Paying off a loan early feels unambiguously good, which is exactly why it is worth slowing down before doing it with student loans. Unlike a high-interest credit card, where extra payments are almost always the right move, student loans come with lower average rates, potential forgiveness paths, and tax treatment that can change the math. The right answer depends on the loan type, the rate, and what else you would otherwise do with the money.
What changed in 2026
- Federal student loan interest rates continue resetting annually based on Treasury yields, so the rate on loans taken in different years can differ meaningfully — check your specific loans rather than assuming a single rate applies.
- Income-driven repayment and forgiveness program rules have shifted multiple times in recent years, making it more important than ever to confirm your loan's current status before deciding to prepay, as covered in Income-driven repayment plans.
- Refinancing federal loans into private ones remains a one-way door — you permanently give up federal protections and forgiveness eligibility, a tradeoff more borrowers are weighing carefully.
The case for paying early
If your loans carry a high interest rate, particularly private loans that were not eligible for pandemic-era relief or forgiveness programs, extra payments reduce the total interest you pay and shorten the payoff timeline meaningfully. Paying early also removes a fixed monthly obligation, which increases flexibility if your income becomes unpredictable, a consideration that pairs with broader planning like recession-proofing your finances. There is also a simple psychological benefit: some people value being debt-free over squeezing out the last percentage point of theoretical return elsewhere.
The case against paying early
If you are on a path toward loan forgiveness, whether through an income-driven plan or a public service program, extra payments can actively work against you by shrinking the balance that would otherwise be forgiven. If your loan rate is low relative to what you could reasonably expect from long-term investing, the opportunity cost of prepayment can outweigh the interest saved. And if prepaying comes before you have built an emergency fund, you risk having to borrow again at a worse rate when something unexpected happens.
Comparing the paths
| Situation |
Early payoff makes sense |
Why |
| High-rate private loan, no forgiveness path |
Usually yes |
Interest saved is close to guaranteed |
| Federal loan, low fixed rate, no forgiveness plan |
Depends on other goals |
Opportunity cost is the real question |
| On an income-driven repayment plan headed to forgiveness |
Usually no |
Extra payments reduce the forgiven amount |
| No emergency fund yet |
No, fund that first |
Avoids higher-cost borrowing later |
How to prepay correctly if you decide to
Contact your servicer and confirm in writing that extra payments are applied to principal, not to future scheduled payments — many servicers default to the latter unless you specify otherwise, which can silently reduce the benefit of prepaying. Target the highest-rate loan first if you have several, since that is where each extra dollar saves the most interest, and reassess annually since rates, forgiveness eligibility, and your own financial situation can all change.
FAQ
Does paying off student loans early hurt my credit score?
It can cause a small, temporary dip by reducing account diversity, but the long-term effect of lower debt and interest paid is generally favorable.
Should I prepay federal loans before private loans?
Usually the higher-rate loan should come first regardless of federal or private status, unless you are pursuing forgiveness on the federal loan, in which case treat it separately.
Is there a prepayment penalty on student loans?
Federal student loans do not charge prepayment penalties. Most private lenders do not either, but confirm your specific loan terms before assuming.
What if I am not sure whether I qualify for forgiveness?
Check your loan servicer's current program rules directly before prepaying, since forgiveness program details change and misreading eligibility can be costly. This is general information, not personalized financial advice.
Where to go next
For related reading, see Income-driven repayment plans, What is a good debt-to-income ratio, and Recession-proofing your finances.