
Explained: How Trump's RAP rips up student debt rules; bigger bills, gutted aid, a brutal new reality for borrowers
When the Trump administration signed its sweeping tax-and-spending bill on 4 July 2025, a quiet but consequential shift was tucked into its 700-plus pages. Amid the fanfare over tax cuts and spending reallocations, the Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) was introduced as the new framework that will govern federal student loans from 1 July 2026.
Marketed as a simplification of America's complex income-driven repayment (IDR) system, RAP promises 'legal compliance' after courts struck down parts of Biden's student debt relief agenda. But scratch the surface, and RAP looks less like reform and more like a recalibration of who carries the weight of higher education costs in America.
From discretionary to gross income: Redrawing the fairness line
Under Biden's Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan, repayment was tied to discretionary income—earnings above 225% of the federal poverty line, giving low-income borrowers breathing room.
According to the Student Borrower Protection Center (SBPC), over 40% of SAVE borrowers earn less than this threshold (around $35,213 for a single person, $72,338 for a family of four), meaning many legally owed $0 monthly payments, with no interest piling up.
RAP wipes out this buffer. Payments will now be based on gross income, not adjusted for essential living costs. A borrower earning $30,000 annually—once paying close to nothing—may see monthly bills rise to $100–$150, depending on Department of Education calculations.
Supporters call this 'shared responsibility'; critics call it regressive taxation disguised as reform, extracting more from those least able to pay while offering little relief to those already struggling.
A symbolic minimum payment, masking compounding debt
RAP introduces a mandatory $10 minimum payment for all borrowers, even for those with no verifiable income. The administration presents this as a fairness measure: every borrower must contribute 'something.'
Yet this token sum does little against loans accruing hundreds of dollars in interest monthly.
Where SAVE paused unpaid interest to prevent balances from ballooning, RAP allows interest to compound without restraint. A borrower paying $10 on a loan generating $200 in monthly interest will see their debt grow, month after month, despite 'repayment.' The minimum payment, far from ensuring fairness, ensures an ever-lengthening shadow of debt for the most vulnerable borrowers.
New borrowing limits and
Pell Grant restrictions
: The quiet gatekeepers
RAP is not just about repayment; it reshapes the entry point to higher education financing. The July 2025 bill introduces caps on federal loans, setting stricter annual and lifetime borrowing limits. Families whose tuition costs exceed these caps—common in graduate and professional programmes—will be pushed toward private lenders, with higher interest rates and fewer protections.
Simultaneously, Pell Grant eligibility tightens, with new academic and enrolment criteria limiting who qualifies for this low-income student aid.
While framed as fiscal prudence, the effect is clear: future students from disadvantaged backgrounds will have to borrow more from riskier sources or scale back their education plans, perpetuating inequality long before repayment even begins.
The legal pretext: Policy by injunction
The Department of Education has repeatedly justified RAP, and the recent interest accrual restart (effective 1 August 2025), as necessary compliance with federal court rulings that struck down SAVE.
Yet, legal scholars and debt advocates note that no ruling mandated these specific policy shifts. Ending interest-free forbearance, replacing discretionary income formulas, or introducing minimum payments are choices, not obligations, presented under a veneer of judicial inevitability.
This narrative of 'our hands are tied' masks a deliberate policy direction: reducing federal liability for student loans, shifting risks back to borrowers, and signalling that higher education is increasingly a personal gamble, not a public investment.
A more expensive, less forgiving future
For the 8 million borrowers currently in SAVE, interest is already accruing again, costing an estimated $300 per month or $3,500 per year on average, per SBPC data. When RAP kicks in from July 2026, these same borrowers could face higher mandatory payments, relentless interest growth, and fewer safety nets if their income falters.
Future students will encounter tighter borrowing limits, reduced grants, and a repayment system less sensitive to their real ability to pay.
In effect, RAP signals a policy retreat from income-driven protection, making the student debt system more rigid, more punitive, and less aligned with the principle that education should elevate, not impoverish.
The bottom line
RAP is sold as simplification and legality, but in practice, it reshapes the student loan system into a harsher, more market-driven regime. By moving from discretionary to gross income, introducing compulsory minimums, lifting interest safeguards, and constraining federal aid, it redraws the boundaries of opportunity in American higher education.
For millions of borrowers—especially those below the poverty line—the promise of education as an accessible, upward path is narrowing, replaced by a reality where debt obligations harden even as economic security remains elusive. The legal justifications may soothe the policymakers' conscience; they will do little to soften the arithmetic facing graduates in 2026.
TOI Education is on WhatsApp now. Follow us
here
.
Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News18
4 minutes ago
- News18
US inflation unchanged last month, though core prices accelerated
Agency: Last Updated: August 12, 2025, 20:00 IST Representational image (Image: News18) Washington, Aug 12 (AP) US inflation was unchanged in July while a measure of underlying inflation rose to its highest level in five months as tariffs push the price of imported goods higher while gas and grocery prices cooled. Consumer prices rose 2.7 per cent in July from a year earlier, the Labour Department said Tuesday, the same as the previous month and up from a post-pandemic low of 2.3 per cent in April. Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core prices rose 3.1 per cent, up from 2.9 per cent in June. Both figures are above the Federal Reserve's 2 per cent target. The figures suggest that slowing rent increases and cheaper gas are offsetting some impacts of President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs. Many businesses are also absorbing some of the cost of the duties. Tuesday's figures likely include some impact from the 10 per cent universal tariff Trump imposed in April, as well as higher duties on countries such as China and Canada. Still, stubbornly high inflation puts the Federal Reserve in a difficult spot: Hiring slowed sharply in the spring, after Trump announced tariffs in April. The stalling out of job gains has boosted financial market expectations for an interest rate cut by the central bank. Chair Jerome Powell has warned that worsening inflation could keep the Fed on the sidelines — a stance that has enraged Trump, who has defied traditional norms of central bank independence and demanded lower borrowing costs. Gas prices fell 2.2 per cent from June to July and have plunged 9.5 per cent from a year earlier, the government's report said. Grocery prices slipped 0.1 per cent last month, though they are still 2.2 per cent higher than a year ago. Restaurant meals continued to get more expensive, however, rising 0.3 per cent in July and 3.9 per cent from a year earlier. Tariffs appeared to raise the cost of some imported items: Shoe prices jumped 1.4 per cent from June to July, though they are still just 0.9 per cent more expensive than a year ago. The cost of furniture leapt 0.9 per cent in July and is 3.2 per cent higher than a year earlier. Clothing prices ticked up 0.1 per cent in July, after a larger rise in June, though they are still slightly cheaper than a year ago. Tuesday's data arrives at a highly-charged moment for the Labour Department's Bureau of Labour Statistics, which collects and publishes the inflation data. Trump fired Erika McEntarfer, then the head of BLS, after the Aug. 1 jobs report also showed sharply lower hiring for May and June than had previously been reported. The president posted on social media Monday that he has picked E.J. Antoni, an economist at the conservative Heritage Foundation and a frequent critic of the jobs report, to replace McEntarfer. 'E.J. will ensure that the Numbers released are HONEST and ACCURATE," Trump said on Truth Social. Adding to the BLS's turmoil is a government-wide hiring freeze that has forced it to cut back on the amount of data it collects for each inflation report, the agency has said. UBS economist Alan Detmeister estimates that BLS is now collecting about 18 per cent fewer price quotes for the inflation report than it did a few months ago. He thinks the report will produce more volatile results, though averaged out over time, still reliable. Americans are likely to absorb more trade-war costs in the coming months as Trump begins to finalize tariffs. Once businesses know what they will be paying, they are more likely to pass those costs to customers, economists say. Trump has insisted that overseas manufacturers will pay the tariffs by reducing their prices to offset the duties. Yet the pre-tariff prices of imports haven't fallen much since the levies were put in place. Economists at Goldman Sachs estimate that foreign manufacturers have absorbed just 14 per cent of the duties through June, while 22 per cent has been paid by consumers and 64 per cent by US companies. Based on previous patterns, however — such as Trump's 2018 duties on washing machines — the economists expect that by this fall consumers will bear 67 per cent of the burden, while foreign exporters pay 25 per cent and US companies handle just 8 per cent. Many large US companies are raising prices in response to the tariffs, including apparel makers Ralph Lauren and Under Armour, and eyewear company Warby Parker. Consumer products giant Procter & Gamble, maker of Crest toothpaste, Tide detergent and Charmin toilet paper, said late last month that it would lift prices on about a quarter of its products by mid-single-digit percentages. And cosmetics maker e.l.f. Beauty, which makes a majority of its products in China, said on Wednesday that it had raised prices by a dollar on its entire product assortment as of Aug. 1 because of tariff costs, the third price hike in its 21-year history. 'We tend to lead and then we will see how many more kind of follow us," CEO Tarang Amin said on an earnings call Wednesday. Swipe Left For Next Video View all Matt Pavich, senior director of strategy and innovation at Revionics, a company that provides AI tools to large retailers to help them evaluate pricing decisions, says many companies are raising prices selectively to offset tariffs, rather than across the board. 'Up until now we haven't seen a massive hit to consumers in retail prices," Pavich said. 'Now, they are going up, we've seen that." (AP) GSP (This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed - PTI) view comments News agency-feeds US inflation unchanged last month, though core prices accelerated Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Read More


News18
4 minutes ago
- News18
Washington Mayor SLAMS Trump: ‘Illegal to Use Military on Americans'
Washington Mayor SLAMS Trump: 'Illegal to Use Military on Americans' | Bowser's Bold Rebuttal | N18G Last Updated: August 12, 2025, 20:00 IST Videos Tensions escalate in Washington D.C. as Mayor Muriel Bowser openly rejects former President Donald Trump's controversial move to deploy police and military forces against American citizens. Bowser calls it 'illegal to use the military on Americans' and warns that such actions threaten democracy and civil rights. The clash comes amid growing concerns over the militarization of domestic law enforcement, raising questions about constitutional rights, federal authority, and the limits of presidential this video, we break down Bowser's fiery statement, the legal implications of Trump's plan, and what this political showdown means for the future of civil liberties in the United States. From the streets of Washington to the halls of power, this is a battle over law, order, and the Constitution. News18 Mobile App - homevideos Washington Mayor SLAMS Trump: 'Illegal to Use Military on Americans' | Bowser's Bold Rebuttal | N18G CNN name, logo and all associated elements ® and © 2024 Cable News Network LP, LLLP. A Time Warner Company. All rights reserved. CNN and the CNN logo are registered marks of Cable News Network, LP LLLP, displayed with permission. Use of the CNN name and/or logo on or as part of does not derogate from the intellectual property rights of Cable News Network in respect of them. © Copyright Network18 Media and Investments Ltd 2024. All rights reserved.

Time of India
4 minutes ago
- Time of India
'Pro-Putin' Orban Attacks ‘SIDELINED' EU For 'Opposing' Trump-Putin Summit: 'Stop Instructing...'
/ Aug 12, 2025, 07:57PM IST Hungarian PM Viktor Orbán refused to back an EU statement on Ukraine, blasting leaders for setting conditions on talks they were not invited to. He urged an EU-Russia summit based on the Trump-Putin model, calling it the 'only sensible action' and stressing diplomacy over battlefield solutions. Orbán warned Europe risks being sidelined in peace talks, while EU leaders insist on Ukraine's consent and a ceasefire before negotiations.