Student Loans

Pick One or Face the Consequences. Either Way, You Will Be Worse Off. Rough roads for Students having student loans. But what is unusual about this? The answer is “nothing.”

For decades, student loans have become the cross to bear (if needed) to gain a college education. If you have been keeping track of Angry Bear’s commentaries, going back years, we have been discussing the issues. If you have been keeping track and reading the Angry Bear commentaries, you may remember Biden was an issue in making it impossible for students to get relief.

While companies can renege on loans, students are not offered such relief. During the Covid epidemic, companies taking federal loans to sustain themselves were given relief at the end of the pandemic. In Michigan a person who is in default may not be eligible for state programs. Learned that while sitting in an Unemployment seminar. They did pay for 12 weeks of Lean Six Sigma classes. (well worth it).

And here we are again, with the department of education being the tough guys forcing students having loans into other programs or else face punishment.

I did get a chance to ask Michigan Senator Debbie Stabenow the question of what she was going to do to grant student loan relief. Old guy asks question, young people clap, and other oldsters go pale. I was fed some bilge water by the Senator to satisfy my thirst for justice for young students. Senator Stabenow did nothing as have the other Senators. I asked again six months later. Since we were not in public anymore, I could hear the crickets.

The Education Department will begin forcing millions of student loan borrowers in an income-driven repayment plan to change programs, according to a Trump administration announcement on Friday. Borrowers who have been enrolled in the SAVE plan will, starting in July, be given just 90 days to select a different plan.

If they don’t, they could be placed in a staggeringly expensive Standard repayment plan.

AB: How original! This message is the same dialogue being said over decades. Why the hell would you post such on X or some other social media? This is government dialogue and not some social message.

Here’s the latest, and what SAVE plan student loan borrowers should know about the Education Department’s efforts to shift them into other repayment plans.

Education Department To Start Notifying SAVE Plan Student Loan Borrowers To Change Plans

Starting this week, the Education Department will begin sending notices to student loan borrowers enrolled in the SAVE plan that they will need to move their student loans to a different repayment program.

“On March 10, 2026, a federal court issued an order preventing the U.S. Department of Education (ED) from implementing the SAVE Plan and parts of other income-driven repayment (IDR) plans,” said the department in guidance updated on its website on Friday. “Borrowers who have loans in forbearance because they enrolled in or applied for the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) Plan must select a new repayment plan.”

“The U.S. Department of Education is beginning to email people enrolled in the popular Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan with a stark message: apply for a new plan within 90 days, or we will put you in the Standard Plan, which typically has the highest monthly payments,” said the National Consumer Law Center, or NCLC, in a statement on Friday.

“The Department of Education is putting the burden on student loan borrowers to navigate this complicated mess quickly or face sky-high bills,” said Abby Shafroth, managing director of advocacy at NCLC in the statement. “The Department could have moved borrowers it is kicking out of SAVE into the next most affordable plan, and given people plenty of notice of the change. But instead it’s leaving people to fend for themselves in the midst of a deepening affordability crisis.”

Student Loan Borrowers May Face Higher Payments Under Other Income-Driven Plans

Advocacy organizations had hoped that the Education Department would make transitioning student loan borrowers from the SAVE plan to other income-driven plans easier by automatically placing them in the next-most affordable program. But that won’t happen. Borrowers will need to affirmatively apply for another income-driven plan to keep their payments on their student loans tied to their income.

The Education Department is planning on launching the Repayment Assistance Plan, or RAP, later this summer. RAP may offer student loan borrowers lower payments than existing income-driven plans such as Income-Based Repayment (or IBR), and will also prevent borrowers’ student loan balances from ballooning due to runaway interest accrual. But RAP will also have a 30-year repayment term, trapping borrowers in debt for far longer than existing income-driven plans. And borrowers getting kicked off of the SAVE plan cannot yet enroll their student loans in RAP. That means some borrowers may have to switch income-driven plans multiple times this year – first to IBR, and then (if they want) to RAP.

“This abrupt change is going to cause hardship for millions of people who are already struggling to manage rising costs in other areas, from gas, to groceries, to healthcare, to rent, and we’re going to see a lot more people default in the coming year,” said Shafroth.

“Millions of hard working people will have no choice but to choose between feeding their families and putting a roof over their head or defaulting on their student loans,” said Braxton Brewington, spokesperson for the Debt Collective, a union representing the interests of student loan borrowers and other debtors.

Income-Driven Repayment System Already Facing Backlogs for Thousands of Student Loan Borrowers

“Trump and McMahon are on track to create what could be the largest administrative disaster in the history of the existence of student loans,” warned Brewington in the Debt Collective’s statement. “Ending the SAVE plan—which has kept millions of debtors’ payments low—while also carelessly transferring tens of millions of student debt accounts to a new agency will be the exact recipe necessary for massive errors to cost families thousands of dollars.”

The Education Department encourages SAVE plan student loan borrowers to apply for a new income-driven repayment plan online at StudentAid.gov. Using the online application system, which allows borrowers to automatically import their income data from their federal tax return, may allow for faster processing so that their student loans can return to repayment more quickly, says the department.