Student Loan Forgiveness in 2026: What's Still Open & How to Apply

PSLF, IBR, borrower defense, and disability discharge are still open in 2026 — even after SAVE ended. See which forgiveness program fits you and how to apply.

Updated · 14 min read

If you've read that student loan forgiveness is dead in 2026, here's the most important thing to know: it isn't. The core programs are still open and still discharging loans.

What ended was the SAVE planSAVE Plan (SAVE)The Saving on a Valuable Education Plan, a federal income-driven repayment plan introduced in 2023 to replace REPAYE. Its implementation has been subject to ongoing litigation, and enrolled borrowers have faced court-ordered forbearance periods. and the Biden-era attempt at one-time mass cancellation. Those are gone. But Public Service Loan Forgiveness is actively processing applications. Income-Based RepaymentIncome-Based Repayment (IBR)A federal income-driven repayment plan that caps monthly payments at 10% or 15% of discretionary income, depending on when the loans were taken out. Remaining debt is forgiven after 20 or 25 years of qualifying payments. forgiveness is available. Borrower defense claims are being reviewed and paid. Disability discharge is moving through the system.

The rules changed. The programs remain.

This guide tells you where forgiveness actually stands right now, which program fits your situation, and exactly how to apply — step by step.

Where Student Loan Forgiveness Stands in 2026

As of 2026, the major federal forgiveness programs — PSLF, income-driven repaymentIncome-Driven Repayment (IDR)A category of federal student loan repayment plans that calculate monthly payments based on income and family size rather than loan balance. Any remaining balance can be forgiven after 20–25 years of qualifying payments. forgiveness, borrower defense, and disability discharge — are all still open and processing applications. What ended was the SAVE plan and the one-time mass cancellation, and those two casualties are the reason so many borrowers think forgiveness is over. They're two different things, and it's worth separating them.

The mass cancellation is gone. The permanent programs are not. The roughly $10,000-per-borrower across-the-board cancellation never survived the courts, and recent announcements confirm there's no broad write-off coming. But the forgiveness programs Congress wrote into law — PSLFPublic Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF)A federal program that forgives the remaining balance on Direct Loans after 120 qualifying monthly payments made while working full-time for a government or qualifying nonprofit employer., income-driven repayment forgiveness, borrower defense, disability discharge — were never part of that fight. They're still running.

PSLF is fully active. Congress created it, and the legal battles over other plans never touched it. Applications are being processed and discharges go out regularly. New PSLF rules take effect July 1, 2026, including a provision letting the Department of Education disqualify employers it finds were organized for a substantial illegal purpose.

SAVE is over. A federal court vacated the SAVE Final Rule on March 10, 2026 — following the Eighth Circuit's March 9 ruling — and the Department of Education confirmed the plan is finished. It began notifying all 7.5 million enrolled borrowers on March 27, 2026. Interest on SAVE balances resumed accruing on August 1, 2025, and servicers will start directing borrowers to choose a new plan on July 1, 2026.

IBR is the most stable path to IDR forgivenessIDR ForgivenessThe forgiveness of any remaining federal student loan balance after a borrower has completed 20 or 25 years of qualifying payments under an income-driven repayment plan, depending on the specific plan.. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed July 4, 2025, eliminates SAVE, PAYEPay As You Earn (PAYE)A federal income-driven repayment plan that caps monthly payments at 10% of discretionary income and forgives remaining debt after 20 years. It is only available to borrowers who took out their first federal loans on or after October 1, 2007., and ICRIncome-Contingent Repayment (ICR)The oldest federal income-driven repayment plan, with payments generally set at 20% of discretionary income or a fixed 12-year amount, whichever is lower. It is the only IDR plan available to Parent PLUS borrowers after consolidation. for new enrollments and phases all three out entirely by July 1, 2028. Income-Based Repayment stays available to borrowers with loans disbursed before July 1, 2026, and it's the most legally solid route to forgiveness right now. OBBBA also removed IBR's old partial-financial-hardship requirement, so more borrowers can enroll regardless of income. One timing note: the Department of Education has temporarily paused processing of IBR forgiveness discharges while it recalculates payment counts, with no announced resumption date. Enrollment and payment counting continue — the pause affects when final discharges go out, not your ability to keep earning credit.

Forgiveness in 2026 can come with a tax bill. The American Rescue Plan Act's exclusion that made forgiven student debt tax-free expired on December 31, 2025. IDR forgiveness received in 2026 or later is now taxable at the federal level unless you qualify for the IRS insolvency exclusion. PSLF forgiveness stays permanently tax-free, and death and disability discharges are permanently tax-free under OBBBA. The tax change is worth weighing if you're close to your forgiveness date.

Which Forgiveness Program Is Right for You?

Which program fits comes down to four things: the type of loans you have, where you work, how long you've been repaying, and whether your school misled you or closed. Your answers narrow a confusing field down to one or two real paths.

What type of loans do you have? Log in to StudentAid.gov and check. Direct Loans qualify for all major federal programs. If you have FFEL or Perkins Loans, you'll generally need to consolidate into a Direct Consolidation Loan before you can apply for most forgiveness programs.

Where do you work? If you work full-time for a government agency or a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, PSLF is your primary path. If you're in the private sector, IDR forgiveness through IBR is more likely your route.

How long have you been repaying? Approaching 20 or more years of payments? IDR forgiveness may be closer than you think. Under 10 years in? PSLF (if your employer qualifies) or getting enrolled in IBR is the right starting point.

Did your school mislead you, or close? If your school made false claims about job placement, accreditation, or cost, borrower defense may apply. If it closed while you were enrolled, you may qualify for a closed school dischargeClosed School DischargeA federal loan discharge available to borrowers whose school closed while they were enrolled or shortly after they withdrew, before they could complete their program of study.. Neither requires a long repayment history.

A few situations carry their own urgency. If you were on SAVE, you'll need to pick a new plan during a limited window (covered below). And if you hold Parent PLUS loans, the consolidation path that preserves IDR and PSLF access has a hard deadline of July 1, 2026 — and because a Direct Consolidation Loan takes weeks to process, finishing in time means starting it right away.

How to Apply for Public Service Loan Forgiveness

PSLF cancels your remaining Direct LoanDirect LoanA federal student loan made directly by the U.S. Department of Education under the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program. Most federal student loans issued since 2010 are Direct Loans. balance after 120 qualifying monthly payments — about 10 years — made while you work full-time for a qualifying employer: a government agency, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, or certain other public service organizations.

Step 1: Confirm your loan type. Only Direct Loans qualify. If you have FFEL or Perkins Loans, consolidate them into a Direct Consolidation Loan at StudentAid.gov first. After consolidating, check how it affects your payment count.

Step 2: Verify your employer. Use the PSLF Help Tool on StudentAid.gov. Government employers at any level — federal, state, local, tribal — qualify automatically. Nonprofits need 501(c)(3) status. One thing that trips people up: if you're an independent contractor rather than a direct employee, your eligibility depends on who actually employs you, not just where you work.

Step 3: Submit the PSLF form. This single form does two jobs — it certifies your employment, and once you reach 120 payments it becomes your forgiveness application. Generate it through the PSLF Help Tool and have your employer sign the certification section. If your employer has closed or won't sign, there's an alternative documentation process.

Step 4: Enroll in a qualifying repayment plan. All income-driven repayment plans count toward PSLF, and IBR is the most reliable option for new enrollments right now. Payments under the Standard 10-Year Plan also count, but usually leave little or no balance to forgive.

Step 5: Know that forbearance months don't count. Months in forbearance generally don't count toward your 120 payments — and making voluntary payments during a forbearance doesn't change that, so that money doesn't move you closer to forgiveness. Qualifying payments are the ones made in an active income-driven or standard repayment planStandard Repayment PlanThe default federal repayment plan, which spreads loan payments evenly over 10 years — or up to 30 years for consolidation loans. It usually results in the lowest total interest paid among federal plans., not into a forbearance.

Step 6: Recertify every year. Submit a new PSLF form annually, or whenever you change employers. This keeps your payment count accurate and prevents a backlog when you hit 120. If a past certification was denied, the reconsideration process can often reverse it — a denial isn't necessarily final.

Step 7: Submit your final forgiveness application. Once you've made 120 qualifying payments, submit the PSLF form one last time. You must be working full-time for a qualifying employer when you submit it.

PSLF forgiveness is tax-free. To check your status, log into StudentAid.gov, open "View All Activity," and review your form status: In Review, Action Required, Processed, or Denied.

How to Apply for IDR (IBR) Forgiveness

Here's the part most guides get wrong: there's no separate "IDR forgiveness application." You don't file paperwork to claim it. You get into an income-driven repayment plan, stay enrolled, recertify your income every year, and the forgiveness processes once you hit your mark — 20 or 25 years of qualifying payments, depending on your plan and when you first borrowed.

Under IBR, that timeline depends on when you borrowed: payments are capped at 10% of discretionary incomeDiscretionary IncomeFor federal income-driven repayment plans, a borrower's adjusted gross income minus a set percentage of the federal poverty guideline for their family size. Monthly IDR payments are calculated as a percentage of this amount. with forgiveness after 20 years if you borrowed after July 1, 2014, or 15% with forgiveness after 25 years if you borrowed before then.

Step 1: Enroll at StudentAid.gov. Submit the Income-Driven Repayment Plan Request. You'll need your FSAFederal Student Aid (FSA)The office within the U.S. Department of Education that manages federal grants, work-study, and student loans. It runs the FAFSA, the StudentAid.gov website, and oversees the federal loan servicers. ID. When prompted, consent to IRS income verification — it speeds up processing and saves you from uploading documents manually.

Step 2: Choose IBR. For most borrowers enrolling now, IBR is the available income-driven option. If you're currently on PAYE or ICR, you can stay on it until the July 1, 2028 phase-out, but you can't newly enroll. Your servicer can confirm what you qualify for.

Step 3: Avoid paying into a forbearance. This is the most common avoidable mistake on the IDR side. Payments made during a forbearance generally don't count toward your 20- or 25-year total, so paying extra into one spends money without advancing your count — the months that move you toward forgiveness are the qualifying payments made inside your plan.

Step 4: Recertify every year. Missing your recertification deadline can spike your payment and trigger interest capitalizationInterest CapitalizationThe addition of unpaid interest to the principal balance of a loan. After capitalization, interest begins accruing on the new, larger principal, which increases the total cost of repayment.. A reminder set ahead of the date is more reliable than waiting for a notice from your servicer.

Step 5: Track your payment count. The Department of Education's IDR tracker shows your qualifying paymentQualifying PaymentA monthly loan payment that counts toward federal forgiveness programs like PSLF or IDR forgiveness. Whether a payment qualifies depends on the loan type, the repayment plan, and the borrower's employment at the time of payment. count. Checking it regularly catches credited-payment errors early rather than at the finish line.

One thing to plan for: IDR forgiveness received after December 31, 2025 is taxable at the federal level. If you're nearing your forgiveness threshold, that tax exposure is worth thinking through. Borrowers who are insolvent at discharge — meaning total debts exceed total assets — may be able to exclude the forgiven amount under IRS rules. It's a real provision, but narrow and often misunderstood.

If You Were on SAVE: Choosing Between IBR and RAP

If you were enrolled in SAVE, you don't lose the payments you already made. Time you spent repaying under SAVE while it was in effect is generally expected to count toward your IDR total. What changes is the plan you're on going forward, and you have a limited window to choose it — borrowers get at least 90 days from the date their servicer contacts them, with notices beginning July 1, 2026. Missing that window can land you in a standard plan built to fully repay your balance, which can shrink or erase what would have been forgiven.

Two plans are the realistic choices: IBR and the new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP).

IBR is available to borrowers with loans disbursed before July 1, 2026, with payments of 10% or 15% of discretionary income and forgiveness after 20 or 25 years.

RAP is open to all borrowers with eligible Direct Loans. Payments are based on a percentage of your adjusted gross incomeAdjusted Gross Income (AGI)A borrower's total taxable income minus specific deductions, as reported on a federal tax return. Federal income-driven repayment payments are generally calculated using AGI. with a $10 monthly minimum, unpaid interest is waived each month so your balance doesn't grow, and forgiveness comes after 30 years. RAP isn't available for Parent PLUS loans or consolidation loans that include them.

The credit math is where borrowers get tripped up, and it matters. The forgiveness credit you've already earned toward IDR carries with you into RAP — you don't forfeit it by switching. But it runs in only one direction. Payments you make while in RAP don't count back toward IBR or the other income-driven plans' forgiveness if you later switch off RAP. You can move back to IBR, but you'd pick up your IDR count where you left it — the months you spent in RAP only count toward RAP's own 30-year forgiveness, not the 20- or 25-year IBR clock. It's effectively a one-way door, which is why the decision to move to RAP is worth getting right the first time rather than treating it as easily reversible.

That tradeoff cuts different ways for different people. If you're close to the 20- or 25-year IDR mark, IBR reaches forgiveness sooner, since RAP runs 30 years. Some borrowers choose RAP for the opposite reason — the monthly interest waiver keeps the balance from growing, and a longer runway can soften the tax exposure on the eventual forgiveness. Neither is the "right" answer in the abstract; it depends on how close you are, how your balance behaves, and how you weigh a tax bill years out. Your servicer can confirm your current payment count before you choose.

How to Apply for Borrower Defense Discharge

Borrower defense lets you apply to discharge your federal student loans if your school misled you or broke the law in a way that affected your decision to borrow. It applies to Direct Loans.

A long-running legal fight over this relief was resolved on February 23, 2026, when the Supreme Court declined to block the Sweet v. McMahon settlement. Under that settlement, automatic discharges went to borrowers who meet three conditions: they attended a school on the settlement's Exhibit C list, they had filed a borrower defense application, and that application was still pending as of January 28, 2026. Notices went out around March 30, 2026. If you believe you qualify and haven't received confirmation, check your status at StudentAid.gov.

For new individual claims, the rules reverted to a stricter standard under OBBBA, which carries a higher burden of proof and a tighter filing window than the borrower-friendly rules that briefly applied.

Step 1: Gather your evidence. Document exactly how your school misled you — false claims about job placement, graduation rates, accreditation, credit transferability, or total cost. Collect enrollment agreements, promotional materials, emails, and any communications with admissions or financial aid.

Step 2: File at StudentAid.gov. The application asks you to name the school, describe the misrepresentation, and upload your supporting documents.

Step 3: Request forbearance if you need it. Once your application is materially complete, you can ask the Department to pause payments and stop collection while it reviews your claim.

Step 4: Wait for a decision. Processing times vary widely. You'll receive a written decision by mail, and if approved, your loans are discharged and you may receive a refund of payments made on them.

If your school appears on the Exhibit C list and you haven't gotten confirmation, following up directly tends to move faster than waiting indefinitely.

How to Apply for Disability Discharge

Total and Permanent Disability (TPDTotal and Permanent Disability Discharge (TPD)A federal loan discharge for borrowers who are totally and permanently disabled, as documented by the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Social Security Administration, or a physician's certification.) discharge cancels your federal student loans if a qualifying condition prevents you from working. It applies to Direct Loans, FFEL Loans, and Perkins Loans, and you can qualify through one of three documentation paths: a VA disability determination, a Social Security Administration determination, or certification from a qualifying clinician. The right path usually depends on the documentation you already have.

Step 1: Identify your path. Veterans with a qualifying VA rating use the VA pathway. SSA recipients use the SSA pathway. Everyone else needs a signed clinician certification.

Step 2: Apply at StudentAid.gov. You can apply online or on paper. Once the Department receives your application, it suspends collection while it reviews your eligibility.

Step 3: Complete the monitoring period if required. Approvals through SSA or physician documentation come with a three-year monitoring period; VA-based approvals don't. As long as you stay within the income and re-enrollment limits, your loans won't come back.

TPD discharge is permanently tax-free under OBBBA.

Related: Applying for a TPD discharge covers the full process and the documentation standards for each path.

Other Forgiveness and Discharge Programs

Several programs serve borrowers in specific situations, each with its own rules and application path.

Teacher Loan Forgiveness. Teach full-time for five consecutive academic years at a qualifying low-income school and you may be eligible for up to $17,500 in forgiveness. The full amount applies to highly qualified secondary math and science teachers and special education teachers; others may receive up to $5,000. All teachers need full state certification — emergency or provisional certifications don't count. It's tax-free and separate from PSLF, so the same years of service can't count toward both at once.

Military and veteran programs. Active-duty service counts as qualifying public service employment for PSLF. Service-connected disabilities may qualify for TPD discharge. Individual branches also run their own loan repayment programs.

Closed school discharge. If your school closed while you were enrolled — or shortly after you withdrew — you may be able to have your federal loans discharged. There are two routes: the Department may grant an automatic discharge about a year after the closure if you didn't transfer your credits elsewhere, or you can apply through your servicer. Applying yourself is usually faster and more certain than waiting for an automatic discharge. Check your eligibility at StudentAid.gov.

State-specific programs. Many states offer loan repayment assistance for borrowers working in healthcare, law, education, or social work in underserved areas. Eligibility and application steps vary by state.

What If You've Already Applied and Are Waiting?

Each program has its own way to check status after you apply.

PSLF: Log into StudentAid.gov, open "View All Activity," and check your form status — In Review, Action Required, Processed, or Denied. If you see "Action Required," responding quickly matters; an unanswered request can stall everything for months.

Borrower defense: Log into StudentAid.gov to check your status. Processing has historically ranged from months to years. If you filed before the Sweet v. McMahon settlement and haven't heard back, it's worth checking whether you're covered as a class member.

IDR forgiveness: Once you reach your qualifying payment threshold, forgiveness should process automatically through your servicer. If you believe you've hit your count and nothing has happened, your servicer can review it against your payment history and the IDR tracker.

Disability discharge: The Department suspends collection while it reviews your application, and initial decisions typically take up to 120 days. If you haven't heard back after that, your servicer can check on the status.

What to Do If Your Application Was Denied

A denial isn't always the end. Every major program has a formal way to challenge a decision.

PSLF denial: PSLF reconsideration runs through StudentAid.gov. The most commonly reversible reasons are employer-verification issues, payment-count discrepancies, and incorrect loan types at the time of payment. Reconsideration requests go in with supporting documentation, and if that fails, the next step is the FSA Ombudsman.

Borrower defense denial: You can request a review, and the Department must give you a written explanation. If your school is on the Exhibit C list and your individual claim was denied, the Sweet v. McMahon settlement may still cover you.

IDR payment disputes: If your count is lower than expected, your servicer can run a payment-count review. If that doesn't resolve it, a complaint with the FSA Ombudsman is the next step, and it's worth confirming any account-adjustment credits are reflected in your history.

TPD denial: A denial based on documentation can be reopened by reapplying with updated or additional certification from a qualifying clinician.

If your situation involves multiple denial reasons, years of misapplied payments, or a complicated loan history, a student loan attorney can identify what went wrong and help you work the right channel.

Your Next Steps

Forgiveness is still available in 2026 — the right path depends on your loan type, your repayment history, and where you work. If you have FFEL or Perkins Loans, you may need to consolidate into a Direct Consolidation Loan before you qualify for PSLF or most IDR forgiveness.

Your loans, repayment plan, and payment count are all visible at StudentAid.gov, where every federal forgiveness and discharge application is free. If you're leaving SAVE, working toward PSLF or IDR forgiveness, or approaching a major forgiveness milestone, reviewing your options early and staying on top of your annual recertification keeps a missed deadline from costing you progress.

Related: When Do Student Loans Go Away? All Your Questions, Answered

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