Bill comes due: Student loan borrowers are set to see spike in prices as Trump provision begins


Millions of student loan borrowers enrolled in a payment plan the Trump administration has called โ€œillegalโ€ will see their bills go up starting Friday as interest accrual resumes.

The nearly eight million student loan borrowers who rely on the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) Plan โ€” a repayment plan rolled out under former President Joe Biden โ€” will start seeing interest accrue on their loans as of August 1. The repayment plan was among the generous to date, and many borrowersโ€™ monthly payments dropped by as much as half, CNBC reports.

When announcing the change, the department said it โ€œlacks the authority to put borrowers into a zero percent interest rate status,โ€ according to a July statement.

The Biden administration rolled out the plan in 2023, but it has since faced Republican-led challenges. A court blocked parts of the plan last year, placing SAVE borrowers on a no-interest forbearance plan in the meantime.

Education Secretary Linda McMahon shared a video on X on Friday explaining that the โ€œTrump administration will not allow the American taxpayer to take on debts that are not their own.โ€

SAVE borrowers were previously on a no-interest forbearance plan

SAVE borrowers were previously on a no-interest forbearance plan (Getty Images)

โ€œIf you are a borrower enrolled in the illegal SAVE plan, please visit studentaid.gov to learn about affordable repayment options,โ€ she said.

Now, borrowers are reacting to the change. Shelly Cornwell, a 55-year-old from Illinois, told The Wall Street Journal she has been in โ€œlimboโ€ for the past year after signing up for a SAVE plan.

She wasnโ€™t making payments because her loans were in forbearance, so she signed up for a different plan to make progress toward forgiveness. Now, sheโ€™s worried her payments will go up and hopes she doesnโ€™t have to take on another part-time job.

Jessica Ochoa, a 31-year-old from California, told the Journal that her life became more affordable after going on a SAVE plan.

โ€œI realized, โ€˜Oh, wow, my loans are much more manageable and affordable. I can have a kid, I can buy a house,โ€™โ€ Ochoa told the outlet. โ€œSo then I did those things.โ€

On social media, users have also shared posts reacting to the decision.

โ€œCompletely forgot interest will start accruing on my student loans tomorrow,โ€ one user wrote.

Experts say borrowers are likely better off finding new plans, CNBC reports. One of the best options at the moment is the Income-Based Repayment Plan, which caps borrowersโ€™ monthly payments according to their income, the outlet reports. Borrowers could also opt for the Repayment Assistance Plan, which will launch next year.

These options are among the few income-driven plans that will be available to borrowers after Trumpโ€™s sweeping tax and spending legislation phased out many similar plans, CNBC reports.

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