
460k student loan borrowers face application denials as feds overhaul repayment plans
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The data and the drama
460,000 applications denied: These borrowers will not be able to enter IDR programs through the now-invalidated SAVE application process.
1.98 million applications in limbo: Court filings and Education Department data show nearly 2 million student loan borrowers remain stuck in a backlog, waiting for decisions on more affordable repayment options.
Processing at a snail's pace: In April alone, the government managed to review just about 79,350 applications, meaning at this rate, it would take more than two years to clear today's backlog.
Trump administration's overhaul: Out with the old, in with…?
What borrowers are saying
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A seismic jolt hit the student loan world this week as roughly 460,000 borrowers learned their applications for income-driven repayment (IDR) plans will be denied, thanks to a sweeping overhaul by the Trump administration, reported Politico. The Department of Education dropped the bombshell, confirming that applications cannot be processed since the embattled SAVE repayment program is now officially off the table — and illegal under current law.Borrowers hoping for relief through the SAVE (Saving on a Valuable Education) program — a hallmark of the Biden era — are now left in suspense. "Loan servicers cannot process these applications as SAVE is no longer an option, as it is illegal," the Department declared in a statement. While SAVE borrowers are stuck in a kind of repayment purgatory (forbearance) while courts debate the program's fate, officials have confirmed their eventual transition to alternative plans later this year.These denials are part of a massive shake-up spurred by President Trump's reconciliation legislation. The administration described SAVE as too costly for taxpayers, and has called for 'simplifying the loan repayment process' with new options that have yet to be unveiled. In a move reminiscent of a reality show reboot, the Department is scrapping its complex matrix of repayment plans, including those built in recent years, and preparing to introduce two new types.'There's a bit of a struggle to understand if borrowers intended to apply for the Biden-era program that's currently on hold,' said Scott Buchanan of the Student Loan Servicing Alliance. Many simply selected what looked like the lowest payment — but didn't know that was SAVE, now illegal. With the application paused, Buchanan suggests borrowers will need to reapply for repayment plans under the new rules when available.Advocates remain worried. 'If their income has shifted in the last year, it's going to result in a higher payment,' warned Persis Yu from the Student Borrower Protection Center. The months spent in SAVE forbearance won't count towards loan cancellation or forgiveness — potentially forcing borrowers to pay more over the life of their loans.Consumer advocates and unions have blasted the chaotic process. 'Applications for loan relief have been essentially disappearing into a black hole,' said Winston Berkman-Breen of the Student Borrower Protection Center. Randi Weingarten, President of the American Federation of Teachers, called it 'outrageous and unacceptable,' blasting the administration for locking millions out of affordable payment options and delaying pathways to loan forgiveness For now, borrowers are advised to wait for the Education Department's promised new repayment plans later this year. Meanwhile, those holding out for relief are stuck in a classic bureaucratic limbo, caught between changing administrations and courtroom showdowns.
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