Detailed Guide Coming Soon
We're working on a comprehensive educational guide for the Student Loan Forgiveness Calculator. Check back soon for step-by-step explanations, formulas, real-world examples, and expert tips.
A student loan forgiveness calculator estimates whether you qualify for loan forgiveness under federal programs and how much you would save compared to standard repayment. The primary forgiveness programs are Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF), which forgives the remaining balance after 120 qualifying monthly payments (10 years) while working for a qualifying employer, and income-driven repayment (IDR) forgiveness, which forgives the remaining balance after 20-25 years of payments under an IDR plan. The SAVE plan (Saving on a Valuable Education), introduced in 2023, provides the most generous IDR terms with forgiveness after 20 years for graduate loans and 10 years for borrowers with original balances under $12,000. The federal student loan landscape has undergone dramatic changes in recent years. Total outstanding student loan debt in the United States exceeds $1.75 trillion, held by approximately 43 million borrowers. The average undergraduate borrower carries approximately $28,000 in federal student loan debt, while the average graduate or professional school borrower owes $70,000-$150,000 or more. The Biden administration pursued multiple approaches to broad-based forgiveness (including a Supreme Court-rejected plan to cancel up to $20,000 per borrower) while implementing targeted relief through PSLF waivers, IDR adjustments, and borrower defense discharges. PSLF is the most valuable forgiveness program for eligible borrowers. To qualify, you must: have Direct Loans (or consolidate other federal loans into Direct Loans), be enrolled in an IDR plan or the 10-year standard plan, make 120 qualifying monthly payments (not necessarily consecutive), and work full-time for a qualifying employer (government at any level, 501(c)(3) nonprofits, AmeriCorps, Peace Corps, and certain other public service organizations). The forgiven amount is tax-free under current law. PSLF participation has increased dramatically since 2021 following the Limited PSLF Waiver and subsequent PSLF account adjustments. IDR forgiveness applies to borrowers on income-driven plans (SAVE, REPAYE, PAYE, IBR, ICR) who make payments for 20-25 years without qualifying for PSLF. The forgiven balance under IDR has historically been treated as taxable income (the tax bomb), though the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 temporarily exempts forgiven student loan debt from federal income tax through 2025. Whether this exemption will be extended is a significant open question affecting millions of borrowers approaching the 20-25 year forgiveness threshold.
PSLF Forgiveness Amount = Loan Balance at Month 120 (after 120 qualifying payments) IDR Forgiveness Amount = Loan Balance at Month 240 or 300 (after 20 or 25 years) Monthly IDR Payment = (AGI - 150% or 225% of Poverty Line) x 10% or 5% / 12 Total Savings = Standard Repayment Total - IDR Payments Total - Tax on Forgiveness (if applicable) Worked Example (PSLF): Loan balance: $120,000 (graduate school) Income: $65,000/year SAVE plan payment: ($65,000 - $22,590 x 2.25) x 10% / 12 = $117/month Total payments over 120 months: $14,040 Forgiven amount: approximately $105,000+ (tax-free) Standard repayment total: approximately $160,000
- 1Determine your loan types and consolidation needs. Only Direct Loans qualify for PSLF and most IDR plans. If you have FFEL loans, Perkins loans, or Parent PLUS loans, you must consolidate them into a Direct Consolidation Loan to access forgiveness programs. Consolidation does not necessarily reset your payment count if you took advantage of the PSLF waiver period adjustments. Check your loan types on StudentAid.gov or by contacting your loan servicer. Private student loans are not eligible for any federal forgiveness program.
- 2Enroll in an income-driven repayment plan. Four IDR plans are currently available: SAVE (new in 2023, replaces REPAYE; payments are 5% of discretionary income for undergraduate loans, 10% for graduate; discretionary income defined as income above 225% of the poverty line), PAYE (10% of discretionary income above 150% of poverty line, available for new borrowers after 2007), IBR (10% or 15% of discretionary income above 150% of poverty line, depending on when you borrowed), and ICR (20% of discretionary income or the amount of a 12-year fixed payment, whichever is less). SAVE generally provides the lowest payments for most borrowers.
- 3For PSLF, verify your employment and submit the Employment Certification Form (ECF) annually or when you change employers. Qualifying employers include federal, state, local, and tribal government agencies at any level, 501(c)(3) tax-exempt nonprofit organizations, AmeriCorps and Peace Corps service, and certain other nonprofit organizations providing qualifying public services. Submit the ECF (now integrated into the PSLF Help Tool on StudentAid.gov) to MOHELA (the current PSLF servicer) to track your qualifying payment count. Full-time employment is generally defined as 30+ hours per week (or meeting the employer's definition of full-time).
- 4Make qualifying monthly payments toward your 120-payment (PSLF) or 240/300-payment (IDR forgiveness) goal. Qualifying payments must be: made under a qualifying repayment plan (IDR or standard 10-year for PSLF), made in full, made on time (within 15 days of the due date), and made while employed full-time by a qualifying employer (for PSLF). Payments during forbearance or deferment generally do not count, though certain administrative forbearances have been credited under recent adjustments. The CARES Act payment pause (March 2020 through August 2023) counted as qualifying payments for both PSLF and IDR forgiveness.
- 5Recertify your income annually by the deadline specified by your servicer. IDR plan payments are recalculated each year based on your updated income (AGI from your most recent tax return) and family size. Failure to recertify by the deadline results in your payment reverting to the standard 10-year payment amount, which can be significantly higher. Under the SAVE plan, if you fail to recertify, you are placed on an interest-accruing forbearance rather than having your payment increased, though this forbearance time may not count toward forgiveness.
- 6Calculate your total savings from forgiveness versus standard repayment. Compare: total amount paid under the IDR plan over 10 years (PSLF) or 20-25 years (IDR forgiveness), the forgiven balance, any tax liability on the forgiven amount (for IDR forgiveness if the tax exemption expires after 2025), and the total amount you would pay under the standard 10-year plan. For many public service workers with graduate school debt, PSLF provides six-figure savings. For IDR forgiveness, the savings are partially offset by the longer repayment period and potential tax bomb, but can still be substantial for high-debt, lower-income borrowers.
- 7Consider strategies to maximize your forgiveness benefit. For PSLF candidates: minimize your monthly payment by filing taxes as married filing separately (if your spouse has income) to reduce your AGI, maximize retirement contributions (which reduce AGI), and choose the IDR plan with the lowest payment (typically SAVE). For IDR forgiveness candidates: similar AGI-reduction strategies apply, and consider whether paying extra toward loans or investing the difference provides better long-term returns. For all borrowers: avoid unnecessary forbearance (which pauses your payment count), keep documentation of employment and payments, and use the PSLF Help Tool regularly to track progress.
A public school teacher with $35,000 in Direct Loans earning $48,000. SAVE plan payment: ($48,000 - $22,590 x 2.25) x 5% / 12 = $118/month (undergraduate rate of 5%). Over 120 months: $14,160 in total payments. Approximate forgiven amount: $22,000 (accounting for interest accrual). Under standard repayment, total payments would be approximately $45,000. PSLF saves approximately $31,000. Under SAVE's special provision, borrowers with original balances under $12,000 receive forgiveness after just 10 years of payments.
A legal aid attorney with $180,000 in law school debt. SAVE plan payment based on AGI of $70,000 and family size of 3: ($70,000 - $39,450 x 2.25) x 10% / 12 = $236/month. Total payments over 120 months: $28,320. Forgiven balance (with interest): approximately $165,000-$180,000 (tax-free). Without PSLF on standard repayment: approximately $230,000 total. PSLF saves over $200,000. This dramatic savings is why PSLF is particularly valuable for graduate and professional school borrowers in public service.
A borrower with $45,000 in undergraduate loans working in the private sector (not PSLF-eligible). SAVE plan payment: approximately $80/month. Over 20 years: approximately $19,200 in total payments. The interest subsidy under SAVE prevents the balance from growing. Estimated forgiven balance: $30,000-$40,000. If the 2025 tax exemption expires, the forgiven amount would be taxed as ordinary income, potentially creating a $7,000-$10,000 tax bill. Standard repayment total: approximately $57,000.
A physician with $250,000 in medical school debt. During 4-year residency at a hospital (qualifying employer), SAVE payments are approximately $210/month ($10,080 total). After residency, if the physician stays at a qualifying employer at $300,000 income, payments increase to approximately $2,135/month for 6 remaining years ($153,720). Total paid: $163,800. Forgiven: approximately $100,000+. If the physician enters private practice, PSLF is lost and the standard repayment total exceeds $350,000.
The PSLF program has transformed career planning for graduates with significant student loan debt. Law school graduates choosing between high-paying private practice and lower-paying public interest work use PSLF calculations to demonstrate that public service careers, combined with loan forgiveness, can provide comparable long-term financial outcomes. Many law schools and medical schools offer loan repayment assistance programs (LRAPs) that supplement IDR payments during the PSLF qualifying period, further reducing the financial gap between public and private sector careers.
Federal student loan servicers (MOHELA for PSLF, and various servicers for other loans) process millions of IDR recertifications and forgiveness applications annually. The Department of Education has invested heavily in improving servicer performance after widespread complaints about lost paperwork, incorrect payment counts, and wrongful denials. The PSLF Help Tool on StudentAid.gov allows borrowers to verify employer eligibility, track qualifying payments, and submit employment certifications electronically.
Employer human resources departments in qualifying organizations (government, nonprofits) increasingly promote PSLF eligibility as a recruitment and retention tool. Hospitals, school districts, legal aid organizations, and government agencies highlight PSLF in job postings and benefits packages. Some employers offer student loan repayment contributions ($100-$500 per month) as an additional benefit, which both reduces the loan balance and makes qualifying IDR payments lower (since the employer contribution covers part of the payment).
Tax professionals must navigate complex student loan tax rules including: the student loan interest deduction (up to $2,500 of interest paid, phasing out at higher incomes), tax implications of forgiven student loan debt (taxable for IDR forgiveness but tax-free for PSLF and through 2025 for all forgiveness), the interaction between filing status (married filing separately can lower IDR payments but lose other tax benefits), and employer student loan repayment contributions (tax-free up to $5,250 per year through 2025 under CARES Act provisions).
Parent PLUS loans have limited forgiveness options.
Parent PLUS loans are not directly eligible for most IDR plans or PSLF. However, if a parent consolidates their Parent PLUS loans into a Direct Consolidation Loan, the consolidated loan becomes eligible for ICR (Income-Contingent Repayment) and, through ICR, for PSLF. ICR payments are higher than other IDR plans (20% of discretionary income), but PSLF still provides significant savings for parents with large balances who work for qualifying employers. The double consolidation loophole (consolidating twice to access SAVE or other IDR plans) was closed in 2023.
Borrower defense to repayment provides loan discharge for students who were defrauded by their school.
If your school misrepresented job placement rates, graduation rates, accreditation status, or other material facts that influenced your decision to enroll and borrow, you may be eligible for partial or full discharge of your federal student loans. The Department of Education has approved billions in borrower defense discharges for students of schools including ITT Technical Institute, Corinthian Colleges, DeVry University, and others found to have engaged in institutional misconduct.
Total and Permanent Disability (TPD) discharge cancels federal student loan
Total and Permanent Disability (TPD) discharge cancels federal student loan debt for borrowers who are totally and permanently disabled. Qualification requires certification from a physician, the Social Security Administration (SSDI or SSI determination), or the Department of Veterans Affairs (100% disability rating). TPD discharge was previously subject to a three-year monitoring period (during which earning above the poverty level could reinstate the loans), but this monitoring period has been eliminated for most borrowers. The discharged amount is tax-free through 2025.
| Plan | Payment Calculation | Forgiveness Timeline | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| SAVE | 5% (UG) or 10% (Grad) of income above 225% FPL | 20 years (UG) / 25 years (Grad) | Interest subsidy; early forgiveness for small balances |
| PAYE | 10% of income above 150% FPL | 20 years | Payment capped at standard 10-year amount |
| IBR (new) | 10% of income above 150% FPL | 20 years | For new borrowers after July 2014 |
| IBR (old) | 15% of income above 150% FPL | 25 years | For borrowers before July 2014 |
| ICR | 20% of income or 12-year fixed equivalent | 25 years | Only IDR option for Parent PLUS (after consolidation) |
How does PSLF work?
PSLF forgives the remaining balance on Direct Loans after you make 120 qualifying monthly payments (10 years) while working full-time for a qualifying employer (government, 501(c)(3) nonprofit, AmeriCorps, Peace Corps). Payments must be made under an income-driven repayment plan or the standard 10-year plan. The forgiven amount is tax-free. You must submit employment certification annually and apply for forgiveness through MOHELA after reaching 120 payments.
What is the SAVE plan?
SAVE (Saving on a Valuable Education) is the newest and most generous income-driven repayment plan, replacing REPAYE in 2023. SAVE calculates discretionary income using 225% of the poverty line (versus 150% for older plans), sets payments at 5% of discretionary income for undergraduate loans (10% for graduate), provides an interest subsidy that prevents balance growth when payments do not cover interest, and offers early forgiveness for small loan balances (10 years for original balances under $12,000, with one additional year per $1,000 above $12,000).
Is student loan forgiveness taxable?
PSLF forgiveness is permanently tax-free under federal law. IDR forgiveness (after 20-25 years) is normally taxable as ordinary income but is temporarily exempt from federal income tax through December 31, 2025, under the American Rescue Plan Act. Whether this exemption will be extended is uncertain. State tax treatment varies. Borrowers approaching IDR forgiveness after 2025 should plan for a potential tax liability equal to the forgiven amount multiplied by their marginal tax rate.
Can I qualify for PSLF if I work part-time at a qualifying employer?
Generally, no. PSLF requires full-time employment, defined as working at least 30 hours per week at a qualifying employer (or meeting the employer's definition of full-time). However, you can combine part-time employment at two qualifying employers to meet the 30-hour threshold. Adjunct professors, part-time government contractors, and seasonal workers should carefully track their hours to ensure they meet the full-time requirement.
What happens to my PSLF progress if I leave public service?
Your qualifying payment count is preserved if you leave public service and later return. Payments made while not employed by a qualifying employer simply do not count toward the 120-payment requirement. You can resume accumulating qualifying payments whenever you return to qualifying employment. There is no time limit for completing the 120 payments, and they do not need to be consecutive. Some borrowers take years of private sector employment between periods of public service.
Should I pay extra on my loans if I am pursuing forgiveness?
Generally, no. If you are pursuing PSLF or IDR forgiveness, paying more than the required monthly amount reduces the balance that will eventually be forgiven. Every extra dollar you pay is a dollar less that will be forgiven tax-free. The optimal strategy for forgiveness candidates is to minimize monthly payments (through IDR enrollment and AGI reduction strategies) and invest the savings elsewhere. This strategy reverses the conventional wisdom about paying off debt aggressively.
Pro Tip
If you work for a qualifying employer and have federal student loans, submit the PSLF Employment Certification Form today, even if you are years away from reaching 120 payments. Annual certification allows MOHELA to verify your employment and track your qualifying payment count in real time. Many borrowers who waited to certify discovered errors or disqualifying factors that could have been corrected earlier. The PSLF Help Tool at StudentAid.gov makes the process straightforward and provides immediate feedback on employer eligibility.
Did you know?
The Public Service Loan Forgiveness program was created by Congress in 2007 but had an extremely low approval rate in its early years. When the first borrowers became eligible for forgiveness in October 2017 (having made 120 payments over 10 years), the Department of Education initially approved fewer than 1% of applications. By 2023, after the Limited PSLF Waiver and subsequent reforms, the approval rate improved dramatically, and over $62 billion in PSLF forgiveness has been approved for more than 900,000 borrowers. The turnaround represents one of the largest corrections in federal benefits program administration.