The Biden Administration wants to provide student debt relief by modifying Income Driven Replacement IDR student loans. In my view, IDR loans are costly to taxpayers, difficult to administer, fail to assist many student borrowers in need of assistance, and incentivize some borrowers to take on too much debt.
My preferred approach, which will better target student borrowers in need of assistance at lower cost to taxpayers, involves several modifications to standard and IDR loans and some modifications to the bankruptcy code. This post addresses some general issues on IDR loan payments and some specific issues raised by the Biden Administrations reform efforts.
What determines the choice between an IDR student loan and a traditional student loan?
An IDR loan is the most viable way to prevent default tor many people leaving college with substantial student debt and a relatively modest starting salary.
- A student borrower leaving college with $25,000 in student debt at a 5.0 percent interest rate would pay $3,182 per year on their student loan. Total loan payments on an IDR loan that charges 10 percent of disposable income would come to $1,813.
The payment differential between the conventional and IDR loan will change with changes in income and marital status.
Increases in salary increase IDR loan payments which can cause the borrower to shift to a conventional loan. The decision to convert the IDR loan to a conventional loan ends the possibility of a partial loan discharge. (It would usually be very foolish for a person to turn down a nice raise at work to remain eligible for a loan discharge).
Increases in household income after marriage will often increase IDR payments and can induce the borrower to shift from IDR loans to conventional loans. A married IDR borrower can reduce the increase in the student debt payment by filing a separate return but a decision to file separate returns will often result in a substantial increase in tax obligations which, as discussed below, offsets any savings on student loan payments.
When should married couple with an IDR loan file a separate return instead of a joint return?
A married couple where one or both spouses have an IDR loan could reduce their combined student loan payments by choosing filing status married filing separately, but it is highly likely this choice will substantially increase their tax obligations.
Articles on whether a married couple should file a joint return, or a separate return generally focus steps a taxpayer must take to insulate themselves from their spouses tax liability and the loss of tax deductions and credits.
A larger impact of the decision to choose the file married separately returns stems from a shift in tax deductions towards the spouse with lower income.
- A married couple making $120,000 filing a joint return taking the standard deduction of $27,700 will pay federal tax of $10,921. The additional loss of the tax deduction for student loan interest would reduce the couple’s tax obligation to around to $10,371.
- The same married couple where one spouse makes $40,000 and the other spouse makes $80,000 where each spouse takes the standard deduction of $13,950 will pay a combined household tax of $12,787.
The decision to file separate returns instead of joint returns will for this couple result in an increased tax obligation of $2.408. The increase in tax obligations may exceed the reduction in student loan payments from the IDR option.
Many newly married student borrowers will immediately switch from an IDR loan to a conventional because of this tradeoff.
What is the potential income of divorce on successfully paying off a student loan under IDR programs.
IDR relief may not be available for a person who switches from an IDR plan to a conventional plan upon marriage and then gets divorced and wants to reenter an IDR program. A current Biden Administration effort to update and modify IDR loan records, described below, includes a provision that allows for payment credits on IDR loans for payments made under multiple plans. But this one-time fix may not be available in the future.
Changes in student loan payment obligations caused by changes in income or marital status make IDR loans a risky way to provide student loan debt relief. The more effective option outlined here involves selective elimination of interest charges at the beginning of a career and upon the maturity of the loan.
Why are so few people getting IDR loans discharged?
Even after accounting for conversions from IDR to conventional loan programs due to changes in income and marital status relatively few student borrowers are obtaining timely debt discharges from IDR loans. A GAO report found that as of June 1, 2021, only 157 IDR loans had been approved for forgiveness even though another 7,700 loans were potentially eligible for forgiveness.
Both borrower and loan servicer errors result in inaccurate reporting of student loan payments and annual recertifications as documented in this CFPB report. One reason why it is difficult to track payment errors is that in some years or months the required payment on the IDR loan is zero, an amount that is indistinguishable from the amount received if the person failed to make a payment on time.
A failure to annually recertify income and household size can result in loss of IDR payment status. This document indicates that applicants under the SAVE program who fail to recertify will be ineligible for a loan discharge while applicants on the PAYE, IBR or ICR plan can remain in the IDR plans, but their payment will be based on the 10-year standard repayment plan.
What can be done to increase on-time IDR discharges? What are the limits of efforts to improve the administration of IDR loan programs?
There have been several attempts to facilitate IDR discharges by reviewing, modifying, and updating student loan payment records. Congress passed legislation in 2019 to help facilitate IDR loan discharges. The Biden Administration announced an IDR review effort in April 2022. The current Biden Administration effort to update and modify IDR loan records adjusts payment counts for forbearances, deferments and payments made under other payment plans.
The Biden Administration has been fairly aggressive about helping IDR loan applicants obtain a loan discharge. Future Administrations may not place a high priority on facilitating student loan discharges, hence IDR loans unlike other loans are impacted by a form of political risk.
Despite these ad-hoc payment count adjustment efforts the number of IDR discharges remains low, and many discharges occur later than stipulated under the contract. Again, the better solutions outlined here involves selective elimination of interest charges at the beginning of a career and upon the maturity of the loan.
What are the major changes to the IDR program under the Biden Administration’s SAVE program?
The major changes announced under the SAVE program listed here include:
- Increase protected income for loan payments from 150 percent of the federal poverty line (FPL) to 225 percent FPL.
- No interest charge when the IDR payment is lower than interest due.
- Allows married borrowers to exclude spouse’s income when filing separately.
- Disallows existence of spouse in household size calculation when filing married separately.
- Starting in 2024, cuts payment rate on SAVE loans to 10 percent to 5 percent of disposable income.
- Links number of years needed to obtain a loan discharge to initial size of the loan balance. Students with loan balances below $12,000 are eligible for a loan discharge at 10 years. Each additional amount borrowed of $1,000 results in one additional year for eligibility of a discharge up to 20 or 25 years.
Does the SAVE program prevent loan balances from increasing overtime?
The SAVE feature prohibiting interest charges when the SAVE payment is less than the interest charge will prevent an increase in the student loan payment when the borrower makes payments on time. However, student loan balances could increase if the borrower fails to make payments or if the borrower pauses student loan payments to go back to school.
Does the SAVE program create an incentive for people with less than $12,000 in debt from going back to school and pursing more education.
The SAVE rules appear to create a disincentive for more education by recipients of a two-year degree with less than $12,000 in student debt.
The person with up to $12,000 in debt who chooses to stop further education will have the remaining balance on the initial $12,000 in debt forgiven after 10 years, as long as the person makes the payment on the SAVE loan.
The person who goes back to school and formally pauses student debt payments will likely have around $30,000 in total debt upon completion of a bachelor’s degree and no chance for a loan discharge for another 20 years.
It may be possible for a student to maintain payments on the original IDR loan while in school and get a partial discharge of debt after 10 years. The rules appear ambiguous on this point. This is a question for the Department of Education.
How does the SAVE option impact student debt payments for a typical Bachelor’s degree recipient?
The typical bachelor’s degree recipient will end school with around $30,000 in student loans and start her career at a relatively low salary. The initial payment on the loan, currently 10 percent of adjusted gross income over 225 percent of the federal poverty line, is relatively small and is unlikely to initially cover the interest on the loan.
The SAVE loan borrower essentially has a zero-interest loan with an unchanged $30,000 balance until the borrower’s salary rises to the point that her payment (defined as 10 percent of the difference between AGI and 225 percent of the FPL) falls below interest charges.
A person who maintains a low-salary and low household income will make modest student loan payments for twenty years and have the loan forgiven assuming the loan payments were correctly reported by the loan servicer.
A student borrower who obtains a higher salary or household income would have to make higher loan payments. The SAVE loan does not limit the monthly payment on the loan when AGI rises. Other programs like PAYE and IBR cap the monthly payment at the payment for a 10-year standard loan, but these programs would allow the loan balance to increase if the loan payment did not cover interest costs.
Dave Ramsey has noted that many IDR borrowers could pay more on their student loan than the borrower with a standard 10-year loan both because payments could persist for 20 to 25 years and could rise substantially with income.
Is debt forgiven under IDR programs taxable?
The American Rescue Plan exempted dischargeable student debt from federal tax for debt discharged prior to December 2025. However, some states treat dischargeable student loans as taxable income.