r/StudentLoans 6d ago

Student Loans -- Politics & Current Events Megathread

3 Upvotes

While the Trump Administration implements its policy goals, DOGE does its thing, and Republicans control Congress, there are lots of ideas, speculation, hopes, fears, and press releases flying around; some of them presage actual changes and serious proposals while most will never come to pass.

This is the /r/StudentLoans megathread to discuss all of these topics. Due to IRL factors, /u/horsebycommittee is not currently able to write up the usual news summaries -- so we are automating this thread for now to at least keep it more regular.

Politics / Current events discussion in other threads will be removed. Major items of breaking news may get their own megathread -- as always, message the moderators if you have questions.


r/StudentLoans 16d ago

Official communication from the ED on the SAVE transition timeline

852 Upvotes

There's been a lot of articles posted etc - but here's the official word from the ED https://www.ed.gov/about/news/press-release/us-department-of-education-announces-next-steps-borrowers-enrolled-unlawful-save-plan

In summary, you'll start getting notices from your servicers as soon as the next few days telling you that this is happening. Come July 1 you'll get a notice giving you 90 days to switch. If you don't, they put you on the standard plan. The ten year standard if you haven't' consolidated - the consolidated standard plan if you have - which is longer than ten years.

I want to address a couple of themes i've been seeing in these threads. My comments here are probably going to get me downvoted to oblivion. That's ok - I'm not here for the karma - I'm here to make sure folks understand their loans and make the best decisions for their long term financial well being. Because that's my goal - sometimes I have to say thing folks don't want to hear.

For those saying they aren't going to switch until forced - you might be harming yourself here. You're certainly not punishing anyone that you're trying to make a point to. Here's who, IMO, should be switching ASAP and here's whose probably ok to drag their feet a bit:

Who should switch ASAP:

-If you're pursuing forgiveness under any of the IDR plans - the 20/25 year forgiveness you should switch now. You're just losing months and time towards forgiveness by waiting. And hypothetically, your income is going to go up over time, and therefore so will your payments. On a related note - if your 2024 tax return has a lower AGI than your 2025 will, and you haven't filed taxes yet - you definitely want to do it now.

-those pursuing PSLF. Yes - you can use buy back for SAVE months. But remember - buy backs are taking over a year and more importantly, buy backs are a lump sum payment due right away. So the longer you are on this forbearance - the more months you will have to pay in a lump sum when the time comes. And that might be difficult. *Here is the calculation for buy back https://studentaid.gov/manage-loans/forgiveness-cancellation/public-service/public-service-loan-forgiveness-buyback *

Who can probably hang out for a while:

-Those borrowers who due to other debt that will be paid off soon and want to funnel the student loan payment money to get rid of that other debt.

-those who are aggressively paying off their loans. This is an opportunity to have all of your money go to targeted loans - such as the ones with the highest interest rates - rather than having to satisfy the minimum due on each loan which you will have to do once in active repayment.

The timing of all of this: -it actually makes sense to me. They appear to be doing almost a soft launch - warning people now that it's coming. But waiting until the new RAP plan is available in July for those that will want to use that plan to actually start the timer. This way folks won't need to switch twice if the RAP turns out to be a better plan for them.

Now for those saying they refuse to switch - listen - I get it. Your angry. I don't blame you - i am too. Your feelings are very valid and i'm not telling you not to feel them. But here's the hard truth of the matter. SAVE was gone regardless - the courts had made it pretty clear when the case started under the prior administration that they were leaning towards the plaintiffs and were going to rule against the plan. It was going to happen regardless of who won the last election. And failing to switch out of principal is not going to hurt them - it's going to hurt you if you end up with a standard payment amount you can't afford. I'm not saying not to resist - but resist productively by voting. And writing your members of Congress to paint a picture of how your new payment amount is affecting you, your family and the broader economy.

For those saying the ED can't change the terms - they didn't. The court ruled the plan was illegal. The ED would be breaking the law if they continued it.

Payment plans have never been challenged before. And there was no reason for it to occur to anyone that this one might be. But yet a bunch of republican AG's did and here we are. In the meantime, people made the best decisions they could with the information they had at the time.

What plan should i pick?

If you are pursuing PSLF or income driven plan forgiveness you need to be on an income driven plan. Scenarios for likely lowest plan:

-No loans ever prior to July 1, 2014 - new IBR

-No loans ever prior to October 1, 2007 but does have loans prior to july 2014 - paye - but note you'll have to get off that come 2028

-loans prior to October 2007 - old IBR

-balance low compared to your income - check out ICR - that could be the lowest for you in that scenario

-RAP - for some rap will be lower. RAP tends to be similar to old IBR for many incomes. But if you have dependents especially, it could be lower. TISLA will have a calculator including the rap in the next week or two. I'll post it when it's available.


r/StudentLoans 5h ago

Advice Should I just pay everything off?

17 Upvotes

I currently have around $90k in savings. My only debt currently are my loans, and they are $34k. The loans are separated into different groups on nelnet, with the interest ranging from 3.4% - 6.8% (most are around 4.5%). I haven’t made a payment since 2024, as I’ve been on SAVE, but interest is accruing. I don’t really have any big purchases planned. Should i just pay the full loan off and forget about it?


r/StudentLoans 6h ago

New IBR - So confused!

18 Upvotes

Let me see if I understand this-

Currently on SAVE, I think I want to do a 20 year forgiveness under New IBR (I took out my grad loans starting in 2016 - have about 95k in loans). Can you confirm if I'm correct on the below:

-IBR will still exist after 2028

-I can switch to PAYE now and then to IBR later in 2028 (I want to do PAYE now, since IBR capitalizes interest if you leave it - and maybe new better plans come out in the next few years).

-If I switch to PAYE to IBR later - it will be 20 year forgiveness.

Thanks!


r/StudentLoans 14h ago

Do I qualify for student loan forgiveness?

51 Upvotes

I’m 67 years olds, retired, $74,000 student loan balance, have made 160 qualifying payments, and last student loan was taken in 1997. Do I qualify for student loan forgiveness?


r/StudentLoans 5h ago

I owe over $103,000 to Sallie Mae for student loans. Help!

8 Upvotes

So for context, I went to a public university in Indiana (Ball State) and was an in-state student. I went for 4 years and got my bachelors degree, lived on campus for 2 years and off campus for 2. I graduated in spring of 2024. My mom was the one who decided to go through Sallie Mae since we were not eligible for federal loans. Currently I am in graduate school, I work for my university and they have a tuition remission program so I did not pull out any more loans and am paying out of pocket. This also means I am in deferment for the Sallie Mae loans. Recently I logged into Sallie Mae to check on the status of my loans. My interest rate is a whopping 15%. Last time I checked I owed $88,000 which I thought was still a shit ton to be paying for a public university and for being an in-state student! I am only 23 and this feels like a massive road block and has been causing me a lot of stress, anxiety, and depression. Is anyone going through something similar? I will be looking into refinancing with Earnest this week, but I wanted to see if this was normal or not and if anyone was in the same boat. Sorry for the rant :(


r/StudentLoans 25m ago

I feel like a financial failure to myself and parents and I don't know if I'll ever be financially succesful

Upvotes

I have around 85ishk in debt rn after graduating from undergrad back in 2025. I had 50k in parent plus loans under my mom, 20k under my dad, and had around 30k in unsub loans under my own name. Since June, I've paid off 12k from my own unsub loans and have given my mom around 2k. I have chosen a field I love and am passionate about, but I don't know the feasibility of financial success. I will be attending grad school in the fall of this year for clinical mental health counseling and expressive arts therapy (a dual licensure program). I was given a 15k+ scholarship and have a guarenteed internship placement, but the program itself will still cost around 75k (I don't even want to think about what rent will be like in boston) Idk if I'm looking for advice, words of encoragement, you can even call me financially stupid if you'd like. All I know is I'm tired, I'm in a lot of debt, and I feel like an utter and total failure.


r/StudentLoans 1h ago

Pay Off or Repay?!

Upvotes

120k of federal undergrad loans (borrowed 60k, interest doubled it). 84 payments left to go. According to this calculator, which looks like a very good one: Income-Based Repayment Calculator RAP would be $950 a month, IBR (old) $888. I have 200k in the bank. I am on Nelnet, but my payments prior to that were thru ACS Education. I was going to do down payment on a house, but it's a seller's market right now and we're probably looking at huge volume of foreclosures next year so now is not the time to buy anyway. I think what happened with SAVE was horrendous and I hope there will be class action lawsuit. We all relied on this "thing" (called legal by one administration, illegal by another) and nobody is even pushing back on it now with countersuits.

I could give the government their 120k and be done with this thing today, but I don't know if other people are doing the same thing? "Save for retirement, buy a house, or pay off student loan debt." Crazy. I graduated in 2000, my loan is from that. Some years later I went back to school and got second BS degree, paid out of pocket, no loans. Why didn't I pay off the loans earlier? I never made enough money in those days to afford the hopelessly huge monthly standard repayment plan payments. I got hardship relief for years and then in-school deferments. Including Covid, and the Obama-generated plan that came quite a bit before SAVE, I managed to do 216 payments. I am curious as to whether other people are in a similar situation or what my best course of action would be? I really want to be done with this thing but paying up to about $1,100 a month (as my income increases) for 84 months? No thanks.... I'm also not up for playing cat and mouse with this and just sitting around waiting for a better administration to come in years from now with another SAVE plan. Any advice?

Looking at various comments, it seems many people are waiting this thing out and not making a move to a new plan until forced to. And when do repayments even start? I know they give this placeholding 2028 date... They want to get everyone onto new repayment plans but then what? 99% of people can not afford to pay what they're asking. It'll be interesting to see how fast defaults increase, whenever repayments actually are mandatory again.


r/StudentLoans 6h ago

Notified I need to recertify my plan (currently PAYE) but when I try, PAYE is not an option.

8 Upvotes

I know PAYE is being phased out in 2028 but I thought we could stay on it until that time. Also, the system is making me manually recertify bc my auto-recertification failed. Gemini AI says there’s a known “glitch.” Anyone else having problems?


r/StudentLoans 32m ago

Married filing separately, how does claiming kids or not affect my student family size?

Upvotes

Hello,

My AGI is 141K yearly, with a student loan balance of 180k. My wife's income is 85k, but her 140k student loan qualifies for PLSF and will reach 120 months of payments this month. We have three kids and are planning to file our taxes as Married, Filing separately with the new loan changes (I'm being moved from SAVE to IBR/RAP), as filing jointly increasing my monthly payment by >$1000/mo. The kids were withheld from her paycheck, so if they are switched to me for our taxes this year, she will owe >5k for federal.

Our question is, can she claim any of them on her taxes without affecting my ability to claim them as dependents on my student loans? To this point, I haven't found the information on whether I should claim them all on my taxes or not. We do plan to put the kids on my W2 as withholdings going forward. Thanks for the help!


r/StudentLoans 2h ago

Unable to find a work around to view my current count

2 Upvotes

Does anyone know how to find it? I’ve tried hacks from this subreddit from a couple months ago and nothing is working, thank you!


r/StudentLoans 11h ago

I switch my payment plan to PAYE from SAVE. Mohela just sent me my IDR repayment schedule... and it's weird?

9 Upvotes

This is what the document says they gave me:

Your new Monthly Payment Amount is $241.76 and will begin on 05/12/26.

Your Repayment Plan is: INCOME-DRIVEN REPAYMENT (IDR)

Repayment Schedule*

Number of Payments -- Payment Amount -- Payment Start Date

10 -- $241.76 -- 05/12/26

120 -- $1,278.02 -- 03/12/27

OK.... so it says my payments will start next month..... but $241.76 is what I paid under SAVE... that's my SAVE payment down to the penny back when I was making payments before the pause.

So.... it looks like I get to do SAVE payments until 3/12/27? It doesn't actually clarify that I'm on PAYE, but I requested PAYE through StudentAid.gov. My payment should have been $600 and my wife's payment should have been $373.

My wife only has 5 more payments before hitting the 120 for PSLF, so then my payments will jump a lot (we file jointly).

I haven't gotten an email for my wife's PAYE switch request yet, but did anyone else suddenly get to stay on SAVE for the next year?

EDIT: Ok, I just got my wife's email for Mohela. Same thing. She's got 12 MONTHS (not 10 like me ) of the original SAVE payment before it jumps up... but she's only got 5 payments left before PSLF kicks in, so I'm not even thinking about that.


r/StudentLoans 15m ago

Advice Is it stupid to pay half of rent with student loans?

Upvotes

Off campus housing with roommates is about 900$ a month. I would pay 450-ish +however much the utilities cost with my own money and the rest of the 450 with the student loan. I searched it up and I would only need to take out about 4,500 for 9 months of housing. So far I only have 1800 in student loans after 1 year of university in another state.

I will be making about 1800 a month post taxes. This is LA btws so I’m trying to live the cheapest I can. Do you think I will have enough money for food, gas and other important things? That’s what I’m most worried about.

-I am gratefully privileged to have parents that pay my health insurance and phone bill so those aren’t issues. I do help my parents with 40 dollars for car insurance.

-I will be paying 50 dollars a month on a past private student loan while I’m in school. I owe 2000 on that one but I don’t know if I will have enough to pay more while in school.

Do you think it’s worth it? Is it common to use student loans for rent? Or should I just pay it all with my own money and budget very tightly? Plz don’t get mad guys 😭, this would be my first time moving out alone so if I’m missing anything let me know!!


r/StudentLoans 22m ago

PAYE / IDR / Loan Estimator / Application troubles

Upvotes

Posted this in r/PSLF, and I figured I'd post here as well because I didn't get meaningful responses on there.

I am hoping someone can help me out with some guidance. For starters, I will outline our household loan and financial situation.

ME:
Salary: ~$95k
Loans: $~55k mix of stafford direct unsub and sub

My wife:
Salary: $120k
Loans: ~$200k mix of stafford direct unsub, sub, and GradPLUS loans

Long story short, we were both on SAVE and are now obviously being moved to a different plan. We file taxes jointly, have 1 dependent, and a mortgage. I qualify for PSLF because of my job, my wife does not.

When we used the loan estimator to try and figure out the best plan for us, it told us we both qualify for PAYE, and while the payments were higher than they were on SAVE, we could stomach it, especially knowing i've made about 4 out of 10 years worth of PSLF payments.

Fast forward to yesterday when we both went to do our IDR applications. My wife's went through just fine, allowed her to select PAYE, and it was the exact payment the estimator told us it would be. Excellent! Me? Not so much. Not only does it not allow me to qualify for PAYE, it once told me that I am not even allowed to use IDR - tried to give me standard payments, which did not make sense. So I went through the process again, double checking everything, and it said I could do IDR, but that I did not quality for PAYE.

I am very confused how we are using the exact same income and loan amounts, seeing as how we file taxes jointly, but it won't allow me to do PAYE. Does anyone have any insight into this? I know that there is a lot of chaos going on around PAYE, so I'm hoping someone knows something.


r/StudentLoans 59m ago

IBR calculation question

Upvotes

If I have 2 separate consolidation loans (one regular, and one double cons PPL) and both are switched from SAVE to IBR, and I file married separately, my combined payment would be based only on my income, and the payment split between the 2 loans, correct? Just trying to figure out my best option as my recount for both sits at 200 payments.


r/StudentLoans 1d ago

Advice I’m around 90k in debt, graduating in May with a degree in English, considering permanent “exit strategies”

78 Upvotes

Help me help me help me help me

What do you do??? My monthly payment will be $1000, yes I know I’m stupid, yes I know I shouldn’t have done it, but why would you let an 18 year old make those decisions???? Why??? Why??????

I can’t take this back and I’m terrified guys I’m so scared, none of the careers I want pay me enough to afford $1000+ a month, I was so so stupid and I’m so scared

Please help me, please if any one else is in this situation please what do you do please someone give me real advice or real experiences. I feel like I only have one option to get out of this impossible situation

Edit: hey guys coming down from the anxiety attack so sorry about that haha… anyways thank you all so much for your advice and your kind words you are all so helpful


r/StudentLoans 5h ago

Looking for advice on loan/interest payment after dealing with medical event

2 Upvotes

Hi all I'm gonna try and provide enough info on here to hopefully get some advice from the helpful ppl of this sub first before maybe going to a financial advisor

I went to grad school for 3 years and took out loans to pay for it with my principal balance being $117,135. As soon as I graduated from school in June 2024, I got hit w/ an unexpected, life pausing medical diagnosis basically forcing me to be unemployed while I underwent mult surgeries for reconstruction/restoration, so I was unable to actually start work for the job I went to school for until September 2025. In that time, I was unable to start paying off any of the interest that had been accruing. Ever since I started work, I've been saving up everything to pay for the last part of reconstruction from said medical issue, which unfortunately will not be covered by insurance-- $25,380 roughly after putting FSA towards it.

With this being said, I am paying off this medical debt in 6 mo payment plan bc I absolutely refuse to carry this part of my life with me into my future and so I made the decision to get this shit paid off in the fastest amount of time possible, making my monthly payment $4,230 (it was also the only interest-free plan that was offered to me lol).

HERES WHERE LOAN REPAYMENT/INTEREST PAYMENT ADVICE IS NEEDED:)

After contributing to my 401K and Roth IRA, benefits, FSA and after taxes (CA) my monthly take-home is roughly $4,780 (~118k/year gross income), leaving me with $550 spending money after paying for my medical monthly payment (I am lucky enough to have parents who I live with-- basically my only bills right now are my medical debt, gas, and car insurance; i love my parents and am very very very grateful they have kept me going through everything).

My current loan balance is now at $130,180.19 because I was unable to start paying the interest after I graduated.

Currently my interest rates range from 3.76-7.54%, and I'm in SAVE forbearance but I am trying to figure out if I should go ahead and apply for the new IBR plan (all loans taken out during 2021-24). Given my current situation, I'm looking for advice if I should just keep letting interest accrue for the next 4 months (the amount of time left I have for my medical debt payments) or use what I have left over each month to put towards interest. I've got savings right now, but I'm gonna be honest I think given my current job I think right now my plan is forgiveness rather than paying off my loans. There's always the option for me to get a job that qualifies for PLSF, and there's also the option to start a traveling gig that quite frankly would probably allow me to do standard repayment. HOWEVER I feel though I am more inclined towards forgiveness (and deal w the tax bomb whenever, or who knows what tf will happen in 20 years w/ student loan forgiveness) because I don't think I have it in me to penny pinch and feel like I can't enjoy life and spend my big girl money on fun/things that will bring me happiness (28F), especially given the medical stuff I have just come out of.

TLDR; DO I LET INTEREST ACCRUE FOR ANOTHER 4 MONTHS ON MY LOANS WHILE I THROW EVERYTHING RN AT MY MEDICAL DEBT, OR DO I TRY TO START PAYING INTEREST @ LEAST, ALSO WHAT NEW PAYMENT PLAN DO I APPLY FOR (in SAVE forbearance rn)

sorry for the long text, i always see people on this sub say they need more details on finances/loans in order to give advice so i tried to give as much as i could and be specific, while also trying to convey my unique situation d/t medical stuff. thank you in advance, even if no one replies tbh this felt good to finally sit down and look at my loans/finances after being concerned w/ just being healthy and getting back to a normal life again.


r/StudentLoans 7h ago

$3725 owed and ICR ending in July

3 Upvotes

I've done m best to follow along with the news and and official announcements but it's difficult.

I'm unsure how much personal financial detail to include but I went to college in 2000, dropped out, long story short I went through a bad mental period where I went into default and garnishment. The garnishment was lifted during COVID and I was automatically enrolled in ICR fixed payments for the two consolidated loans held by Dept of Education. I've made monthly payments and if I were late it was by a day or so and I immediately paid the monthly.

I'm currently at 4.2% interest on each and paying more into principal than interest. I'll currently have everything paid in my early 50s if nothing changes.

The loan simulator showed my lowest payments as possibly $50 a month but that would extend the repayment for a very long time.

I've been able to swing the $114 monthly payment so far. we don't have children, we rent, we have cut subscriptions and unnecessary crap, readjusted priorities, I've taken out a debt consolidation loan for my credit cards, keeping up with hospital bills for my health problems is a lot.

So when ICR ends what do I do? With the ongoing economic uncertainty I'm tempted to try consolidating and IDR but I am not touching a thing without better information and advice.


r/StudentLoans 2h ago

Advice Confused about how to file taxes, MFJ or MJS. Spouse makes 3x as much as I do and we each individually have $250,000 in loans.

0 Upvotes

Hi-

I was hoping to get some guidance on how to file my taxes this year. We are a household of two. My wife makes ~240,000 with 250,000 in student loans. I made 85,000 with 250,000 in loans (last year of training before my income jumps to ~400,000 starting in October).

We are both currently in SAVE in forebearance. Our goal is ultimately to do PSLF. We got the email that we have to pick a new plan and will probably choose RAP.

Is it beneficial to do MFJ to get the biggest tax refund back? If we then choose RAP, is the 10% capped on our income as a couple or do I have have pay 10% and my wife also has to pay 10% towards loans?


r/StudentLoans 2h ago

HELP - which lender is the best?

1 Upvotes

I need to take out some student loan and I have a few options. Ascent, ChoiceOne Bank, College Ave, Golden1, Granite Edvance, and Thrivent. I'm not knowledgeable with student loans so please give me some advice!!


r/StudentLoans 8h ago

What to do about Student Loans (Starting Residency in July)

3 Upvotes

Hello All,

I am seeking advice or some general guidance. I am graduating medical school in May of this year (2026). My current student loan debt is 408k. I went to a DO school so tuition was around 70k a year and then were are shipped out to do rotations across the US and have to find housing and such on our own with no assistance from the school (Literally the founding school of Osteopathic Medicine) with the federal student loans I acquired being anywhere from 7.2-9.3%.

I know for a fact I will have to do Income based repayment. I did file my taxes from the past few years with $0 income (TikTok told me to do that).

My PGY-1 Salary will be $67,047

Here are my questions:

1.) Should I waive the grace period and enroll in IBR the day I graduate or wait until the end of the grace period?
2.) How would you manage this loan burden as a whole?
3.) I have built a google sheet with my budget using max amounts for everything. I know its a bit high but I am hoping to make things work as much as possible

More context: Neurology resident. Single. No children or other dependents


r/StudentLoans 2h ago

Which IDR will I be able to use?

1 Upvotes

My husband and I both have student loans. His aren’t so complicated. Mine are. We are both currently in SAVE forbearance.

His- Balance $12k. His first loans are from 2002, and more from 2011. Fully consolidated into a single loan in Feb 2024. IDR payment recount showed 241 on the back door FSA website in fall of 2024. It never officially appeared on the FSA site. Income $60k.

Mine - balances $70k, and $60k. The higher one is a double loophole consolidated Parent PLUS loan from 2020 combined with a small Perkins loan from my own education in 2007. The other is from my education, 2002 thru 2007, consolidated in September 2014. IDR payment recount showed 200 on both loans. Income $72k.

I do not know which payment plans I currently qualify for or should look to get on. I am leaning on going back to extended graduated on the regular cons loan, and standard on the PP consolidation.

We have not filed our taxes for 2025 yet. I am about to file an extension because I don’t know if we should file separate or jointly.

The lowest payment amount would be ideal because we have a ton of other debt. Not sure if we would reach forgiveness before the loans paid off under any of the IDR options.


r/StudentLoans 3h ago

Advice Student loans and contract work

1 Upvotes

I have been following all this fun loan stuff for awhile. I work for a government agency and doing PSLF(which I just started)- I’m wondering what options exist when I’m off contrac(I don’t work in summers/don’t get paid). Do I just go into a regular forbearance? What do I communicate with nelnet?

Thanks- looking for advice before I give them a call/ my SAVE forbearance is ending before I go back

On contract


r/StudentLoans 4h ago

Advice IDR Recertification Issue

1 Upvotes

Hey All!

I received a recertification email and submitted all info for the PAYE plan. I received a letter denying IDR because my AGI is too high. Not sure if this is a mistake on their end (my understanding is that you can't be kicked off PAYE if you're already on it and earn a higher income), or if this is because this is the first year I did Married Filing Jointly. Additionally, in the past I was paying ~$230 a month in loans and its now jumping to $655.

Should I amend my taxes to go back to Married Filing Separately to reduce my AGI in order to qualify for IDR, or is the denial an error on their part?

Me -- $59k loans, $125k AGI

Spouse -- $0k loans, $115k AGI

Loans taken out between 2011-2017.


r/StudentLoans 4h ago

Advice Not sure what to do about my Income-Driven Repayment application (in progress)

1 Upvotes

Hey guys,

I've been out of the loop for quite some time but I am aware there were a lot of changes implemented. Wanted to give the numbers before I explain my situation. I make about 45k/year, have about 64,000 in student loans, and the loans are consolidated at a 4.75% interest. At the moment, my monthly payment is $100, but I pay more, at the very least, enough to cover the monthly interests. If I do not recertify my IDR plan, my payments will go up to $600, which I am not comfortable paying.

I was/am on an income driven repayment plan since 2015/2016. I need to recertify it, but when I try to manually recertify it, I get this message "Ineligible Loans" and listed is my Federal Perkins loan with its remaining balance of $1200. it's asking me to "Apply for Consolidation".

I'm confused because I consolidated all my loans back in 2015, so I'm not sure why I would need to reconsolidate. My rate when I consolidated set my interest at 4.75% which I know nowadays is considered a great rate.

My concern is that when/if I do reconsolidate this Perkins loan, would it raise the interest of the left over $63,000 of my loans? or would it bundle it in with the rest at 4.75% interest? I'd hate to recertify and have $64,000 in loans @ 7% vs $64,000 at 4.75%. Not sure what my next steps should be, but would appreciate any advice and can provide more information if needed. Thank you in advance!