Student Loan Repayment Resumed: 5 Steps To Manage Payments

Navigate the resumption of student loan payments with expert strategies, repayment plans, budgeting tips, and forgiveness options to regain financial control.

By Sneha Tete, Integrated MA, Certified Relationship Coach
Created on

Student Loan Repayment Resumed

Federal student loan payments have resumed after a prolonged pause, requiring borrowers to reintegrate payments into their budgets. This guide outlines key steps to manage repayments effectively, from reviewing balances to exploring forgiveness options, helping you achieve financial stability.

Steps to Take Now That Student Loan Payments Have Resumed

With repayments restarting, proactive management is essential to avoid delinquency. Follow these structured steps based on recommendations from Equifax and federal guidelines.

  • Review your student loan balance on your Dashboard. Log into your account at StudentAid.gov or your loan servicer’s portal to verify your total balance, interest accrual, and payment due date. Accurate information prevents surprises.
  • Choose a repayment plan based on your income. Use the Loan Simulator tool on StudentAid.gov to compare plans like Standard, Income-Driven, or Graduated, tailoring to your earnings and family size.
  • Visit your loan servicer’s website if you need help. Loan servicers provide personalized support, payment history, and plan enrollment assistance. Update contact details immediately.
  • Pay your student loans online through your loan servicer’s website. Enroll in autopay for on-time payments and potential interest rate reductions. This ensures compliance and builds positive credit history.
  • Review the various loan forgiveness options. Explore programs like Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) or Teacher Loan Forgiveness if eligible, as they can erase remaining balances after qualifying payments.

Understand Your Repayment Plan Options

Federal loans offer diverse plans to fit different financial situations. Selecting the right one minimizes total costs and aligns with your income.

Plan NameDurationPayment StructureBest For
Standard Repayment Plan10 yearsFixed monthly amountBorrowers with stable income seeking lowest total interest
Graduated Repayment Plan10 yearsStarts low, increases over timeEarly-career borrowers expecting income growth
Extended Repayment Plan25 yearsFixed or graduated; requires >$30,000 debtHigh-balance borrowers needing lower monthly payments
Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE)20-25 years10% of discretionary incomeLower-income borrowers; eligible for forgiveness
Pay As You Earn (PAYE)20 years10% of discretionary income, capped at Standard planRecent graduates with high debt-to-income
Income-Based Repayment (IBR)20-25 years10-15% of discretionary incomeModerate-income with federal Direct loans
Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR)25 years20% of discretionary income or 12-year fixedParent PLUS or grad loan borrowers

Income-driven plans recalculate annually based on AGI and family size, often leading to forgiveness of remaining balances. However, they may increase total interest paid compared to Standard plans.

Budgeting for Your Student Loan Payments

Integrating loan payments requires a solid budget. Prioritize essentials and adjust discretionary spending to accommodate repayments.

Use the 50/30/20 budgeting rule: Allocate 50% to needs (rent, food, loans), 30% to wants, and 20% to savings/debt payoff. Customize based on your situation—reduce wants if payments strain your budget.

  • List all income sources and mandatory expenses first.
  • Calculate disposable income after taxes and necessities.
  • Allocate surplus to extra loan payments or emergency fund.
  • Track monthly via apps or spreadsheets for adjustments.

Prioritize debts using the avalanche method: Pay minimums on all, then target highest-interest loans first to save on total costs.

Handling Hardship: Deferment and Forbearance

If payments are unaffordable, seek temporary relief. Contact your servicer promptly to qualify.

Deferment pauses payments without interest accrual on subsidized loans for reasons like unemployment, economic hardship, or school re-enrollment. Unsubsidized loans accrue interest.

Forbearance reduces or pauses payments but interest accrues on all loans. Available for financial distress, medical costs, or military service; limited to 3 years aggregate.

OptionInterest AccrualQualifying ReasonsDuration Limit
DefermentNo on subsidized; yes on unsubsidizedUnemployment, hardship, school, militaryVaries by type
ForbearanceYes on allFinancial difficulty, medical, employment changeUp to 3 years total

Loan Forgiveness and Discharge Options

Qualifying for forgiveness can eliminate debt. Maintain on-time payments under eligible plans.

  • Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF): 120 payments while employed full-time by government/nonprofit; use PSLF Help Tool.
  • Teacher Loan Forgiveness: $17,500-$20,000 for 5 years in low-income schools.
  • Total and Permanent Disability Discharge: Loans canceled if permanently disabled (certified by VA/SSA).
  • Death Discharge: Automatic for borrower or dependent.

Check eligibility annually; recent expansions under Biden-Harris administration have approved billions in forgiveness.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What if I can’t afford my payments?

Contact your servicer for income-driven plans, deferment, or forbearance. Never ignore bills to avoid default.

Does autopay help?

Yes, it ensures on-time payments and qualifies you for 0.25% interest rate reduction on Direct loans.

Are private loans covered?

No, this guide focuses on federal loans. Private loans lack these options; refinance if rates are high.

How do I check my loan type?

Visit StudentAid.gov/login for details on Direct, FFEL, or Perkins loans.

Can I prepay without penalty?

Federal loans allow penalty-free prepayments; apply to principal for maximum savings.

Long-Term Financial Health Tips

Beyond immediate steps, build habits for success: Monitor credit reports via AnnualCreditReport.com, as on-time payments boost scores. Equifax notes student debt impacts 45 million Americans—strategic repayment enhances portfolios. Save for retirement alongside debt payoff; compound interest favors early action.

Stay informed via Federal Student Aid updates, as policies evolve (e.g., recent IDR adjustments). If self-employed, use tax returns for income certification.

References

  1. Student loan repayments — Equifax UK. 2024-01-12. https://www.equifax.co.uk/resources/students/student-loan-repayments.html
  2. How to Prepare for Student Loan Repayment — Equifax. 2023-10-15. https://www.equifax.com/personal/education/loans/articles/-/learn/student-loan-repayment-options/
  3. Student Loan Payment Reporting Resumed — Equifax. 2023-09-01. https://www.equifax.com/personal/education/personal-finance/articles/-/learn/student-loan-repayment-resume/
  4. How Can I Prioritize Repaying Multiple Debts? — Equifax. 2024-02-20. https://www.equifax.com/personal/education/debt-management/articles/-/learn/prioritize-debt-payments/
  5. Student Loan Repayment Risk. Here’s How to Get Ready — Equifax. 2023-08-10. https://www.equifax.com/newsroom/all-news/-/story/student-loan-repayment-risk-here-s-how-to-get-ready/
Sneha Tete
Sneha TeteBeauty & Lifestyle Writer
Sneha is a relationships and lifestyle writer with a strong foundation in applied linguistics and certified training in relationship coaching. She brings over five years of writing experience to fundfoundary,  crafting thoughtful, research-driven content that empowers readers to build healthier relationships, boost emotional well-being, and embrace holistic living.

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