Student Loan Forgiveness Programs 2026: Every Option Explained

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Student loan forgiveness is real — but the rules are strict. Millions of borrowers qualify for at least one program. Most never apply because they don’t know which program fits their situation.

This guide covers every major federal forgiveness and discharge option available in 2026.

Rates and figures as of May 2026.

Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF)

PSLF is the biggest forgiveness program. It cancels the remaining balance on your Direct Loans after 10 years (120 monthly payments) of qualifying payments while working full-time for a qualifying employer.

Qualifying employers: government agencies (federal, state, local, tribal), and most 501(c)(3) nonprofits. This includes teachers, nurses, police, firefighters, and many hospital workers.

Qualifying payments: Made under an income-driven repayment (IDR) plan, on time, for the full amount due.

Important: Only Direct Loans qualify. FFEL loans must be consolidated into a Direct Consolidation Loan first.

Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) Forgiveness

All IDR plans offer forgiveness at the end of the repayment term. Depending on the plan and your loan type, forgiveness comes after 20–25 years of payments.

Plan Payment Cap Forgiveness After
SAVE 5–10% discretionary income 10–25 years
PAYE 10% discretionary income 20 years
IBR (new borrowers) 10% discretionary income 20 years
IBR (prior borrowers) 15% discretionary income 25 years
ICR 20% discretionary income 25 years

Note: IDR forgiveness may be taxable as income, depending on the year. PSLF forgiveness is tax-free.

Teacher Loan Forgiveness

Teachers who work 5 consecutive years in a low-income school may receive up to $17,500 in forgiveness on Direct or FFEL subsidized and unsubsidized loans. Highly qualified math, science, and special education teachers qualify for the $17,500 maximum. Other full-time teachers may receive up to $5,000.

Total and Permanent Disability (TPD) Discharge

If you are totally and permanently disabled, you can apply for a full discharge of your federal loans. Documentation from the VA, Social Security Administration, or a licensed physician is required.

Borrower Defense to Repayment

If your school defrauded you or violated state law in connection with your loans, you may be eligible for a full or partial discharge. This applies when schools made false claims about job placement rates, accreditation, or program quality.

Closed School Discharge

If your school closed while you were enrolled — or within 180 days of your withdrawal — you may receive a full discharge of the Direct Loans you took out for that school.

How to Apply

PSLF: Submit the PSLF Form annually (not just after 10 years). Apply at studentaid.gov/pslf. Your employer must certify employment each time.

IDR forgiveness: Happens automatically after the qualifying payment count is reached. Enroll in an IDR plan at studentaid.gov.

Teacher forgiveness: Submit the Teacher Loan Forgiveness Application to your loan servicer after completing 5 years of qualifying teaching.

TPD discharge: Apply at disabilitydischarge.com.

What About Private Student Loans?

Federal forgiveness programs do not cover private loans. A small number of private lenders offer limited forgiveness for disability or death. Otherwise, refinancing and income-based payment plans are the main options for private loan relief.

The Bottom Line

PSLF is the most powerful program — 10 years of payments for full forgiveness, tax-free. If you work in public service, apply now. Don’t wait until year 10. IDR forgiveness works for everyone else, but the timeline is longer. Submit the annual certification forms for PSLF and track your payment count every year.

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