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SAVE Forbearance Is Ending: 7 Million Borrowers Face Repayment Restart

save-forbearance-is-ending:-7-million-borrowers-face-repayment-restart
The end is near sign on a stormy background reflecting the end of the SAVE Forbearance. Source: The College Investor

The payment pause protecting borrowers in the SAVE plan is winding down, with loan servicers set to begin notifying borrowers starting July 1 to move into a new repayment plan.

Once a borrower receives that notice, the clock starts: forbearance ends 90 days after the official notice is sent, which means most affected borrowers will be back in active repayment by the end of September 2026. This means either the borrower selects a new repayment plan, or will default back into the standard repayment plan.

The bottom line – nearly all of these borrowers will have a payment due in October or November, whether they elect a repayment payment or not.

Why It Matters: Roughly 7.7 million borrowers were enrolled in the SAVE plan when it was struck down in court, and there are still nearly 7 million borrowers waiting in the associated forbearance.

Borrowers have between now and the end of their notice to select a new repayment plan. Enrolling in a new repayment plan resumes payments immediately. However, failing to select a repayment plan will result in borrowers defaulting into the standard plan – with payments still resuming anyway.

Borrowers who don’t take action risk delinquency, damaged credit, and eventually default.

The Timeline

Here is the expected timeline for the end of the SAVE plan forbearance and the requirement to enroll in a new repayment plan or be defaulted into the standard plan.

  • July 1, 2026: Loan servicers begin sending notices instructing borrowers to select a new repayment plan. Entering repayment will also exit forbearance.
  • 90 days After Notice: Forbearance ends for borrowers who haven’t selected a new repayment plan. Borrowers who fail to make a selection will be defaulted into the tiered standard plan
  • End of September 2026: The date for borrowers contacted at the start of July. 

A borrower who doesn’t get a notice until mid-July could technically have until mid-October. But sources tell us the notification period will be “compressed,” meaning most borrowers should plan around the end-of-September timeline rather than counting on extra weeks (or months).

What Happens If You Do Nothing: Borrowers who don’t pick a new plan before forbearance ends will be moved into the Standard Repayment Plan by default. That plan is typically the highest monthly payment of all repayment plans.

Missed payments will be reported once the standard 90-day delinquency window passes, and federal student loans enter default after 270 days of non-payment. Default triggers wage garnishment, Treasury offsets of tax refunds and Social Security, and collection fees.

Update Your Contact Information Now: The single most important step right now is making sure your loan servicer can actually reach you. Borrowers should:

  • Log in to StudentAid.gov and confirm the email address, mailing address, and phone number on file.
  • Log in directly to your loan servicer (MOHELA, Nelnet, EdFinancial, etc.) and update contact information there as well. Sometimes the information at StudentAid and your loan servicer are different.
  • Set up email and text alerts so a notice doesn’t get buried.

Borrowers who moved, switched email addresses, or changed servicers in the past two years are most at risk of missing the notice entirely.

What To Do Next: Replacement options for SAVE borrowers include the Income-Based Repayment (IBR) plan, the new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) once it’s available in July, and the Standard plans. While Pay As You Earn (PAYE) and Income Contingent Repayment (ICR) both still technically exist, they are ending in less than 2 years and may not be as good of an option for most borrower. Each has different payment calculations and forgiveness timelines.

How This Connects: The College Investor has tracked the SAVE plan since its rollout, including the court ruling that paused the program and the launch of the Repayment Assistance Plan.

With more than 42 million Americans holding federal student loan debt and an average student loan balance above $38,000, the end of SAVE forbearance is one of the largest single events of the decade.

Borrowers who haven’t logged in to StudentAid.gov or their servicer in the last six months should do so this week — before the July notices start hitting inboxes.

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Editor: Colin Graves

The post SAVE Forbearance Is Ending: 7 Million Borrowers Face Repayment Restart appeared first on The College Investor.

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