LoanPlanCompare

SAVE is ending — 90-day switch notices are going out now

RAP vs IBR vs Standard: compare your student loan plans side by side

About 7.4 million SAVE borrowers must pick a new repayment plan. This simulator runs a month-by-month amortization of the three main options — the new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP), Income-Based Repayment (IBR), and the 10-year Standard plan — so you can see monthly payments, interest subsidies, forgiveness timing, and total cost before you choose. Free, private, nothing leaves your browser.

Parent PLUS loans are not eligible for RAP. If your balance includes Parent PLUS loans, the RAP column doesn't apply to those loans — see your Parent PLUS options.

RAP

Repayment Assistance Plan — 30-yr forgiveness

Lowest payment

$250.00/mo

first monthly payment

Outcome
Paid off in 12 yr 10 mo
Total you pay
$62,149
Interest you pay
$22,331
Amount forgiven
Interest waived (subsidy)
Gov. principal match
$182

IBR

Income-Based Repayment — 10%, 20-yr forgiveness

$300.50/mo

first monthly payment

Outcome
Paid off in 14 yr 5 mo
Total you pay
$63,735
Interest you pay
$23,735
Amount forgiven

Standard

Fixed payment, paid off in 10 years

Lowest total cost

$454.19/mo

first monthly payment

Outcome
Paid off in 10 yr
Total you pay
$54,503
Interest you pay
$14,503
Amount forgiven

Assumptions: payment recalculated once a year; income grows 3%/yr; poverty guidelines grow at the same rate; RAP counted income $60,000, IBR family size 1. Estimates only — verify with the official Loan Simulator.

Monthly payment by year
RAPIBRStandard
$0$250$500$750$1kYr 13579111315Repayment year
Remaining balance by year
RAPIBRStandard
$0$12.5k$25k$37.5k$50kYr 13579111315Repayment year

How the three plans differ

 RAPIBRStandard
Payment based on1–10% of AGI (bracketed)10% or 15% of discretionary incomeLoan balance only
ForgivenessAfter 30 yearsAfter 20 or 25 yearsNone (paid off in 10)
Unpaid interestWaived every monthAccrues (balance can stall)Always covered
Extra helpUp to $50/mo principal match; −$50/mo per dependentPayment capped at Standard amount
Parent PLUSNot eligibleOnly via consolidation pathsEligible

Frequently asked questions

What is the Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP)?

RAP is the new income-driven repayment plan created by the 2025 budget law (One Big Beautiful Bill Act). Your payment is a percentage of your AGI — from a flat $10/month under $10,000 of income up to 10% of AGI above $100,000 — minus $50 per dependent, never below $10/month. Interest your payment doesn't cover is waived, the government adds up to $50/month toward principal if needed, and any remaining balance is forgiven after 360 qualifying payments (30 years). It opened to applications on studentaid.gov in July 2026.

Should I pick RAP or IBR now that SAVE is ending?

It depends on your income, family size, and how long you've been repaying. IBR usually wins if you're closer to its 20- or 25-year forgiveness clock (your SAVE/old IDR payments count toward IBR forgiveness), if your income is low relative to your family size, or if you're pursuing PSLF on a shorter timeline. RAP usually wins if you'd face negative amortization on IBR (RAP waives unpaid interest), if you have many dependents (the $50/dependent deduction), or if IBR's payment would be higher than RAP's for your bracket. Run both in the simulator above and compare total cost and forgiveness timing.

How is the RAP payment calculated?

Take your AGI: $10,000 or less pays a flat $120/year ($10/month). From $10,001 to $20,000 the payment is 1% of AGI per year, and each additional $10,000 bracket adds one percentage point, reaching 10% of AGI above $100,000. Divide the annual amount by 12, then subtract $50 per dependent. The payment never goes below $10/month.

Does RAP really waive unpaid interest?

Yes. If your RAP monthly payment doesn't cover the interest that accrued that month, the uncovered interest is waived — your balance does not grow. On top of that, if your payment reduces principal by less than $50, the government adds the difference (up to $50/month) toward your principal, so your balance falls at least a little every month you pay on time.

How does IBR calculate my payment?

IBR takes your AGI minus 150% of the HHS poverty guideline for your family size (that's your discretionary income), then charges 10% of it per year (12 monthly installments) if you were a new borrower on or after July 1, 2014, or 15% if you borrowed earlier. The payment is capped at what you'd pay on the 10-year Standard plan, and forgiveness comes after 20 years (new borrowers) or 25 years.

What happens if I do nothing before my SAVE deadline?

Servicers began sending 90-day notices to SAVE borrowers in July 2026. If you don't choose a plan within your 90-day window, you'll be moved into a standard repayment plan automatically — which typically has the highest monthly payment and no forgiveness. Interest has already been accruing on SAVE accounts since August 2025, and forbearance months don't count toward forgiveness, so choosing sooner usually costs less.

Are these numbers official?

No — this is an independent educational simulator. It implements the published formulas (Congressional Research Service report IF13075 and studentaid.gov guidance) with the 2026 HHS poverty guidelines, using simplified assumptions like annual recertification and steady income growth. Your servicer's numbers and the official studentaid.gov Loan Simulator are authoritative.