OBBBA Standard payment.

  • ICR completely eliminated - borrowers must switch
  • PAYE completely eliminated - borrowers must switch
  • SAVE remains blocked - borrowers must switch
  • Choose IBR (20-25 year forgiveness) or RAP (30 year forgiveness)
  • Consolidated Parent PLUS borrowers can access IBR
  • Payment history preserved when transitioning plans
MANDATORY TRANSITION
July 1, 2028

What You Should Do Now

For SAVE Borrowers Currently in Forbearance

Decision Point: Switch to IBR now or wait for RAP in 2026?

  • Switch to IBR now if: You're close to forgiveness and want to lock in 2025 tax-free treatment, or you're pursuing PSLF and need qualifying payments to count
  • Stay in SAVE forbearance if: You can't afford IBR payments (10-15% vs. 5%), you want to wait for potentially lower RAP payments, or you're focusing on other financial priorities
  • Remember: Interest is accruing as of August 1, 2025, even though payments aren't required
  • Application backlog: current backlog and processing times calculate to 2+ years processing time on average. Hope Hero average is 2-4 months

For Parent PLUS Borrowers

URGENT: You have until June 30, 2026, to preserve income-driven repayment access

  • Consolidate your Parent PLUS loans into a Direct Consolidation Loan before June 30, 2026
  • Enroll in IBR plan (Parent PLUS borrowers can now go directly to IBR after consolidation)
  • IBR offers 15% of discretionary income with 25-year forgiveness for Parent PLUS consolidation loans
  • Critical: Taking ANY new Parent PLUS loan after July 1, 2026, locks ALL loans into Standard Plan
  • New Parent PLUS borrowers after 7/1/2026 have NO income-driven options - only fixed Standard Plan

For Borrowers Expecting IDR Forgiveness

Tax Strategy: Complete forgiveness requirements by December 31, 2025

  • Eligibility date (not processing date) determines tax treatment
  • If you hit 240/300 payments by 12/31/2025, forgiveness is tax-free federally
  • Save all payment records and eligibility notifications
  • If forgiveness happens in 2026+, expect IRS Form 1099-C reporting forgiven amount as income
  • Potential options: insolvency exclusion (IRS Form 982), offer in compromise, payment plan
  • Some states (AR, IN, MS, NC, WI) tax forgiveness even when federally exempt

For PSLF-Eligible Borrowers

Action: Switch to IBR immediately - don't wait

  • SAVE forbearance months don't count toward 120 PSLF payments
  • IBR payments count toward PSLF
  • Consider PSLF Buyback program to recapture lost months (but expect 7-8 month delays)
  • Every month matters when you're close to forgiveness
  • PSLF remains tax-free indefinitely (not affected by 2026 tax changes)

For All Borrowers: Do NOT Take New Loans After July 1, 2026

WARNING: The biggest trap in the new system

  • If you have ANY loan disbursed on/after July 1, 2026, ALL your loans must use new rules
  • This means losing access to IBR, PAYE, ICR, SAVE - only RAP and Standard Plan available
  • Exception: If multiple family members borrow, having another parent borrow can preserve existing parent's IBR access
  • Consolidation after 7/1/2026 also triggers conversion to new rules

Understanding the Changes

IBR vs. RAP: Which Plan Is Better?

Borrowers with loans before July 1, 2026, will eventually need to choose between Income-Based Repayment (IBR) and the new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP):

FeatureIBR (Old/New)RAP
Payment Calculation10-15% of discretionary income
(Income - 150% poverty line)
1-10% of total AGI
(No income protection)
Minimum Payment$0 possible$10 minimum always
Forgiveness Timeline20 years (new IBR)
25 years (old IBR)
30 years for all borrowers
Interest SubsidyLimitedUnpaid interest waived
+ $50 principal match
Better ForIncome under ~$85K
Want faster forgiveness
Need $0 payment option
Very low balances
High income ($90K+)
Benefit from principal match

General Rule: IBR typically has lower payments for borrowers earning under $80-85K annually. RAP may be better for higher earners or those with small balances who can benefit from the principal matching program. Run the numbers for your specific situation.

Parent PLUS Borrowers and IBR Access

A significant change under OBBBA is that Parent PLUS borrowers who consolidate their loans before July 1, 2026, can now enroll directly in IBR without needing to go through ICR first. This gives them immediate access to 25-year forgiveness at 15% of discretionary income - which is actually MORE favorable than the new RAP plan that offers 30-year forgiveness. However, new Parent PLUS borrowers after July 1, 2026, will have no income-driven options at all and will be limited to the Standard Repayment Plan only.

State Tax Considerations

Even though federal forgiveness is tax-free through 2025, five states currently tax student loan forgiveness:

  • Arkansas
  • Indiana
  • Mississippi
  • North Carolina
  • Wisconsin

If you live in one of these states, you may owe state income tax on forgiven amounts even when federally exempt. Some of these states also tax PSLF forgiveness. Check with a tax professional in your state.

Take Action Today

These deadlines are firm and the consequences of missing them are severe. Here's what to do right now:

  1. Determine which borrower category you fall into (SAVE, Parent PLUS, PSLF-eligible, close to forgiveness)
  2. Mark these deadlines in your calendar with reminders 90 days and 30 days in advance
  3. Gather your loan information - log in to StudentAid.gov and know your servicer, balances, and payment history
  4. Calculate your options - use student loan calculators to see IBR vs. RAP payments
  5. Apply early - with 2+ year processing backlogs, don't wait until the deadline
  6. Keep all documentation - payment records, eligibility notices, and correspondence
  7. Consider professional help - these changes are complex and the stakes are high