Federal Student Loans Are Changing in a Big Way. Here’s What Borrowers Need to Know to Minimize the Pain
Borrowers, it’s about to be “pencils down” for federal student loans as we know them. In 2026, the Trump administration is making big moves to upend a system that’s been a political and financial point of contention for years, and beginning on July 1, if you have student loans or are planning to borrow for college , your repayment options will look much different. At the heart of the upheaval is the Department of Education (DOE) settlement to end President Joe Biden’s Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) repayment plan. If adopted by the court, it would end years of litigation from several states, which argue the Biden administration exceeded its authority, and effectively shutter the program. Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), other popular repayment plans will be phased out as well. That’s big news for the nearly 43 million Americans who collectively owe about $1.6 trillion in federal student loans. The Department of Education’s Federal Student Aid (F SA) data center r...