New Student Loan Limits May Force More Borrowers to Take Out Private Loans
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Student loan borrowers may have to turn to private loans after Congress lowered a cap on federal dollars.
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The “One Big, Beautiful Bill” will restrict the amount of federal student loans available to college students next year. Students may have to take out riskier private loans to cover the rest of their schooling.
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The average medical graduate student will not be able to take out enough federal loans for the cost of their school and will likely have to take out tens of thousands of dollars in private loans.
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Some families who take out Parent PLUS loans will have to use private loans, which typically have higher interest rates and will cost them almost $5,000 more in interest during repayment.
Borrowers will be restricted in the amount of federal student loans they can take out, which could lead to more students—especially those pursuing a medical degree—taking out private loans.
The “One Big, Beautiful Bill” generally lowers the amount of federal money that college students can borrow starting in the 2026-27 academic year. Students may need to bridge the gap between the amount of money they can borrow and the cost of school.
Some advocates and experts say borrowers will be forced to take out private loans to cover the costs.
Private student loans can be harder to pay off as they do not qualify for federal forgiveness programs, and the companies that offer them have proportionally more complaints than federal loan servicers. Many private loans also have higher interest rates than their federal counterparts, making repayment more expensive.
“Proponents of these lending caps argue that by limiting federal aid, schools will be forced to lower decades-worth of price hikes. However, data has shown that this is simply not the case,” Aissa Canchola Bañez, policy director at Protect Borrowers, a loan borrower advocacy group, said in a Senate hearing last week. “Instead, students and families will be simply pushed into more expensive, riskier, predatory, private student loan debt.”
Congress’s “One Big, Beautiful Bill” lowers the existing $138,500 aggregate loan limit for non-professional graduate students to $100,000. According to the most recent National Center for Education Statistics report, the average non-professional borrower with a master’s degree holds $80,550 in student debt after adjusting for inflation.
The bill did increase the cap for graduate students pursuing a “professional” degree, such as medical and law students. Professional graduate students will be able to take up to $200,000 in student loans over their educational career.
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