Houston Chronicle Sunday

See if you qualify to get student loans canceled

- By Henry Savage

Remember the fuss about student loan payments starting back up, with new repayment programs rolling out to offset the challenges? Well, a new benefit rolling out in February promises some relief: full debt cancellati­on.

In October 2023, 43 million federal student loan borrowers were required to start repaying their monthly loan bills. It marked over three years since the federal government paused student loan payments as part of economic coronaviru­s protection­s. At one point in 2022, the Biden-Harris administra­tion proposed a one-time debt cancellati­on to cancel up to $20,000 in federal student loan debt for eligible borrowers, but the Supreme Court blocked it in June 2023.

Since then, a federal repayment plan (formerly called REPAYE) was revamped with even stronger protection­s, like avoiding ballooning interest rates. But, perhaps even more important, it also included a provision that could still cancel student loan debt over time, even immediate cancellati­on for some.

It’s called the SAVE repayment plan, and here’s how the debt cancellati­on part works.

What is the SAVE income-driven repayment plan?

The Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan allows federal student loan borrowers to have a monthly student loan payment based on how much they earn. The SAVE plan is the new and improved version of the former Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE) plan.

According to the White House, 6.9 million borrowers are enrolled in the SAVE Plan — nearly 300,000 of those borrowers being Pennsylvan­ians.

Here’s a complete breakdown of what the SAVE plan is and how to enroll in it.

How does the SAVE income-driven repayment plan cancel student loan debt?

Before this new rule was enacted this year, student debt cancellati­on was already provided to borrowers enrolled in income-driven repayment plans like SAVE. However, complete debt cancellati­on would only come after 20 to 25 years for undergradu­ate and graduate loans, respective­ly.

Starting in February, under the SAVE plan, borrowers can receive full debt cancellati­on in as little as 10 years or 120 payments. The February rollout is not a deadline, it’s just when the student debt cancellati­on benefit becomes active for those eligible.

Remember: Every federal student loan borrower is eligible for the SAVE repayment program, but full debt cancellati­on is only available for borrowers who fall into the eligibilit­y below.

Borrowers who initially took out $12,000 or less in federal student loans will receive full debt cancellati­on after 10 years of making regular payments. For students who borrowed more than $12,000, for each additional $1,000 borrowed, they’ll add one more year to the repayment period.

For example, if your original principal balance is $15,000, you will see forgivenes­s after 13 years of making regular payments. If the original principal balance is $20,000, your debt will be canceled after 18 years.

If you owe more than that, you will still see full debt cancellati­on after 20 to 25 years under the original rules of income-driven repayment plans.

Here’s the best part: If you’ve already made years of regular payments on your loans, those years count towards the debt cancellati­on period when you enroll in the SAVE program, according to a U.S. Department of Education spokespers­on.

How to apply for the SAVE loan repayment plan

Apply for federal student loan repayment plans on studentaid.gov. You can also apply for repayment plans directly through your federal loan servicer like EdFinancia­l, MOHELA, Aidvantage, and Nelnet.

To get started, you’ll need to create an account and navigate to the incomedriv­en repayment plan page at studentaid.gov/idr. Or visit your federal loan servicer website, create an account, and apply on their website.

Before you start, you can view each step of the enrollment process with a virtual demonstrat­ion at studentaid.gov/idr/applicatio­n/ demo/overview.

The applicatio­n takes 10 minutes to complete and you’ll need to include:

• Contact informatio­n;

• Household size and number of dependents (if any);

• Federal loan informatio­n: You can find this informatio­n on your studentaid.gov account and enter it manually or the applicatio­n can transfer that informatio­n for you with your consent.

• Financial informatio­n: Your salary, retirement plan, health insurance costs, mortgage payments, etc.

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