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The PSLF (Public Service Loan Forgiveness) Calculator tracks your progress toward loan forgiveness under the federal PSLF program, which forgives the remaining balance on Direct Loans after 120 qualifying monthly payments (10 years) while working full-time for an eligible public service employer. Qualifying employers include federal, state, and local government agencies, 501(c)(3) nonprofit organizations, and certain other nonprofits providing qualifying public services. Unlike IDR forgiveness (20-25 years), PSLF forgiveness is always tax-free under IRC Section 108(f)(1). The calculator estimates your qualifying payment count, projected remaining payments, the amount that will be forgiven, and the total cost comparison between pursuing PSLF and simply repaying the loan on a standard or extended plan.
PSLF Forgiveness Amount = Remaining Loan Balance after 120 qualifying payments. Total Cost with PSLF = Sum of 120 Monthly IDR Payments. Savings = Total Standard Repayment Cost - Total PSLF Cost
- 1Enter your total Direct Loan balance, interest rate, and current qualifying payment count. You can find your payment count on the PSLF tracker at studentaid.gov or by submitting the PSLF Help Tool (formerly ECF).
- 2Confirm your employer qualifies: government (federal, state, local, tribal), 501(c)(3) nonprofit, or other nonprofit providing qualifying services (emergency management, public health, public education, etc.). You must work full-time (30+ hours/week or employer's definition).
- 3Select your current IDR plan. To maximize PSLF forgiveness, you want the lowest possible monthly payment, which means using the SAVE plan (5-10% of discretionary income) or PAYE (10%) rather than the standard 10-year plan or ICR (20%).
- 4Enter your AGI, family size, and expected income growth. The calculator projects your monthly IDR payment for each of the remaining qualifying months until you reach 120 total payments.
- 5The calculator sums all projected payments over the remaining qualifying period to determine your total out-of-pocket cost, then subtracts this from the projected loan balance to determine the forgiveness amount.
- 6Compare the PSLF path against alternatives: standard 10-year repayment (no forgiveness), aggressive payoff, or 20/25-year IDR forgiveness. PSLF is usually best for borrowers with large balances relative to income working in eligible employment.
- 7Review action items: submit the PSLF Help Tool annually (or whenever you change employers), ensure you are on an eligible repayment plan, and maintain full-time qualifying employment until reaching 120 payments.
On SAVE, initial payment is approximately $53/month for undergraduate loans. Over 84 remaining months with 3% annual income growth, total payments sum to ~$34,500. Remaining balance at month 120 (including accrued interest, offset by SAVE's interest subsidy) is approximately $32,000, which is forgiven tax-free.
With a family of 3, the SAVE discretionary income threshold is higher, resulting in lower payments. At 6.8% interest on $90K, the balance grows despite payments, but SAVE's interest subsidy limits growth. After 120 total payments, a substantial balance remains and is forgiven entirely tax-free.
With $180K in graduate loans, the SAVE plan payment starts at ~$331/month (10% of discretionary income for grad loans). Even with 4% annual income growth, the 10-year standard payment would be $2,093/month. PSLF saves over $160,000 in total repayment costs.
Public school teachers, social workers, and nurses evaluating whether to stay in lower-paying public service roles for PSLF versus pursuing higher-paying private sector positions.
Government attorneys and public defenders with $150,000+ in law school debt calculating whether PSLF will forgive more than the income premium they would earn in private practice.
Nonprofit employees verifying their organization's 501(c)(3) status qualifies for PSLF and tracking qualifying payments to ensure they are on pace for forgiveness.
Military service members and federal employees including PSLF in their total compensation analysis, as the forgiveness benefit can be worth $50,000-$200,000+ over 10 years.
Career changers deciding whether to take a qualifying public service position for the PSLF benefit versus staying in the private sector and using standard or IDR repayment.
IDR Account Adjustment (Ongoing)
The Department of Education's ongoing IDR account adjustment is reviewing borrower accounts and providing credit toward IDR and PSLF forgiveness for certain periods that previously did not count, including long forbearance periods, some deferments, and time on non-qualifying repayment plans. This adjustment has already resulted in forgiveness for hundreds of thousands of borrowers who were previously denied or had incorrect payment counts. Check studentaid.gov for the latest status.
Borrower Defense to Repayment + PSLF
Borrowers who attended schools that engaged in fraud or misrepresentation may qualify for both Borrower Defense discharge and PSLF. These are separate programs. If your school closed or was found to have defrauded you, a Borrower Defense application may result in full or partial loan discharge regardless of PSLF status. Any payments made during the Borrower Defense review period may count toward PSLF if other requirements are met.
Military Service and PSLF
Active-duty military service counts as qualifying employment for PSLF. Additionally, time spent on active duty deployment may qualify for the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) interest rate cap of 6%. Military service members can also combine PSLF with military-specific benefits like the Post-9/11 GI Bill for new education and Military Service Deferment. National Guard and Reserve members on active duty also qualify.
| Requirement | Details | Common Pitfall |
|---|---|---|
| Loan Type | Direct Loans only (Subsidized, Unsubsidized, PLUS, Consolidation) | FFEL/Perkins must be consolidated first |
| Employer | Government (fed/state/local), 501(c)(3), qualifying nonprofit | For-profit government contractors do NOT qualify |
| Employment | Full-time (30+ hours/week) | Part-time at one qualifying employer does not count alone |
| Repayment Plan | Any IDR plan or 10-yr standard | Standard plan leaves nothing to forgive |
| Payments | 120 qualifying monthly payments | Forbearance/deferment months usually do not count |
| Payment Amount | Full scheduled amount paid on time | $0 payments under IDR count as qualifying |
| Certification | Submit PSLF Help Tool (recommended annually) | Not submitting delays forgiveness processing |
Is PSLF forgiveness taxable?
No. PSLF forgiveness is permanently tax-free under IRC Section 108(f)(1). This is different from IDR forgiveness after 20-25 years, which may be taxable (though temporarily tax-free through 2025). The tax-free nature of PSLF is one of its most significant advantages.
What counts as full-time employment for PSLF?
You must work at least 30 hours per week for a qualifying employer (or whatever your employer considers full-time, if more than 30 hours). Multiple part-time positions with qualifying employers can be combined to meet the 30-hour threshold. Contractual employment through a for-profit staffing agency does NOT qualify.
Do I need to work for the same employer for all 120 payments?
No. You can change jobs between qualifying employers. The 120 payments do not need to be consecutive. If you leave public service and return later, your previous qualifying payments still count. However, any payments made while NOT working for a qualifying employer do not count.
What happens if my PSLF application is denied?
If denied, you can request reconsideration through the Department of Education. Common denial reasons include non-qualifying loans (FFEL instead of Direct), non-qualifying repayment plan, or non-qualifying employer. Many historical denials were addressed by the 2022 PSLF waiver and the ongoing IDR account adjustment. You can also continue making qualifying payments and reapply.
Which repayment plan should I use for PSLF?
The SAVE plan typically produces the lowest payments, maximizing forgiveness. For undergraduate loans, SAVE charges only 5% of discretionary income (vs 10% for PAYE/IBR). For graduate loans, SAVE and PAYE are both 10% but SAVE has a higher poverty threshold (225% vs 150%), resulting in lower payments. Avoid the standard or extended plans, which reduce the forgiveness benefit.
Can Parent PLUS loans qualify for PSLF?
Not directly. Parent PLUS loans must be consolidated into a Direct Consolidation Loan and repaid under ICR (the only eligible IDR plan for consolidated PLUS loans). After consolidation, the 120-payment count restarts from zero. The ICR payments (20% of discretionary income) are higher than other IDR plans, reducing the forgiveness benefit.
Consejo Pro
Submit the PSLF Help Tool every year, even if you have not changed employers. This creates a contemporaneous record of your qualifying employment and allows the Department of Education to track your payments in real-time. When you finally reach 120 payments, your forgiveness application will be processed much faster if you have been certifying annually rather than submitting 10 years of employment verification all at once.
¿Sabías que?
The PSLF program was created in 2007, meaning the first borrowers became eligible for forgiveness in October 2017. Shockingly, of the first wave of applicants, 99% were rejected due to having the wrong loan type, wrong repayment plan, or insufficient qualifying payments. This led to the TEPSLF (Temporary Expanded PSLF) program, the 2022 Limited PSLF Waiver, and major program reforms. As of 2025, over 1 million borrowers have received PSLF forgiveness totaling more than $74 billion.