One Big Beautiful Bill Act Updates
On July 4, 2025, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act was signed into law, resulting in changes to some federal student aid programs. Some of these changes went into effect immediately, while others will go into effect at a later date.
The page will continue to be updated as new information becomes available.
Please visit the to get the latest information on changes affecting recipients of federal student aid, including borrowers. Their page will continue to be updated as new information becomes available.
Federal Student Aid Changes for 2026-2027
Significant changes to federal student loans and grants will take effect on July 1, 2026. Here鈥檚 what 果酱视频 students should know:
Federal Student Loans
What鈥檚 Changing?
- Federal Direct Graduate PLUS Loans will be eliminated for new borrowers on July 1, 2026.
- New borrowing aggregate limits will be imposed:
- $100,000 for graduate students (lifetime)
- $200,000 for professional students in qualifying programs (lifetime)
- Fewer repayment plans will be available for all new loans after July 1, 2026.
Why Borrowing Now Matters?
Graduate and professional students who borrow before these changes take effect (July 1, 2026) will be considered 鈥渓egacy status鈥 borrowers. They will retain access to the current loan programs, repayment options and borrowing flexibility that will no longer be available to new borrowers after 2026.
Legacy Status Benefits:
- Continued access to the Federal Direct Unsubsidized Loan program up to $20,500 per year.
- Continued access to Federal Graduate PLUS Loans with current borrowing limits/caps.
- Greater flexibility in financing your graduate education compared to future borrowers.
Important Reminders:
To take advantage of Federal Direct Loans:
- You must file your (if you haven鈥檛 done so already).
- Receive a College Financing Plan from the One-Stop Student Services Center.
- Accept the terms and conditions of your loan: Complete and .
- Receive a disbursement before June 2026.
If you borrow in time to gain legacy status, your benefits as a legacy borrower will extend to all borrowing until July 1, 2029, or until you complete your program, whichever comes first.
What鈥檚 Changing?
- Federal Direct Parent PLUS loans for new borrowers will be limited to $20,000 a year with a lifetime aggregate of $65,000, as of July 1, 2026.
- Fewer repayment plans will be available for all new loans disbursed after July 1, 2026.
Why Borrowing Now Matters?
By borrowing before these changes take effect, you鈥檒l be considered a 鈥渓egacy borrower鈥. This status allows you to keep these benefits:
- Federal Parent PLUS Loans without a yearly loan or lifetime aggregate limit. (New borrowers will be limited to a Federal Direct Parent PLUS loan of $20,000 a year.)
- Protection from stricter repayment structures and reduced borrowing options that will apply to new students starting in 2026鈥2027.
Note: Fewer repayment plans will be available for all new loans after July 1, 2026.
Important Reminders:
To take advantage of Federal Direct Loans:
- You must file your (if you haven鈥檛 done so already).
- Receive a College Financing Plan from the One-Stop Student Services Center.
- Accept the terms and conditions of your loan: Complete and .
- Receive a disbursement before June 2026
If you borrow in time to gain legacy status, your benefits as a legacy borrower will extend to all borrowing until July 1, 2029, or until you complete your program, whichever comes first.
It is important to note that these changes will not affect the borrowing rules for Federal Direct Subsidized and Federal Direct Unsubsidized Loans. The greatest impact will be felt by undergraduates who have not yet borrowed under the current system.
What鈥檚 Changing?
- Annual borrowing cap: Parents will be limited to borrowing up to $20,000 per year per dependent student.
- Lifetime borrowing cap: Parents may borrow a maximum of $65,000 total per dependent student.
- No unlimited borrowing: Previously, Parent PLUS loans could cover the full cost of attendance minus other aid. Starting July 1, 2026, this will no longer be the case.
- Repayment options: Parent PLUS borrowers with loans issued after July 1, 2026 will lose access to income鈥慸riven repayment plans unless they consolidate before that date.
What Does This Mean for Families?
Parents who receive a loan disbursement before July 1, 2026, will be considered 鈥渓egacy borrowers鈥 and will have continued access to Federal Direct Parent PLUS Loans with no aggregate current borrowing limits.
Important Reminders:
To take advantage of Federal Direct Loans, your student must:
- File your (if they haven鈥檛 done so already).
- Receive a College Financing Plan from the One-Stop Student Services Center.
- Both you and your student must accept the terms and conditions of your loan: Complete and .
- Receive a disbursement before June 2026.
Loan Part-Time Status Policy Update
Going forward, any student enrolled at a university with part-time status (fewer than 12 credits), regardless of graduation status, will have their loans reduced based on the number of credits they are taking.
- New proration rules will apply to all incoming students beginning in the 2026鈥2027 academic year, based on enrolled credits.
- All students enrolled in fewer than 12 credits (less than full-time) will have their loans prorated according to the number of credits.
- Proration may occur either during the semester of part-time study or in the following semester.
We are awaiting further details and will update as more information is available.
Pell Grants
The Federal government provided additional funding to continue running the Pell Grant program.
- Students with a very high may no longer qualify. Any student who has an SAI that is twice the amount of maximum Pell will not be Pell eligible.
- Students receiving scholarships that cover their full cost of attendance won鈥檛 be eligible for Pell.
Repayment Plans
These new payment plans will be applicable to all borrowers who take a new loan on or after July 1, 2026.
- Former borrowers who are not taking new loans and are currently enrolled in a plan that will be phased out (Graduated, Extended, ICR, PAYE and IBR) may stay in these plans for the remainder of their repayment. Providing they do not borrow a new loan.
- New Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP):
- Payments based on income (1鈥10% of Adjusted Gross Income).
- $10 minimum payment, with family size adjustments.
- 30鈥憏ear repayment period.
- New Parent PLUS loans cannot be repaid in RAP; it would be an ineligible loan, which would be paid separately.
- No cap on monthly payments.
- Standard repayment plan updated: fixed terms of 10, 15, 20, or 25 years.
- Current borrowers keep existing options but may opt into RAP.
- By 2028, older repayment plans will sunset and RAP/standard plans will be the default.
Deferment, Forbearance and Rehabilitation
These provisions are all applicable as of July 1, 2027.
- Borrowers may rehabilitate a defaulted loan twice. The minimum payment is $10, and borrowers must make nine (9) on-time, consecutive payments.
- Economic hardship and unemployment deferments will be phased out by 2027.
- Forbearance limited to 9 months within any 2鈥憏ear period (instead of 12 months at a time).
What This Means for 果酱视频 Students
- Legacy borrowers (those who take out loans before July 1, 2026) keep current borrowing rules for up to 3 years or until completing their program. Minus the graduate aggregate limit.
- 果酱视频 will continue to support our students through institutional scholarships to help offset costs.
- Students should plan ahead and explore external funding options (state/federal aid, private loans and scholarships and employer reimbursement).