Feds plan for student loan interest rates could cost taxpayers
The U.S. Department of Education is reducing student loan interest rates for borrowers, but critics argue the move could cost taxpayers billions of dollars.
The Education Department announced this week that federal student loan borrowers enrolled in automatic payments will be eligible for a 1% interest rate reduction beginning July 1.
Borrowers who plan to enroll in auto pay by Sept. 30, 2026, and those who are enrolled, will receive this reduction in the interest rate through June 30, 2028.
Federal student loan interest rates currently range from 6.39% to 7.94% for undergraduate and graduate borrowers. The average student loan balance in the U.S. is about $40,000, while the federal student loan portfolio totals approximately $1.8 trillion.
Education Under Secretary Nicholas Kent said the Trump administration’s temporary student loan interest rate reduction is intended to help borrowers manage repayment and explore affordable repayment plan options.
Before COVID-19, over 80% of student loan borrowers were actively in repayment plans and currently, due to the previous administration’s policies on student loan forgiveness programs, only 40% are enrolled in either auto pay to active repayment.
The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit, criticized the Education Department’s new policy.
According to the organization, the change could cost taxpayers at least $5 billion and effectively amounts to a form of student debt cancellation because it reduces the total amount borrowers repay over the life of their loans rather than lowering monthly payments.
CRFB President Maya MacGuineas said the policy primarily benefits borrowers who are already making payments on their loans.
“Make no mistake: Quadrupling the auto-pay incentive is debt cancellation by another name. And worse, it’s targeted at people already making repayments,” MacGuineas said. “The auto-pay interest deductions don’t even reduce monthly payments or improve affordability — they just wipe out debt balances, especially for high-earning professionals that are already doing quite well.”
MacGuineas said expanding the discount could set a precedent for future administrations to further reduce or eliminate student loan interest rates through executive action.
Instead of expanding loan benefits, the CRFB said the Trump administration should focus on addressing the projected $100 billion shortfall in the Pell Grant program, which could reduce aid for low-income students.
Latest News Stories
DEA surge against cartel turns up fentanyl, millions in cash, guns
Illinois quick hits: Woman charged in Metro East murder; taxpayer funded homeowner relief fund announced
WATCH: Former state lawmakers endorse, donors support GOP candidate Dabrowski
Louisiana native awaits Senate confrmation
Portland protests Trump’s plan to send federal troops to protect ICE facilities
With potential mass transit service cuts looming, IL legislators seek reforms
Trump asks Supreme Court to review birthright citizenship case again
Trump’s limited drug tariffs might not bring back U.S. manufacturing
Government shutdown deadline days away, but Dems don’t budge on demands
Report: 25 state governments don’t have enough money to pay their bills
Officials react to DOJ voter roll lawsuit
Defense says more time needed for Tyler Robinson case
Tribal members want 15 minutes for oral arguments in tariff case
Welfare reform pilot to reduce government dependency is ‘step forward’, scholar says