Latest update made on April 14, 2025
The federal student loan landscape is undergoing significant transformations in 2025 with changes and proposals that directly affect doctors, especially those involved in public service.
Below we take a look at proposed and actual changes and how they may impact doctors and doctors-in-training. This article will be updated regularly as changes or new proposals are made.
By proactively engaging with these updates, doctors can better navigate the evolving federal student loan environment and make informed decisions about their loan repayment strategies.
April 3, 2025
Proposed PSLF Eligibility Restrictions
The Trump administration took a key step toward narrowing the definition of “public service” in PSLF to exclude organizations engaged in activities deemed “illegal” or “harmful” to national interests. According to Forbes, this includes entities involved in facilitating the violation of federal immigration laws, advocating for or providing gender affirming healthcare for transgender youth, or engaging in “illegal discrimination,” which may be a reference to DEI initiatives.
Takeaways: Doctors employed by organizations involved in such activities may find their eligibility for PSLF compromised.
March 26, 2025
IDR Applications Available Now
In March 2025, IDR applications were temporarily unavailable. As of April 9, 2025, applications for the Income-Based Repayment (IBR), Pay As You Earn (PAYE), Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) plans, and loan consolidation are available again. Processing of these applications is still paused.
Takeaways: IDR and consolidation applications are available again, but processing is still paused. You can apply now but expect delays.
March 26, 2025
IDR & PSLF Forgiveness Paused
Loan forgiveness is currently paused for Department of Education-created IDR plans, including SAVE, PAYE, and ICR, due to ongoing litigation. Borrowers who reach forgiveness milestones will be placed in forbearance if they aren’t already.
However, forgiveness under the congressionally enacted IBR Plan is still being processed. Payments made under SAVE, PAYE, or ICR can count toward IBR forgiveness if the borrower switches to the IBR Plan.
Takeaways: Forgiveness is paused for SAVE, PAYE, and ICR plans due to litigation, but IBR forgiveness is still being processed. You can switch to IBR to have previous payments under other plans count toward forgiveness.
March 17, 2025
IDR Recertification Dates
Because IDR applications were temporarily unavailable, some borrowers were impacted due to their recertification deadlines.
- If your recertification date was on or before March 17, 2025, you were due to recertify by Feb. 20, 2025:
- If you submitted by Feb. 20, 2025 and your servicer processed it: no action needed.
- If you submitted by Feb. 20, 2025 but it wasn’t processed: your recertification date is extended by one year—no need to resubmit.
- If you did not submit by Feb. 20, 2025: your payment was temporarily recalculated (not based on income). You must submit a new IDR application ASAP.
- If your recertification date was on or after March 18, 2025, you were due to recertify on or after Feb. 21, 2025:
- Your recertification date has been extended by one year—no action needed.
- Some borrowers were incorrectly moved to non-income-based payments; servicers are fixing this.
- If your recertification date is on or after Feb. 1, 2026:
- Your deadline remains unchanged—you must recertify by that date.
Takeaways: Check your recertification date by logging into your loan account.
February 18, 2025
SAVE Plan Injunction
On February 18, 2025, a federal court issued a new injunction preventing the implementation of the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan. The SAVE plan could have helped doctors-in-training reduce their monthly payments while working toward PSLF. It isn’t likely that the SAVE plan will be implemented in the future.
If you are enrolled in the SAVE plan, you are in general forbearance until servicers are able to accurately calculate monthly payment amounts of the court reaches a decision on the injunction. General forbearance means you don’t have to make monthly payments and interest is not accruing. Your time in general forbearance will not count for PSLF or IDR forgiveness.
Takeaways: A court blocked the SAVE plan in February 2025, and it likely won’t move forward. If you’re enrolled in SAVE, you have been moved to forbearance with no payments or interest, but this time doesn’t count toward forgiveness.