Does this apply to you?
OBBBA borrowing limits apply only to loans originated on or after July 1, 2026. Existing balances are not affected by the caps — but they are subject to the new repayment framework.
- ✓ Old borrowing limits apply to your existing balance
- ✓ Can access IBR, PAYE until July 1, 2028 transition deadline
- ✓ PSLF eligibility intact if pursuing qualifying employment
- → RAP is your default after July 1, 2028 if you don't choose a plan
- ✗ New OBBBA caps apply — less federal money available
- ✗ IBR and PAYE no longer available for new borrowers
- ✗ RAP is the only income-driven option from day one
- → Funding gap between cap and program cost must be financed privately
OBBBA Borrowing Caps — July 1, 2026+
Annual and aggregate limits for new Direct loans. Limits in red are changed from pre-OBBBA. Limits in gray are unchanged.
| Borrower Tier | Annual Limit | Aggregate Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Undergraduate
Dependent / Independent
|
$5,500–$12,500 / yr
Varies by year & dependency
|
$31,000–$57,500
Dep. $31k · Indep. $57.5k
|
Unchanged from pre-OBBBA. Undergrad borrowing unaffected. |
|
Parent PLUS
For undergrad dependent
|
$20,000 / yr
New cap
|
$65,000 lifetime
Per dependent student
|
New annual and lifetime caps. Combined across all parents per student. |
|
Graduate
Non-professional programs
|
$20,500 / yr
Unchanged
|
$100,000
Grad borrowing only
|
Annual rate unchanged. New $100k aggregate cap on grad-level borrowing. MBA, MPH, MPA programs hit this ceiling fastest. |
|
Professional
MD · JD · DDS and equivalents
|
$50,000 / yr
New cap
|
$200,000
Professional-level only
|
4-year MD programs cost $250k–$400k+. At $50k/yr cap, a 4-year program hits $200k federal max — leaving $50k–$200k+ as private gap financing. |
|
Lifetime Cap
$257,500 unified lifetime maximum
across all levels (undergrad + grad + professional combined) · excludes Parent PLUS in most implementations
|
|||
Why the cap creates the trap
The gap gets financed privately.
A 4-year MD program at a private medical school costs $280,000–$380,000. Under OBBBA, a new borrower can access at most $200,000 in federal professional loans over their lifetime. The remaining $80,000–$180,000 must come from private lenders — at market rates, with no income-driven repayment, no PSLF, no interest subsidy, and no forgiveness pathway. This is not a choice. It is a structural outcome of the cap design.
Income-based payments, 30-year forgiveness, PSLF pathway. Tax bomb on forgiveness after 2025. This auditor models this portion.
Fixed or variable APR. No income-driven option. No forgiveness. No PSLF. Underwriting requires income, credit, co-signer. Must be refinanced or paid off on fixed schedule.
Federal and private portions behave differently, require separate servicers, and cannot be consolidated back into a federal loan once split. The decision is permanent.
Decision timeline for current and incoming borrowers
IDR loan forgiveness is now federally taxable as ordinary income. PSLF remains tax-free under IRC §108(f)(1) — that exemption is permanent statute.
New Direct loan originations fall under OBBBA caps. New borrowers default into RAP with no access to IBR or PAYE. Parent PLUS, grad, and professional annual/aggregate limits activate. Existing borrowers are unaffected by caps but enter a two-year plan-selection window.
Legacy borrowers enrolled in SAVE, PAYE, or ICR must transition to IBR, a standard plan, or RAP by this date. Borrowers who do not choose are automatically enrolled in RAP. This is the actual migration deadline for existing SAVE borrowers — not July 1, 2026.
RAP forgiveness at month 360 triggers a federal + state tax bill on the forgiven balance. PSLF forgiveness at month 120 is tax-free under permanent statute. The gap between these two outcomes can exceed $50,000 for high-balance borrowers.
- ✓ High income relative to loan balance — RAP payments would cover interest + principal without forgiveness
- ✓ Not pursuing PSLF and not eligible for qualifying employment
- ✓ Private APR available is materially below weighted federal rate
- ✓ Tax bomb on projected forgiveness exceeds refinance interest savings
- ✗ Pursuing PSLF — refinancing permanently disqualifies you
- ✗ Income is low relative to balance — RAP subsidy and matching credit outperform private rate
- ✗ Projected RAP total cost (including tax bomb) is less than private refi total
- ✗ Job stability is uncertain — losing IDR and deferment protections is permanent
The RAP Escape Auditor models your exact lifetime cost under RAP versus private refinance — including the tax bomb, the interest subsidy, the $50 matching credit, and the PSLF pathway if you qualify.
Open the Auditor →