New Parent PLUS Limits Take Effect July 1 — What Families Need To Plan For Fall
Starting July 1, 2026, Parent PLUS loans will be capped at $20,000 per year and $65,000 in total per dependent student under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
Parent PLUS has historically been uncapped — parents could borrow up to the full cost of attendance. The new limit forces families to either choose lower prices colleges, or to fill the gap with private loans, scholarships, savings, or income.
What’s Changing For Families: A parent of a student attending a $50,000-per-year private college could previously cover the full bill with Parent PLUS. After July 1, that same parent can borrow $20,000 federally and must source the remaining $30,000 from another channel.
Private student loans typically require a co-signer, strong credit, and verified income, which may not be feasible for every family.
It’s important to note that these limits should be viewed as a stop sign for families – one that you shouldn’t generally try to go around. Borrowing the maximum of $65,000 would equal a future loan payment of $560/mo, which is pretty significant. But exceeding that level is even more expensive.
In the example above, families trying to borrow $50,000 per year (or $200,000 in total), would see a payment of roughly $2,500 per month after graduation. Families should run the How Much Student Loan Debt Can You Afford Simulator to determine how much they can actually afford.
Existing Borrowers: Families with a Parent PLUS loan disbursed before June 30, 2026, get a three-year grace period under the old terms — meaning they can keep borrowing past the new caps for up to three more academic years for the same student in the same program.
Key Takeaway: Families with students entering college in fall 2026 should run the math now on total cost of attendance, available 529 balances, expected aid, and a realistic estimate of private loan costs. Schools at the top of the price range may be out of reach for families that were planning to lean heavily on Parent PLUS.
May 29 is recognized nationally as “529 Day,” with states and financial institutions offering bonuses, giveaways, and events to promote...
Graduate student loans are designed to help cover tuition and other costs when scholarships, savings, and income are not enough....
The Lifetime Cash Flow Podcast is the home of Rod Khleif’s long running interviews with operators, syndicators, and investors who...