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Don’t Ignore This Student Loan Email
Financial Aid
Student loan repayment plan changes are impacting millions after the end of the SAVE plan. Here’s what borrowers need to know to avoid higher payments or lost forgiveness.
The SAVE Plan Is Officially Over. Here’s What 7 Million Borrowers Need to Know
By Becca Craig, CFP®, CeFT®, CSLP®
If you’re one of the millions of student loan borrowers who opened an email from the Department of Education earlier this month and thought, wait… what just happened, you’re not alone. It was abrupt, and it carries real consequences if you don’t act.
The reality of the situation is that the SAVE plan is over. Not paused, not being reworked, not quietly coming back later. But sadly, done After a long legal battle, a federal court shut it down, impacting more than 7 million borrowers who had been relying on it for lower payments and potential forgiveness.
And following the court decision, the Department of Education wasted no time rolling that out. Honestly, it’s probably the quickest they’ve ever acted on anything.
The message itself was clear. If you were enrolled in SAVE or even had an application pending, you now need to choose a new repayment plan. Once your loan servicer contacts you, you’ll have a 90 day window to act. If you don’t, they will move you into a different plan automatically.
That last part matters more than anything. This is not a passive situation or a drill. If you don’t choose, a choice will be made for you, and it may not align with your goals, your cash flow, or any forgiveness strategy you were working toward.
The Department also used this moment to introduce a new option, the Repayment Assistance Plan, or RAP, expected to launch July 1, 2026. Like other income driven plans, payments are based on your income and family size. That sounds appealing, and for some borrowers, it could be. But it’s not a universal solution. In fact, some experts note that RAP may be less generous than prior options and extend repayment timelines, especially for higher earners.
So what can borrowers actually do right now to put themselves in a solid position going forward?
- Apply for a new repayment plan through StudentAid.gov, not at the last minute
- If you’re pursuing forgiveness or earn over $100,000, take a hard look at Income Based Repayment (IBR)
- Understand RAP before defaulting into it
- Don’t go it alone