Income driven repayment plans tie your monthly student loan bill to what you actually earn instead of what you owe, and in 2026 they matter more than ever because the plan most people signed up for, SAVE, no longer exists. If you enrolled in SAVE during its brief life, you have likely already been shuffled into a forbearance or a different plan. This guide explains what still works, who each option fits, and the quiet tax problem waiting at the finish line.
What changed in 2026
The big story is the collapse of SAVE (Saving on a Valuable Education). Federal courts struck it down, and the Department of Education spent 2025 unwinding it. That triggered a cascade:
- SAVE enrollees were placed in an interest-free forbearance, then began transitioning to older plans. Months in forbearance generally do not count toward forgiveness.
- New legislation narrowed the menu for newer borrowers, pushing many toward a single consolidated option.
- The tax-free treatment of forgiven balances — the federal exclusion under the American Rescue Plan — expired at the end of 2025. Forgiveness in 2026 may be federally taxable again unless Congress acts.
Verify your own status directly on StudentAid.gov, because servicer notices in this period have been unreliable.
The plans that still exist
Three legacy income driven repayment plans survived the SAVE ruling, plus a newer statutory plan for recent borrowers. They differ on payment percentage, the type of loans allowed, and how long until forgiveness.
| Plan |
Payment |
Forgiveness |
Best for |
| IBR |
10-15% of discretionary income |
20 or 25 years |
Broadest eligibility, has a payment cap |
| PAYE |
10% of discretionary income |
20 years |
Older borrowers with high balances |
| ICR |
20% of discretionary income |
25 years |
The only IDR option for Parent PLUS (after consolidation) |
| RAP (newer borrowers) |
Sliding scale by income band |
30 years |
Loans taken after mid-2026 |
Exact percentages and eligibility windows shift with your loan disbursement dates, so confirm the current terms before choosing.
How your payment is actually calculated
"Discretionary income" is the phrase that does the heavy lifting, and each plan defines it slightly differently. The common formula is your adjusted gross income minus a multiple of the federal poverty guideline for your family size.
- Bigger family, lower payment. Household size feeds directly into the poverty-line subtraction.
- Married filing separately can shrink the income counted, but you lose other tax benefits — run both scenarios.
- Recertify every year. Miss the deadline and your payment can jump to the standard amount and unpaid interest may capitalize.
If your calculated payment is very low or even zero because your income is low, that month can still count toward forgiveness on most plans. That is the real feature: time keeps moving even when you cannot pay much.
The forgiveness tax bomb
Here is the part the marketing skips. After 20 to 25 years of qualifying payments, your remaining balance is forgiven — but with the federal exclusion expired, that forgiven amount may be treated as taxable income in the year it happens. A large balance forgiven in a single year could push you into a higher bracket and generate a real tax bill.
This is not a reason to avoid income driven repayment. It is a reason to set aside money along the way, treating the eventual tax as a known cost rather than a surprise two decades from now. Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF), which forgives after 10 years for qualifying government and nonprofit workers, remains tax-free — a meaningful edge if you qualify.
Should you even be on an IDR plan
Income driven repayment is not automatically the cheapest path. If your income is solid relative to your balance, the standard 10-year plan often costs far less in interest and clears the debt sooner.
- Choose IDR if your balance dwarfs your income, you want PSLF, or you need breathing room in your budget.
- Skip IDR if you can comfortably clear the loan in a few years — you will pay more interest stretching it out.
- Watch the interest. On some plans your balance grows because the payment does not cover accruing interest, even as you stay current.
Run your numbers in the Loan Simulator on StudentAid.gov, which compares plans side by side using your actual loans.
FAQ
Is the SAVE plan coming back in 2026?
Unlikely in its original form. It was blocked by the courts, and current law steers borrowers toward IBR and a newer consolidated plan. Watch for legislation, but do not count on it.
Will my forgiven balance be taxed?
Federally, possibly yes for forgiveness happening in 2026, because the temporary tax-free exclusion expired at the end of 2025. PSLF forgiveness stays tax-free. Check your state rules too, and verify current federal law.
Do months in forbearance count toward forgiveness?
Generally no. The interest-free forbearance that SAVE borrowers were placed in usually does not count. Confirm your qualifying payment count with your servicer and on StudentAid.gov.
Can I switch plans later?
Yes, though switching may capitalize unpaid interest or reset some progress. Weigh the new payment against what you lose before moving.
Where to go next
Once your loan strategy is set, the same run-the-numbers discipline applies to the rest of your money. See how to split your portfolio by decade in asset allocation by age, learn a legal way high earners fund retirement in the backdoor Roth IRA guide, and get a skeptical take on the tools in AI investing strategies.