SAVE Student Loan Plan Timeline Estimates: What To Expect

The future of student loan repayment for SAVE borrowers is now caught between a pending court ruling and how quickly the Department of Education can execute on the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) that just passed.
Borrowers in administrative forbearance under the SAVE (Saving on a Valuable Education) plan know the future now, but they don’t know when. The OBBB makes it clear that borrowers in the SAVE forbearance will migrate to amended IBR, or have an option to enroll in the new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) in 2026. But the question as to when remains.
When will the SAVE forbearance officially end and borrowers be required to make payments again?
Several scenarios are on table for SAVE repayment resuming
The fastest option could see payments start again is the very end of 2025, though it’s the least likely. Our opinion is the highest probability of payments resuming is mid-2026 for SAVE plan borrowers.
Here’s a more in-depth look at these three scenarios.
The next court hearing is going to be August 4, 2025, during which it’s likely the Department of Education will preview some plans for the transition out of SAVE. They will likely share that Congress passed a law eliminating it, and potentially what the transition could look like.
If the court rules SAVE borrowers need to leave the plan soon, the Department of Education would be forced to shift borrowers to other available repayment options allowed currnetly (since RAP does not start until July 1, 2026).
The department would likely offer a temporary grace period or administrative forbearance while applications are processed, but full repayment would resume only as early as December 2025.
However, there could be a scenario where, if borrowers don’t select a new plan by a certain date, they will default back into the Standard 10-year plan (then move to default if they still don’t take action).
This seems like a challenging timeline since this would likely require a new round of borrower communications and system updates, informing affected individuals that they must choose between remaining IDR plans such as IBR or PAYE. And knowing these plans are simply ending 6 months later… why do this? (That’s our opinion)
Now that the budget reconciliation bill has passed and we know RAP is going to be law, the “cleanest” path forward seems to be to coordinate the end of the forbearance with the start of RAP and Amended IBR.
We know that borrowers in the SAVE forbearance will automatically migrate to Amended IBR, and after July 1, 2026, can enroll in RAP.
It seems the most reasonable that this could be an easy coordination for both timing, communication, and execution to have the SAVE borrowers begin payments at this time.
We don’t view it likely that borrowers who’ve already been told they are in forbearance until November 2025 would see that timeline shortened. When you also combine that with the logistical workload required to migrate 7-8 million student loan borrowers in SAVE, again, mid-2026 seems more realistic. But, yes, the current forbearance periods end in late 2025 and we can’t deny that currently.
The timeline would look like:
This entire timeline seems like July 2026 should be the target restart date.
It’s possible any timeline can happen, just less likely because of all the steps required.
For example, the law says that SAVE, ICR, and PAYE must be eliminated by June 2028. So, theoretically, these plans could last that long. But the beginning of the transition is July 1, 2026 – so anytime between those dates is also fair game.
And the court could expedite things in August and ask the Department of Education to turn things back on. That could be December 2025 for first payments due, or January 2026, or anything in-between.
Again, because of the logistics required, communication required, and more, it’s unlikely that it would happen at an “off” timing. But we’ve seen stranger things.
Now that Congress has passed the Bill and President Trump should be signing it today, the Department of Education is going to have to get to work creating all the official rules and policies for these new plans. Then they have to coordinate with the loan servicers to get them going as well.
These things take time, effort, manpower (which the Department is lacking), legal analysis, and more.
Regardless, the 7 to 8 million borrowers in SAVE will have to make some decisions with their loans in the next six to twelve months. And that choice will be between amended IBR and RAP.
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