Income-contingent repayment of student loans has been formally proposed in the United States, in various forms, since 1971. The concept has been championed by politicians from both the right and the left. The first iteration,
Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) plan
, was signed in 1993 under President
Bill Clinton, and was introduced in July 1994. The general trend in plans since have offered more favorable terms for borrowers (see Table 1-1 at: https://www.cbo.gov/publication/56277#_idTextAnchor008). On June 9, 2014,
President Obama announced that the
Department of Education would modify the PAYE Plan so that it is available to all borrowers, regardless of when they borrowed. The new repayment plan, Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE), launched on December 17, 2015. Using constant 2025 dollars and Federal Poverty Level figures, a single person with a $50,000 adjusted gross income (AGI) would generally pay: • $572.50 a month under Clinton's 1993 ICR plan • $331.56 a month under Bush's 2007 IBR plan • $221.04 a month under Obama's 2015 REPAYE plan • $61.62 a month under Biden's SAVE plan for undergrad only, and $123.23 a month for grad school loans only, and a weighted average payment between the two for people with loans for both. The
U.S. Department of Education Office of Inspector General calculated that the portion of total Direct Loan volume being repaid through IDR plans has increased 625 percent from the FY 2011 loan cohort ($7.1 billion) to the FY 2015 loan cohort ($51.5 billion). For IDR plans, the
Federal government is expected to lend more money than borrowers repay. From the FY 2011 through FY 2015 loan cohorts, the total positive subsidy cost (net cash outflow) for student loans being repaid through IDR plans has increased 748%, from $1.4 billion to $11.5 billion. President Biden's final round of student debt relief on January 16, 2025 has approved a total of
$189 billion in loan cancellation for 5.3 million borrowers — more than any other president. •
$78.5 billion in forgiveness for more than 1 million borrowers through Public Service Loan Forgiveness (just 7,000 borrowers had been approved before Biden, with a rejection rate of 99% under Trump/DeVos). •
$5.5 billion for 414,000 borrowers enrolled in the SAVE plan. •
$57.1 billion through income-driven repayment adjustment for more than 1.45 million borrowers (there were only 50 under Trump/DeVos). •
$34.5 billion for nearly 2 million borrowers whose colleges abruptly closed, were defrauded by their college or are covered by court settlements. •
$18.7 billion for more than 633,000 borrowers who are totally and permanently disabled. On February 18 2025, the
Eighth Circuit blocked the SAVE plan. Following the ruling until March 26 2025 the online applications were temporarily unavailable. Income based repayment was
restructured under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
Efforts to close the department of education have contributed to a backlog of applications. On August 1 2025, interest resumed on those in the SAVE Plan. In July 2025, the Department of Education temporarily suspended forgiveness under IBR which it restarted in October 2025. ==References==