SAVE is available for Direct Loan borrowers only, and eligible loan types include: Direct Subsidized/Unsubsidized, Direct Grad PLUS, and Direct Consolidation loans. Direct Parent PLUS loans, defaulted loans, and consolidation loans that repaid a Parent PLUS loan cannot be repaid under the SAVE plan.
Repayment plan options for Parent PLUS loans include Standard, Graduated, Extended, or Income-Contingent. Learn more about ICR and staying on track with income-driven repayment. Consider pros and cons before refinancing, and don't use credit cards or home equity to pay your student loans.
Parent PLUS Loans are not excluded from PSLF, but they are not eligible for all income-driven repayment plans. Parent PLUS borrowers can consolidate their debt to access the ICR plan and thus, PSLF. ICR is the least generous of the IDR plans.
However, Parent PLUS Loans will be capped at $20,000 per student per year and a $65,000 lifetime limit beginning July 1, 2026. Parents who borrowed before that date can continue borrowing under the current limits for up to three additional years or until their student completes their program. Good news.
The government doesn't forgive Parent PLUS Loans when you retire or draw Social Security benefits, but it has programs that will wipe out your remaining balance after you've made a number of student loan payments under an income-driven repayment plan.
The Parent PLUS Double Consolidation Loophole is a strategy that requires a parent with more than one Parent PLUS loan to consolidate them twice. The consolidation requires that it be done in a specific sequence to eliminate the Parent PLUS tag on the consolidated loans. The benefit of these extra steps is substantial.
You can achieve Parent PLUS loan forgiveness by consolidating into a Direct Consolidation Loan, enrolling in an eligible repayment plan (usually ICR), and meeting specific program requirements, such as employment in public service for PSLF, documented total disability, borrower defense eligibility, or other qualifying ...
Parent PLUS loan borrowers will be limited to $20,000 a year per student. Parent PLUS loan borrowers' lifetime aggregate limit will be $65,000 per student. Direct student loan offers will be prorated for students who are enrolled less than full time.
Parent Plus loans are federal loans that allow parents to borrow money to help pay for their child's undergraduate education expenses. In the event that the parent borrower passes away, the government will discharge and forgive the remaining Parent PLUS loan debt.
The interest rate for parent PLUS loans disbursed (sent out) between July 1, 2025, and June 30, 2026, is 8.94%—this rate is fixed for the life of the loan.
Your parent PLUS loan may be discharged if you (not the child) become totally and permanently disabled, die, or (in some cases) file for bankruptcy. Your parent PLUS loan also may be discharged if the student for whom you borrowed dies.
For loan discharge, the borrower must be disabled and not a family member. Parent PLUS Loans are eligible for total and permanent disability discharge if the parent borrower, not the student for whom you borrowed, is totally and permanently disabled.
If you're wondering, “Can a Parent PLUS loan be transferred to the student?” The answer is yes. But instead of going through the U.S. Department of Education to transfer a Parent PLUS Loan to a student, you'll need to refinance the loan to the child with a private lender.
Using the formula above, for a $50,000 student loan with a 10-year repayment at 5% interest, you can expect to make monthly payments of around $530 per month. This calculation does not include the addition of an origination fee, which is calculated as a percentage of the loan amount.
Consolidating Parent PLUS loans costs nothing; there are no origination fees. It may simplify your monthly payment if you've been managing multiple payments to different loan servicers. Consolidation can make some types of federal loans eligible for income-driven repayment plans.
Yes, your child can make the monthly payments on your Parent PLUS loan. If you want to avoid having your child apply for student loan refinance, you can simply have them make the Parent PLUS loan payment each month instead. However, it's important to be aware that if you do this, the loan will still be in your name.
There is no forgiveness available to Parent PLUS Loan borrowers looking to retire. Remember that Parent PLUS Loan forgiveness is only possible through the Income-Contingent Repayment Plan or PSLF after first consolidating your Parent PLUS Loan into a federal Direct Consolidation Loan.
Undergraduate Limits and Parent PLUS Loans
There are no changes for undergraduate loans, although undergraduate loans will count towards the new lifetime limits. However, starting July 1, 2026, Parent PLUS loans will be capped at $20,000 per student per year, with a $65,000 lifetime limit per dependent student.
Only after you pay your federal student loans can the default be removed, but it will still take seven years from the time of repayment for those accounts to be removed. Keep in mind: Federal law limits how long most types of negative information can remain on your credit report.
There is no income cap for FAFSA. Even high-income students should apply to access federal loans and some merit aid. Aid eligibility is based on your Student Aid Index (SAI) and cost of attendance, not just income alone.
Beginning July 1, 2026, Parent PLUS loans will be capped at $20,000 per year with a $65,000 aggregate limit. Previously, Parent PLUS Loans had no cap and could be taken out for whatever amount was needed to get the student up to Cost of Attendance.
Grandfather provisions:
There is a grandfather clause for Grad PLUS Loan borrowers, students who are currently borrowing under any Federal Direct Loan provision, may borrow for an additional three years or the completion of their program, whichever comes first.
Parent PLUS loans are educational loans, and the borrower can claim an income tax deduction. When borrowers review their tax deductions, they can deduct up to $2,500 per year in interest paid on the Parent PLUS loan. Income limits and other tax filing rules may apply.
Standard repayment plan: Pay off your loan by making fixed monthly payments for 10 years. Graduated repayment plan: Start with smaller payments, then have your payments gradually increase during the 10-year repayment period. Extended repayment plan: Fixed or graduated payments for 25 years.
Look for a lender that offers cosigner release. This allows the primary borrower (your child) to release the cosigner (you) from the loan once they've met specific criteria, such as a having made a certain number of consecutive on-time payments, meeting minimum credit requirements, and providing proof of income.