The Education Department announced a temporary 1% reduction in federal student loan interest rates for eligible borrowers enrolled in automatic payments. The move aims to make repayment easier and address rising defaults.
This policy change directly impacts millions of federal student loan borrowers by potentially lowering their monthly payments and overall interest paid, while also signaling the administration's approach to managing the significant national student debt.
The U.S. Education Department has announced a temporary reduction in federal student loan interest rates, aiming to ease repayment burdens for borrowers and combat rising default rates. The change, effective July 1, will offer eligible borrowers a 1% interest rate reduction, with those already enrolled in automatic payments receiving an additional 0.75% discount. This initiative targets borrowers with federal Direct Loans issued after July 1, 2012, who are enrolled in or sign up for auto-pay. The administration views this as a measure to improve the overall health of the federal student loan portfolio, which has grown to nearly $1.7 trillion. The reduction is set to last through June 30, 2028, and is part of a broader effort to encourage auto-pay enrollment, a figure currently standing at 40% of borrowers. For the nearly 9 million borrowers currently in default, regaining good standing, often through loan consolidation and new repayment plans, is a prerequisite for eligibility.