Income-based repayment & Public service loan forgiveness

Income-Based Repayment Program (IBR)

On July 1, 2009, the federal government introduced a new way to repay student loans. Under the IBR program, monthly loan payments for eligible borrowers will be capped based on income and family size. After 25 years of "qualifying" to payments, all remaining debt will be forgiven.

IBR is meant to help borrowers who have difficulty making monthly payments under the Standard 10-year repayment plan.

Loans eligible for IBR

You can tap into the IBR program if you have loans issued under:

Eligible loans under both FFEL and Direct include Stafford, Grad Plus, and federal Consolidation loans.

Loans not eligible for IBR

Loans excluded from IBR eligibility include:

How IBR can reduce your monthly payments

IBR uses a formula to compare your debt to your income. If your monthly payments would take more than 15% of your earnings above 150% of the poverty level for your household size, you may be eligible.

For example:

Public Service Loan Forgiveness

This new program forgives all remaining debt in the Direct Loan program after 10 years of payments under the Standard (10-year) or alternative repayment plans, including IBR. The program is open to borrowers who take jobs in government and nonprofit 501(c)(3) organizations.

Only payments made after Oct. 1, 2007 count towards the 10 years. If your loans are in the FFEL program, you may be able to switch them to the Direct Loan program.

For more information on IBR and Public Service Loan Forgiveness, see: