Income-driven repayment (IDR) plans cap federal student loan payments at a percentage of your discretionary income, making payments manageable regardless of loan balance. After 20-25 years of payments, remaining balances are forgiven.

Understanding Discretionary Income

IDR payments are based on discretionary income:

Discretionary Income = Adjusted Gross Income - 150% of Poverty Guideline

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Example (single person, 2024):

  • Income: $50,000
  • 150% poverty guideline: ~$22,590
  • Discretionary income: $27,410
  • 10% of discretionary: $2,741/year = $228/month payment

SAVE Plan (Newest Option)

The Saving on a Valuable Education plan offers the most generous terms:

Payment Calculation

  • Undergraduate only: 5% of discretionary income
  • Graduate loans: 10% of discretionary income
  • Mixed: Weighted average (5-10%)
  • 225% poverty guideline protection (more income excluded)

Key Benefits

  • Lowest payments of any IDR plan
  • Government covers unpaid interest (no balance growth)
  • Spousal income excluded if filing separately
  • 10-year forgiveness for balances under $12,000
  • No payment if income below threshold

Forgiveness Timeline

  • 20 years for undergraduate loans
  • 25 years for graduate loans
  • 10 years for original balances under $12,000

PAYE (Pay As You Earn)

Eligibility

  • Must be a new borrower as of Oct 1, 2007
  • Must have received disbursement after Oct 1, 2011
  • Payment amount must be less than standard 10-year payment

Payment Calculation

  • 10% of discretionary income
  • Capped at standard 10-year payment amount

Forgiveness

  • 20 years for all loans

IBR (Income-Based Repayment)

New Borrower IBR

For loans after July 1, 2014:

  • 10% of discretionary income
  • 20-year forgiveness

Old IBR

For loans before July 1, 2014:

  • 15% of discretionary income
  • 25-year forgiveness

ICR (Income-Contingent Repayment)

The oldest IDR plan with less favorable terms:

  • 20% of discretionary income OR fixed payment over 12 years, whichever is less
  • 25-year forgiveness
  • Only option for Parent PLUS loans (after consolidation)

Comparing IDR Plans

PlanPayment %ForgivenessBest For
SAVE5-10%20-25 yearsMost borrowers
PAYE10%20 yearsIf SAVE ineligible
New IBR10%20 yearsAlternative to PAYE
Old IBR15%25 yearsOlder borrowers only
ICR20%25 yearsParent PLUS only

IDR for PSLF

All IDR plans qualify for Public Service Loan Forgiveness. SAVE typically results in lowest payments, maximizing forgiveness amount.

Annual Recertification

IDR plans require annual income recertification:

  • Submit income documentation yearly
  • Failure to recertify increases payments
  • Can switch plans during recertification
  • Update for major income changes

Tax Implications of IDR Forgiveness

Important tax consideration:

  • PSLF forgiveness: Not taxable
  • IDR forgiveness (non-PSLF): Currently not taxable through 2025
  • After 2025: May be taxable as income (uncertain)

Plan for potential tax liability if relying on IDR forgiveness.

How to Enroll in IDR

  1. Log in at StudentAid.gov
  2. Go to Manage Loans section
  3. Select Apply for IDR
  4. Complete application with income info
  5. Choose plan (SAVE recommended for most)
  6. Submit and await servicer confirmation

Applications are processed within 2-4 weeks.