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CalcWolf Finance Student Loan Repayment Plan Comparison (2026)
Finance

Which Student Loan Repayment Plan Saves You the Most?

Compare Standard, PAYE, IBR, and ICR repayment plans side by side. See total paid, monthly payment, and forgiveness timeline for your situation.

📅 Updated April 2026 Formula verified 📖 4 min read 🆓 Free · No sign-up

The 2026 Student Loan Landscape

The student loan repayment landscape shifted significantly in 2025-2026. The SAVE plan was blocked by courts and the Biden-era IDR reforms were rolled back. Borrowers now choose from the pre-existing plans: Standard (10-year fixed), IBR (Income-Based Repayment), PAYE (Pay As You Earn), and ICR (Income-Contingent Repayment). Each has different payment calculations, forgiveness timelines, and total cost implications.

Repayment Plans Compared

Standard Repayment: Fixed payment over 10 years. Highest monthly payment but lowest total interest paid. Best for borrowers who can comfortably afford the payment and want to be debt-free fastest.

IBR (Income-Based): 15% of discretionary income (income above 150% of the federal poverty level). Payments recalculated annually based on income and family size. Remaining balance forgiven after 25 years. Best for borrowers with high debt relative to income who expect income to stay moderate.

PAYE (Pay As You Earn): 10% of discretionary income with 20-year forgiveness. Lower payments than IBR but only available for borrowers who took out their first loan after October 2007 and had a disbursement after October 2011.

The Forgiveness Trade-Off

Lower monthly payments on IDR plans mean more interest accrues over time. A $45,000 loan at 5.5% costs $58,400 total under the Standard plan (10 years). Under PAYE, you might pay less monthly but accrue interest for 20 years before forgiveness. Depending on your income trajectory, the total amount paid on PAYE can be higher or lower than Standard. The forgiven amount is currently treated as taxable income, which can create a large tax bill in the forgiveness year.

Which Plan Should You Choose?

If you can afford the Standard payment (it is less than 10-15% of gross income), choose Standard — you pay the least total and are debt-free in 10 years. If the Standard payment would be more than 15% of income, IDR plans provide relief. If you are pursuing Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF), choose PAYE — the lowest payment maximizes forgiveness after 10 years of qualifying employment.

⚡ CalcWolf Insight

The difference in total cost between repayment plans can exceed $20,000 on a $45,000 loan. Running the numbers before choosing a plan is one of the highest-value financial calculations a borrower can make.

Frequently asked questions
What happened to the SAVE plan?
The SAVE plan was blocked by federal courts in 2024 and the legal challenges continued into 2025. Borrowers enrolled in SAVE were placed in forbearance during the litigation. As of 2026, borrowers have been moved to IBR or other eligible IDR plans. The future of SAVE remains uncertain.
Is student loan forgiveness taxable?
Under current law (post-2025), forgiven student loan amounts under IDR plans are generally treated as taxable income in the year of forgiveness. This can create a significant tax bill. PSLF forgiveness (after 10 years of public service) is not taxable.
Can I switch repayment plans?
Yes. You can switch between repayment plans at any time by contacting your loan servicer. Switching resets some aspects of your repayment timeline. If you switch to an IDR plan, your payment count toward forgiveness may restart depending on the plan.
Should I refinance federal loans with a private lender?
Generally no, unless you have high income, excellent credit, and do not need IDR or forgiveness options. Refinancing to a private loan eliminates access to federal protections, IDR plans, forgiveness, and future federal relief programs. The lower interest rate must be weighed against losing these benefits.
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Kevin Glover
Founder, CalcWolf · GLVTS · Blickr
All formulas sourced from primary references — IRS publications, peer-reviewed research, and official standards. Results are tested against independent reference calculators before publishing. Rates and brackets updated when official sources change. Editorial policy →
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