Changes to Federal Financial Aid

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act makes significant changes to federal student loans, reshaping how students and families borrow and repay money for college. Starting July 1, 2026, the law introduces new borrowing caps, eliminates certain loan programs and replaces the current range of income-driven repayment plans with a simplified system.

Students and families are encouraged to consult official resources from the U.S. Department of Education, including studentaid.gov, for the most current and authoritative guidance regarding federal student aid programs.

The Office of Financial Aid will continue to closely monitor all legislative changes and final regulations as they are published to ensure we provide timely and accurate information to our students and families. If you have any questions about these changes, please do not hesitate to contact us.

Jump to: Federal Parent PLUS Loans | Graduate students | Repayment plan changes | Additional guidance

Federal Parent PLUS Loans

Beginning July 1, changes to federal law will affect:

  • How much families can borrow through the federal Parent PLUS Loan program.
  • The repayment options available for loans borrowed on or after that date.

Borrowing Limits

Effective July 1, new Parent PLUS Loan limits are:

  • $20,000 per dependent student, per year (annual limit)
  • $65,000 per dependent student, total (aggregate limit)

What You Need to Know

Some families may temporarily avoid the new limits. To qualify:

  • The student must remain continuously enrolled in the same program at the same institution as of June 30.
  • Either the parent received a Parent PLUS Loan for that program before July 1, or the student received a Direct Loan (subsidized or unsubsidized) for that program before July 1.

If eligible, families may continue borrowing above the new caps for up to three academic years if the student remains continuously enrolled.

The exception ends after three academic years or if the student withdraws, changes programs, transfers or graduates. At that point, the $20,000 annual and $65,000 total limits apply.

Parent PLUS Loans borrowed on or after July 1 – including federal consolidation loans that include Parent PLUS Loans – can only be repaid under a single new fixed repayment plan.

What is Changing?

  • The only repayment option available for Parent PLUS Loans taken out on or after July 1 is a new tiered standard repayment plan.
  • The tiered standard repayment plan offers a fixed monthly payment over 10 to 25 years, based on the total outstanding loan balance.
  • If a borrower has existing Parent PLUS Loans and borrows a new Parent PLUS Loan on or after July 1, all Parent PLUS Loans must be repaid under the same plan.

Please note: Families who have Parent PLUS Loans in repayment and borrow a new Parent PLUS Loan on or after July 1 will have all of their Parent PLUS Loans moved to the tiered standard repayment plan, which may change their monthly payment amount.

What is Changing?

  • Borrowers who consolidate their Parent PLUS Loans into a Direct Consolidation Loan before July 1 and enroll in the Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) plan may remain in ICR through June 30, 2028.
  • After June 30, 2028, the ICR plan will sunset, and borrowers will be moved to the Income-Based Repayment plan.

The new tiered standard repayment plan does not qualify for Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF). As a result, borrowing a new Parent PLUS Loan on or after July 1 may prevent a borrower from receiving PSLF – even if they have already made qualifying payments – because all Parent PLUS Loans must be repaid under the new tiered standard repayment plan.

To preserve PSLF eligibility, a parent borrower must:

  • Have consolidated Parent PLUS Loans into a Direct Consolidation Loan and enrolled in the Income-Contingent Repayment plan prior to July 1.
  • Not borrow a new Parent PLUS Loan on or after July 1.

Please note: Families who are planning to borrow on or after July 1 but wish to preserve PSLF eligibility should carefully consider other financing options and speak with the Office of Financial Aid.

Graduate Students

Beginning July 1, changes to federal law will affect:

  • The amount graduate students can borrow.
  • The types of federal loans available.
  • Repayment options after graduation.

Students who are unsure how these changes apply to their situation are strongly encouraged to contact the Office of Financial Aid before making enrollment or borrowing decisions.

What You Need to Know

Beginning July 1:

  • The Graduate PLUS Loan program will be eliminated, unless a student qualifies for a limited exception.
  • The annual Direct Unsubsidized Loan limit remains $20,500.
  • A $100,000 aggregate limit will apply to Direct Unsubsidized Loans for graduate study.
  • A $257,500 lifetime limit will apply to all Federal Direct Loans (excluding Graduate PLUS and Parent PLUS loans) borrowed across all levels of study.

Students who currently rely on Graduate PLUS loans should carefully review whether they qualify for the limited exception and understand what circumstances could cause them to lose eligibility. Students who qualify for the limited exception are exempt from the new aggregate and lifetime limits during their exception period.

The law allows some students to continue borrowing through the Graduate PLUS program – and remain exempt from the new aggregate and lifetime limits – for up to three years, through their time to completion.

To qualify for the limited exception, a student must:

  • Remain continuously enrolled in the same program of study at the same institution in which they were enrolled as of June 30.
  • Have had a Direct Loan (Direct Unsubsidized or Graduate PLUS) disbursed for that same program before July 1.

Can students qualify for the limited exception if they do not currently meet the criteria?

Possibly. Taking out a federal student loan (Direct Unsubsidized or Graduate PLUS) before June 30 may allow a student to retain access to Graduate PLUS Loans and current borrowing limits under the limited exception.

However, borrowing solely to “lock in” eligibility is not the right choice for everyone. Federal student loans have long-term financial consequences. Students should speak with the Office of Financial Aid before deciding to borrow.

What happens when a student no longer qualifies for the limited exception?

After three academic years – or earlier if the student withdraws, ceases enrollment, changes programs or completes their degree – they will no longer be eligible for Graduate PLUS Loans and will become subject to the new aggregate and lifetime borrowing limits.

Repayment Plan Changes

Students who borrow a new federal Direct Loan on or after July 1 will be eligible for only two repayment plans.

Tiered Standard Repayment

  • Fixed monthly payments
  • Repayment term between 10 and 25 years, depending on total amount borrowed

Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP)

  • Monthly payments based on income
  • Loan forgiveness after 30 years of repayment
  • Qualifies for Public Service Loan Forgiveness

What You Need to Know

Students who do not borrow a new federal Direct Loan on or after July 1 may continue to access current repayment options, including:

  • Standard (10-year), Graduated or Extended Repayment
  • Income-Based Repayment
  • Pay As You Earn (PAYE)
  • Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR)

The PAYE and ICR plans will sunset effective July 1, 2028. Borrowers enrolled in PAYE or ICR must select another eligible repayment plan before July 1, 2028, or they will automatically be moved to the Repayment Assistance Plan.

Beginning in July 2026, these borrowers may also choose to enroll in:

  • Repayment Assistance Plan
  • Tiered Standard Repayment

Salve does not offer any programs that are classified as “professional degree” programs under the recent changes. Because of this, the provisions in the new law that specifically affect professional degree programs do not apply to Salve’s graduate or doctoral students.

Our graduate and doctoral programs remain structured as they were prior to these legislative updates, and students enrolled in these programs are not subject to the changes tied to the federal redefinition of professional degrees.

Additional Guidance

Loan Proration for Less Than Full-Time Enrollment

Federal guidance indicates that loan eligibility for students enrolled less than full time may change beginning with the 2026-2027 academic year. These potential changes could affect how federal loan amounts are determined for students who enroll below full-time status.

Additional information will be shared once final federal regulations and implementation guidance are released.

Pell Grant Eligibility

Recent legislative updates also affect Pell Grant eligibility:

  • Students may become ineligible for a Pell Grant if their non-federal grants and scholarships equal or exceed their cost of attendance.
  • Students whose Student Aid Index is more than twice the annual maximum Pell Grant award will not qualify for Pell Grant funding.

Students with questions about how these changes may affect their eligibility should contact the Office of Financial Aid for individualized guidance.

Asset Reporting Changes

The legislation reinstates certain asset exemptions in the federal aid calculation, including:

  • The exemption of family farms
  • The exemption of family-owned small businesses
  • A new exemption for family-owned commercial fisheries

These changes may positively impact some families by excluding these assets from federal financial aid eligibility calculations.

This page was prepared for informational purposes only. It reflects our current understanding and interpretation of federal student loan regulations and recent legislative changes; however, it does not constitute an official or legally binding statement of federal policy.