San Diego Union-Tribune

BIDEN’S NEW STUDENT LOAN REPAYMENT PLAN — HOW TO ENROLL

- BY TARA SIEGEL BERNARD Siegel Bernard writes for The New York Times.

Borrowers who are buckling under the pressure of their federal student loans have a new option to significan­tly cut their payments, eventually by as much as half.

The Biden administra­tion’s new income-driven repayment plan known as SAVE opened for enrollment Tuesday, providing millions of borrowers with a more affordable way to pay their monthly student loan bills, which will become due again in October after a three-year pause.

“With the SAVE plan, we are making a promise to every student,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said during a call with reporters. “Your payments will be affordable. You’re not going to be buried under a mountain of interest and you won’t be saddled with a lifetime of debt.”

In the coming days, more than 30 million borrowers will be invited to enroll in the plan, which was initially proposed in January and bases monthly payments on income and family size.

Unlike the White House’s former plan to cancel up to $20,000 in federal debt — struck down by the Supreme Court in June — this payment option will become a permanent piece of the student loan machinery and be available to current and future borrowers. It also creates a new safety net, automatica­lly enrolling certain borrowers into the SAVE plan after they have fallen behind on their payments.

Borrowers who want to sign up for the SAVE — or Saving on a Valuable Education — plan, should move quickly: You can expect to wait roughly four weeks for your applicatio­n to be processed, senior department officials said. By enrolling now, you can have your paperwork processed with enough time before your first payment becomes due, officials added.

Borrowers won’t receive the full benefits of the plan until next summer, because some features won’t immediatel­y take effect.

Who is eligible for the new repayment plan?

Those with federal undergradu­ate or graduate loans. Borrowers with undergradu­ate debt are eligible for lower payments than graduate borrowers.

Who is excluded?

Parents who borrowed to pay for their children’s schooling using Parent PLUS loans cannot enroll in the new plan.

If parent borrowers cannot afford to make their payments, they generally have access to only the most expensive income-driven repayment plan — known as income-contingent repayment — which requires borrowers to pay 20 percent of their discretion­ary income for 25 years; anything remaining is forgiven.

How does the new SAVE plan work?

All income-driven repayment plans generally operate the same way. Payments are based on your earnings and household size, and are readjusted each year. After monthly payments are made for a set number of years, usually 20, any remaining balance is forgiven. (The balance is taxable as income, although a temporary tax rule exempts balances forgiven through 2025 from federal income taxes.)

The SAVE plan — which replaced the Revised Pay as You Earn program, or REPAYE — is more generous in several ways. To start, it would reduce payments on undergradu­ate loans to 5 percent of discretion­ary income, down from 10 percent in REPAYE (and 15 percent

in other plans).

Graduate debt is also eligible, but borrowers would pay 10 percent of discretion­ary income on that portion. If you hold both undergradu­ate and graduate debt, your payment will be weighted accordingl­y.

The new rules also tweak the payment formula by protecting more income for basic needs, which in turn reduces payments overall. That change will also allow more low-income workers to qualify for $0 payments.

What is discretion­ary income?

Once you pay for basic needs like food and rent, any leftover income is considered discretion­ary; incomedriv­en repayment plans require borrowers to pay a percentage of that discretion­ary income.

The SAVE plan tweaks the payment formula so that more income is shielded for those basic needs, generating less discretion­ary income and a lower payment.

Will the way interest is treated change?

Yes. This is one of the most attractive features of the new plan. If a borrower’s monthly payment does not cover the interest owed, the Education Department will cancel the uncovered portion.

In other words, if a borrower owes $50 in interest each month, but the payment covers only $30, the remaining $20 will disappear as long as the payment is made. And monthly interest will be canceled for those who are not required to make payments because their income is too low.

This new rule will provide relief to those who made payments but saw their balances balloon because they didn’t pay enough to cover the interest owed.

Does the plan go into effect right away?

Three big components of the plan are available now, including: shielding more income from the repayment formula, which will reduce more borrowers’ payments to zero. The new treatment of unpaid interest is also in effect. Lastly, married borrowers who file their taxes separately will no longer be required to include their spouse’s income in their monthly payment calculatio­n.

But other benefits — including cutting payments to 5 percent from 10 percent of discretion­ary income on undergradu­ate loans — won’t take effect until July 2024.

Once the plan is in full swing next summer, many borrowers’ monthly bills, per dollar, will drop 40 percent compared with the REPAYE plan. But the lowest earners may see their payments fall 83 percent, while the highest earners would receive only a 5 percent reduction.

What about borrowers who were in default before payments were paused?

Borrowers who fell into default before the payment pause — which happens when you’re at least 270 days behind — have received a fresh start and are considered current on their payments. That means they can enroll in SAVE or any other repayment plan.

But they need to take certain steps to do so — and complete them before September 2024 to keep their loans out of default for the loan term.

Here’s how: Contact the Education Department’s Default Resolution Group — by phone, online or mail — and ask to take your loans out of default through the “Fresh Start” program. The default group can also help you enroll in an income-driven repayment plan, including SAVE.

The group will transfer your loans to a regular loan servicer and wipe the record of default from your credit report.

“Their new servicer will then put them into the IDR plan with the lowest monthly payment they are eligible for,” a spokespers­on for the Education Department said. “For most borrowers, this is SAVE.”

Can delinquent borrowers enroll?

Borrowers who fell behind on their monthly student loan bills before the payment pause have also received a fresh start and will be permitted to enroll in the SAVE program, just like any other borrower.

Going forward, borrowers who go 75 days without making a payment will be automatica­lly enrolled in the SAVE plan — as long as they have provided approval to disclose their federal tax informatio­n to the Education Department. This policy will take effect next July.

How do I sign up?

You can sign up online at StudentAid.gov/SAVE; borrowers will be able to see their payment amount before signing up. Administra­tion officials said the process shouldn’t take more than 10 minutes. After applying, you can check the status of your applicatio­n by visiting your account dashboard.

And for the next few months, loan servicers will also be able to help borrowers enroll and “self-certify” their income without needing tax documentat­ion, either through the servicer’s website or over the phone, said Scott Buchanan, the executive director of Student Loan Servicing Alliance, an industry trade group.

Those who were already enrolled in REPAYE don’t have to do anything — they will be automatica­lly transferre­d into SAVE and their payment amounts will be adjusted. It’s also possible to switch from another incomedriv­en repayment plan into SAVE, without resetting the clock on your payments.

Do I have to do anything to remain enrolled?

Your payment size adjusts each year based on your earnings, and your income needs to be updated annually.

But if you give the Education Department permission to access your income informatio­n through the IRS (something you can do now during the sign-up process), you will not need to recertify your income each year because it will be done automatica­lly.

 ?? SHURAN HUANG NYT ?? The Biden administra­tion’s student debt repayment plan opened for enrollment Tuesday.
SHURAN HUANG NYT The Biden administra­tion’s student debt repayment plan opened for enrollment Tuesday.

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