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How the New SAVE Plan Will Transform Loan Repayment
and Protect Borrowers
The Biden-Harris Administration believes that education beyond high school should unlock doors to
opportunity, not leave borrowers stranded with debt they cannot afford. That’s why from day one we
have been working to fix the broken student loan system, make college more affordable, and strengthen
oversight and accountability of postsecondary institutions.
Today, the U.S. Department of Education (Department) released final regulations on its new income-
driven repayment (IDR) plan, which will provide student loan borrowers with the most affordable
repayment plan ever. The SAVE plan will cut payments on undergraduate loans in half compared to
other IDR plans, ensure that borrowers never see their balance grow as long as they keep up with their
required payments, and protect more of a borrower’s income for basic needs. Under the Saving on a
Valuable Education (SAVE) plan, a single borrower who makes less than $15 an hour will not have to
make any payments.
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Borrowers earning above that amount would save more than $1,000 a year on
their payments compared to other IDR plans.
The SAVE plan, which is available to student borrowers with a Direct Loan in good standing, will replace
the existing Revised Pay-As-You-Earn (REPAYE) plan which is the most generous existing IDR plan for
most borrowers. Borrowers who are already on the REPAYE plan will be automatically enrolled in the
SAVE plan and see their payments automatically adjust with no action on their part. While the
Department makes this transition, borrowers may see the names REPAYE and SAVE used
interchangeably. Borrowers can sign up for the SAVE/REPAYE plan today by visiting StudentAid.gov/IDR
.
By law, the regulations will go fully into effect on July 1, 2024. But the Department will implement three
critical benefits this summer before the student loan payment pause ends:
• The amount of income protected from payments on the SAVE plan will rise from 150 percent to
225 percent of the Federal poverty guidelines (FPL). This change means a single borrower who
earns less than $32,805 a year ($67,500 for a family of four) will not have to make payments. As
a result, we estimate that more than 1 million additional low-income borrowers will qualify for a
$0 payment, including 400,000 who are already enrolled on the REPAYE plan and will see this
benefit applied automatically. This will allow them to focus on food, rent, and other basic needs
instead of loan payments. Borrowers not eligible for a $0 payment will save at least $1,000 a
year compared to the current REPAYE plan. A single borrower would save $91 a month on
payments ($1,080 a year), while a family of four would save $187 ($2,244 a year).
• The Department will stop charging any monthly interest not covered by the borrower’s payment
on the SAVE plan. As a result, borrowers who pay what they owe on this plan will no longer see
their loans grow due to unpaid interest. We estimate that 70 percent of borrowers who were on
IDR plan before the payment pause would stand to benefit from this change.
• Married borrowers who file their taxes separately will no longer be required to include their
spouse’s income in their payment calculation for SAVE. These borrowers will also have their
spouse excluded from their family size when calculating IDR payments, simplifying the choice of
repayment plan for borrowers.