Student Loan Repayment Options 2026: Complete Guide

Federal student loans come with more repayment options than most borrowers realize. The right plan depends on your income, career goals, and how much you owe. Choosing the wrong plan can cost you tens of thousands of dollars in extra interest — or cause you to miss out on loan forgiveness you qualified for.

This guide covers every federal repayment option available in 2026.

Standard Repayment Plan

Payment: Fixed monthly payments

Repayment term: 10 years

Best for: Borrowers who can afford the payment and want to minimize total interest

The Standard plan has the highest monthly payment of any federal plan, but you pay the least interest over time. If you can afford it, this is often the best choice for total cost.

Graduated Repayment Plan

Payment: Starts low, increases every two years

Repayment term: 10 years

Best for: Borrowers who expect their income to grow

Payments start lower than the Standard plan but increase over time. You pay more total interest than Standard because your balance accrues interest longer in the early years.

Income-Driven Repayment Plans

Income-driven repayment (IDR) plans cap your monthly payment at a percentage of your discretionary income. After 20 or 25 years, any remaining balance is forgiven.

SAVE Plan (Saving on a Valuable Education)

Payment: 5% of discretionary income for undergraduate loans, 10% for graduate loans

Forgiveness: After 20 years (undergraduate) or 25 years (graduate)

SAVE replaced the old REPAYE plan and offers the lowest payments of any income-driven plan for undergraduate borrowers. Borrowers with small balances (under $12,000) may qualify for forgiveness in as little as 10 years. Note: SAVE faced legal challenges in 2024–2025; verify current status before enrolling.

PAYE (Pay As You Earn)

Payment: 10% of discretionary income

Forgiveness: After 20 years

Requirement: Must have been a new borrower as of October 1, 2007

IBR (Income-Based Repayment)

Payment: 10% or 15% of discretionary income depending on when you borrowed

Forgiveness: After 20 or 25 years

IBR is available to all eligible borrowers and has no new-borrower requirement. It is a solid option for those who do not qualify for PAYE.

ICR (Income-Contingent Repayment)

Payment: 20% of discretionary income or what you would pay on a 12-year fixed plan, whichever is less

Forgiveness: After 25 years

ICR has the least favorable terms of the income-driven plans but is the only option available for Parent PLUS loans (if consolidated into a Direct Loan).

Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF)

PSLF forgives your remaining federal loan balance after 120 qualifying monthly payments (10 years) while working full-time for a qualifying employer. Qualifying employers include:

  • Government agencies (federal, state, local, tribal)
  • 501(c)(3) nonprofit organizations
  • Other nonprofit organizations that provide qualifying public services

You must be on an income-driven repayment plan or the Standard 10-year plan to qualify. The forgiven amount under PSLF is not taxable income.

If you work in public service, PSLF is the single most valuable benefit available to federal student loan borrowers. Run your numbers before assuming PSLF does not apply to you.

Teacher Loan Forgiveness

Teachers who work five consecutive years in a low-income school or educational service agency may qualify for up to $17,500 in loan forgiveness. This is separate from PSLF and can be used in combination with it under some circumstances.

How to Pick the Right Plan

Use the Loan Simulator at studentaid.gov. Enter your loan information and it will show your estimated monthly payments and total costs under each plan. This tool is free and takes about 10 minutes.

Key questions to ask:

  • Do you work for a qualifying PSLF employer? If yes, IDR + PSLF is likely the best strategy.
  • Can you afford the Standard plan payment? If yes, consider Standard to minimize total interest.
  • Is your income lower than your debt? IDR plans make sense when your balance is significantly higher than your annual income.

Bottom Line

Federal student loan repayment is not one-size-fits-all. Income-driven plans make sense for high debt or low income. The Standard plan minimizes total cost for those who can afford it. PSLF is a powerful option for public service workers that many borrowers overlook. Use studentaid.gov’s Loan Simulator and consider consulting a student loan specialist before committing to a plan.