Federal Student Loan Rates Set To Rise For The 2026-27 School Year
Federal student loan interest rates are heading higher for the 2026-27 academic year, following Monday’s May 10-year Treasury Note auction (PDF File). Undergraduate Stafford Loans will carry a 6.52% fixed rate, up from 6.392% a year earlier, with graduate and PLUS borrowers seeing similar increases of roughly 13 basis points.
The new rates apply to federal student loans disbursed on or after July 1, 2026, and remain fixed for the life of the loan.
The May 12 Treasury auction produced a high yield of 4.468%, which serves as the base for the federal student loan rate formula. Adding the statutory margin for each loan type produces the 2026-27 rates:
All four rates remain below their respective statutory caps of 8.25% for undergraduate Stafford, 9.50% for graduate Stafford, and 10.50% for PLUS loans.
It’s important to remember that Grad PLUS Loans are only being issued to existing grandfathered-in students.
And these rates are very in-line with historical averages.
Every loan type is moving up by about the same amount (roughly 0.13 percentage points) reflecting the modest rise in the May 10-year Treasury yield compared to last year’s auction.
The change is small in isolation, but it compounds across a 10-year standard repayment plan and even more on extended or income-driven repayment timelines.
For an undergraduate borrowing the full $5,500 annual limit at 6.52% on a 10-year standard repayment plan, total interest costs would run about $1,991 over the life of that single year’s loan.
Parent PLUS borrowers face the steepest absolute rate at 9.07%, along with the standard 4.228% origination fee that applies to PLUS disbursements, a combination that continues to make Parent PLUS one of the more expensive federal borrowing options.
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