If youâre enrolled in SAVE, make this move while your payments remain on hold.
Thereâs been a lot of student loan noise over the past year, but little clarity for borrowers enrolled in the Saving on a Valuable Education repayment plan.
Weâve witnessed several updates to student loan programs over the past year, from proposed changes to Public Service Loan Forgiveness eligibility to the ramping up of collections efforts on defaulted student loan accounts to a new Republican-fronted bill seeking to change existing income-driven repayment plan options. But the official rejection of SAVE may have the biggest impact for the 8 million borrowers who qualified for lower monthly payments.
Now that we know SAVE is officially out, whatâs next? Should you switch to another income-driven repayment plan? Or wait it out? I talked to experts to find out when payments are expected to restart and what you should do during this downtime.
Read more:Â You May Need to Resubmit Your Student Loan IDR Plan Application. Hereâs Why
When will payments restart for SAVE student loan borrowers?
Itâs not clear when payments will start again for borrowers on the SAVE plan, but itâs looking like the end of this year would be the earliest timeframe.Â
The Department of Educationâs website says SAVE borrowers will stay in a general forbearance until at least the fall. It also directed loan servicers to adjust the income recertification deadline to no earlier than Feb. 1, 2026.Â
Robert Farrington, student loan expert and founder of The College Investor, expects the general forbearance to last even longer.Â
âBorrowers will likely see the SAVE forbearance end in mid-to-late 2026,â says Farrington. âMany borrowers are already reporting the end date of their forbearance moving to September 2026.â
Currently, loan payments for any borrower in SAVE remain on hold in a general forbearance and your balance isnât accruing interest. If youâre enrolled in a loan forgiveness program like PSLF, each paused month will not count towards your forgiveness during the pause. While you can choose to switch to an alternative repayment plan, most experts suggest sticking with SAVE, and doing this one thing ahead of payments resuming.
While your payments are paused, you wonât have to worry about your account being moved to collections. Although borrowers with defaulted loans are once again subject to collections, including wage garnishment, those enrolled in the SAVE plan donât have to worry about those consequences for now.Â
Should PSLF borrowers in SAVE switch to another payment plan?Â
If youâre a teacher, nurse or other public servant pursuing PSLF, you may be worried that the payment pause is not counting toward your 120-payment requirement. That leaves you with three options.
First, you could switch from SAVE to another income-driven repayment plan (ICR, IBR or PAYE). That way, your payments will count toward PSLFâs 120-payment requirement.Â
Alternatively, if you would have hit 120 months of on-time payments if not for the pause, you can apply for the PSLF Buyback program to get credit for your time in forbearance.Â
âThis program [allows borrowers] to make a lump-sum payment for any months spent in administrative forbearance under SAVE, ensuring those months count towards PSLF,â explains Megan Walter, NASFAA senior policy analyst.
The downside of these first two options is that borrowers have been reporting processing delays. So donât expect a fast response.Â
Lastly, if youâve recently enrolled in PSLF or are not close to receiving forgiveness, you might prefer to wait until youâre moved into a new payment plan. Yes, your months in forbearance wonât count toward your 120-payment goal, but this could give you time to start saving for a potentially higher student loan payment.Â
Whether you decide to change plans now or wait, make sure your decisions align with your financial goals. With SAVE no longer an option, itâs important to understand all your avenues for paying back your student loans.Â
Two things SAVE borrowers can do right nowÂ
That doesnât mean you should sit back and do nothing, though. Take this time to prepare for the likelihood that your payments will increase in the future by reviewing other payment plans and putting money away so youâre prepared when payments resume.
You can use the Federal Student Aidâs Loan Simulator tool to help calculate how much your monthly payment will be under different payment plans.
If you have the wiggle room in your budget, you can start paying yourself each month the same amount youâd put toward your student loan payments. Pay this money directly into a high-yield savings account so you can earn a little interest on your savings. Then, when payments resume, youâll have a cushion ready to go.

