PSLF Calculator 2026 | IDR Forgiveness & Tax Filing Arbitrage

Underwrite your path to tax-free student loan forgiveness. This estimator calculates your projected Income-Driven Repayment (IDR), tracks your progress toward the 120 qualifying payments required for PSLF, and models Tax Filing Arbitrage (Married Filing Jointly vs. Separately) to shield spousal income. Compare the true out-of-pocket cost of remaining in the federal system versus executing a private refinance.

Eligibility screening 120-payment tracker AGI + family size modeling MFJ vs MFS comparison PSLF vs standard vs refinance Plain-English guidance
1Eligibility & Payment Progress
Core employer screen for estimated PSLF eligibility.
PSLF generally requires qualifying full-time work.
Direct-loan status strongly affects PSLF eligibility.
Used for estimated qualifying-payment screening.
Estimated count already credited toward PSLF.
Operational progress check.
2Loan, Income & Household Strategy
Current federal balance.
Average weighted student-loan rate.
Adjusted gross income used for payment estimation.
Used in discretionary-income estimate.
Projected AGI growth.
Activates spouse-income comparison logic.
Used to compare payment paths.
Relevant for married households.
Used for household-level context.
Simplified SAVE-style discretionary-income shield.
3Comparison Paths
Standard comparison path.
Used for refinance comparison.
Private refinance term assumption.
Include any refinance cost if applicable.
This workbench integrates eligibility, payment-count tracking, household filing-status logic, and repayment-path comparison in one PSLF-focused calculator.
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Enter your employer, loan, payment-count, income, and household details to see whether PSLF appears viable and whether it still beats standard repayment or refinancing.

How It Works

Modeling Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF)

Follow these six steps to get your complete PSLF picture — from eligibility screening and payment counting, to filing-status strategy and total forgiveness value versus refinance comparison.

01

Employer Certification: Validating 501(c)(3) & Government Status

Enter your employer type, full-time status, loan type, and repayment plan. The workbench instantly flags the four core PSLF requirements and tells you whether each one appears met, marginal, or disqualifying based on your inputs.

Employer Type Full-Time Status Loan Type Repayment Plan
02

The 120-Payment Threshold: Tracking Qualifying Months & IDR Waivers

Enter the number of qualifying payments already credited and your years in public service. The tool calculates how many payments remain, your estimated months to forgiveness, and an on-track confidence signal based on your progress.

Qualifying Payments Made Years in Public Service
03

Income-Driven Repayment (IDR): Discretionary Income Limits Under SAVE

Enter your Adjusted Gross Income, family size, income growth rate, and the federal poverty line percentage used by your IDR plan. The tool projects your current and future income-driven payments month by month through your forgiveness date.

Borrower AGI Family Size Income Growth % Poverty Line Factor %
04

Tax Filing Arbitrage: MFJ vs. Married Filing Separately (MFS) Spousal Exclusions

Enter your spouse’s income and student debt. The workbench calculates your IDR payment under both Married Filing Jointly and Married Filing Separately, then shows how much the filing-status choice moves your monthly payment — helping you decide whether a tax penalty is worth the IDR savings.

Marital Status Filing Status Spouse Income Spouse Student Debt
05

Refinance Benchmarking: Federal Protections vs. Private Yield Arbitrage

Provide a private refinance APR, new term in months, and origination fees. The tool projects the total you would pay if you left PSLF and refinanced — including the forgiveness value you’d give up — so you can see whether refinancing makes financial sense at this stage.

Refinance APR Refi Term (months) Origination Fees
06

Review Results, Download & Share

Click Run PSLF Analysis to see your color-coded verdict banner, KPI cards (payments left, projected forgiveness, best filing path, best strategy), an interactive cost-comparison chart, and a full decision summary table. Download a branded PDF or share the key numbers via WhatsApp.

Verdict Banner KPI Cards PDF Export WhatsApp Share

⚠️ This tool provides educational estimates only. Always verify your qualifying payment count and employer certification status directly with your loan servicer and through the official PSLF Help Tool at studentaid.gov/pslf.


Worked Examples

Evaluating PSLF Value vs. Refinance & Private Alternatives

See how different borrower profiles play out in the workbench — from a clear PSLF winner to cases where refinancing or standard repayment might actually beat the forgiveness path.

PSLF Clear Winner

Scenario A: The High-Income Earner (When IDR Exceeds Standard 10-Year EMI)

Loan balance$118,000
AGI$62,000
Qualifying payments made84 of 120
Payments remaining36
Estimated IDR payment$310/mo
Projected forgiveness$89,500
PSLF total paid$26,040
Standard 10-yr total paid$162,400
✅ PSLF wins decisively. With 84 payments complete and $89,500 projected forgiveness, abandoning PSLF now would cost over $136,000 more than staying the course.
Filing Status Swing Case

Scenario B: Spousal Income Shielding (The MFS Tax Strategy for Healthcare Workers)

Loan balance$73,000
Borrower AGI$71,000
Spouse income$94,000
Family size2
IDR payment (MFJ)$1,040/mo
IDR payment (MFS)$495/mo
Payments made44 of 120
⚠️ Filing MFS saves $545/month on IDR but may cost $2,800–$4,200 in lost tax benefits. Run the numbers with your CPA — the break-even is within striking distance.
Refi May Win

Scenario C: Private Refinance Arbitrage (Forfeiting Federal Servicer Protections)

Loan balance$28,000
AGI$85,000
Income growth rate5% / yr
Qualifying payments made12 of 120
Projected forgiveness$3,100
PSLF total paid est.$97,600
Refi at 5.2%, 5 yr total$31,800
🔴 Refinancing wins here. With only $3,100 in projected forgiveness and a rising income that will push IDR payments above the standard payment, PSLF offers little economic benefit. Consider a private refi.
Stay the Course

Scenario D: Mid-Career Transitions & The One-Time Account Adjustment

Loan balance$54,000
AGI$58,000
Family size3
Qualifying payments made60 of 120
IDR payment$290/mo
Projected forgiveness$31,200
PSLF vs. standard savings$48,900
✅ Stay the course. Exactly halfway to 120 payments with $31,200 in projected forgiveness locked in. Switching now would forfeit five years of qualifying payments and tens of thousands in forgiveness value.

Expert / Pro Tips

Pro Borrower Tips: Securing Your Tax-Free Federal Forgiveness

These field-tested strategies help you protect your qualifying payments, optimize your IDR payment, and know exactly when PSLF beats every alternative — before you commit.

If you’re more than 60 payments in

Protect your progress at almost any cost. The forgiveness value of your remaining payments almost certainly exceeds what any refinance or standard plan could save you.

If you’re in the first 24 payments

Run the workbench’s refinance comparison now. With rising income, low balances, or marginal employer eligibility, early exit can save more than staying on PSLF.

01

Submit the PSLF Employment Certification Form (ECF) Annually

The single most common PSLF failure is discovering at payment 119 that the employer was never certified. Submit an ECF (now called the PSLF Form) annually and every time you change employers. Your servicer confirms qualifying payment counts in writing each time, giving you an auditable trail instead of a single high-stakes review at the end.

Pro move: After your first ECF comes back approved, set a calendar reminder each January to resubmit. Annual certification also protects you if your servicer transfers your loans mid-journey — which has happened to thousands of PSLF borrowers.
02

Shield Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) to Minimize Discretionary Payments

Under PSLF, paying more than your required IDR payment does nothing to advance your forgiveness date. Each qualifying payment counts as one payment regardless of the dollar amount — so paying extra only reduces the forgiveness amount you’d eventually receive without accelerating the 120-payment clock.

Use this workbench to confirm your minimum IDR payment and put any additional cash toward an emergency fund, higher-rate debt, or retirement contributions instead.

Pro move: If you receive a raise, check whether your IDR payment increases past the standard 10-year payment amount. Once IDR equals or exceeds standard payment, PSLF loses its economic advantage — this workbench’s income-growth modeling shows exactly when that crossover happens.
03

Coordinate MFS Tax Penalties with Student Loan Savings (The Break-Even)

Most borrowers compare PSLF vs. refinance using monthly payment alone. The right comparison is total amount paid across all paths, including the forgiveness value you’d give up by leaving PSLF. This workbench computes that full economic comparison — use the “Best strategy” KPI card and the cost-comparison chart, not the monthly payment line, as your decision anchor.

Pro move: Run the workbench twice — once with your current income and once with an aggressive income scenario (5–8% annual growth). If PSLF still wins in the higher-income case, the forgiveness value is robust. If refinancing wins in the higher-income case, watch your income trajectory closely and revisit annually.
04

Never Refinance Federal Direct Loans into Private Capital (SoFi/Earnest)

Filing Married Filing Separately can dramatically reduce an IDR payment by excluding your spouse’s income from the calculation. But MFS also disqualifies you from certain tax benefits — the student loan interest deduction (capped at $2,500), the Earned Income Credit, and the American Opportunity Credit, among others.

The workbench shows the IDR savings from MFS vs. MFJ, but you need a CPA to calculate the full tax-benefit loss. The correct decision is: IDR savings minus lost tax benefits. Only file MFS if that net number is positive.

Pro move: Model the MFS scenario in this workbench first to see whether the monthly IDR difference is even large enough to justify a CPA consultation. If the difference is less than $100/month, MFS is rarely worth the complexity.
05

Recertify Income Preemptively Before Salary Spikes or Job Changes

Every employer change requires a new ECF submission. But beyond the paperwork, a move away from a qualifying employer — even briefly — pauses your qualifying-payment clock. Payments made while working for a for-profit employer never count toward PSLF, regardless of your loan type or repayment plan.

Before accepting a role at a private-sector or for-profit employer, use this workbench to model how many qualifying payments you’d forfeit and whether the salary increase more than compensates for the lost forgiveness value.

Pro move: If you’re considering a hybrid role (part government, part other), check whether your qualifying hours still meet the PSLF full-time threshold. The Federal Student Aid PSLF Help Tool can verify employer eligibility before you sign an offer letter.
06

Recertify Your IDR Plan on Time — A Missed Deadline Can Spike Your Payment

IDR plans require annual income recertification. If you miss the deadline, your servicer may capitalize unpaid interest and reset your payment to the full standard 10-year amount until you recertify — which can cause a jarring payment spike and slow down your forgiveness math.

Set a reminder 60 days before your recertification deadline. Use the Federal Student Aid repayment dashboard to track your deadline, and resubmit as soon as your new tax return is available.

Pro move: If your income drops significantly in a given year (parental leave, reduced hours, job gap), recertify immediately — don’t wait for the annual deadline. A lower recertification can reduce your IDR payment right away and maximize forgiveness value.

FAQs

PSLF FAQs: The SAVE Plan, Mohela Transfers & IDR Tax Bombs

Straight answers to the most common questions Americans ask about qualifying for PSLF, counting payments, filing-status strategy, and deciding whether forgiveness beats refinancing.

1. What are the four core requirements to qualify for PSLF?

You must: (1) work full-time for a qualifying employer — federal, state, local, or tribal government, or a 501(c)(3) nonprofit; (2) hold Direct Loans (or have consolidated into a Direct Consolidation Loan); (3) be enrolled in a qualifying income-driven repayment plan; and (4) make 120 qualifying, on-time monthly payments while all four conditions are simultaneously met. Missing any single requirement means those payments don’t count toward forgiveness.

2. Do my FFEL or Perkins loans qualify for PSLF?

Not directly. FFEL and Perkins loans must first be consolidated into a Direct Consolidation Loan before payments can count toward PSLF. Payments made before consolidation do not count. If you consolidate, your 120-payment clock restarts from zero — so consolidating late in your journey can cost you years of credit. Check with your servicer before consolidating, especially if you already have significant progress toward 120 payments.

3. What repayment plans count as “qualifying” for PSLF?

All income-driven repayment (IDR) plans qualify: SAVE (Saving on a Valuable Education), PAYE (Pay As You Earn), IBR (Income-Based Repayment), and ICR (Income-Contingent Repayment). The standard 10-year plan also qualifies technically, but since it’s designed to pay off your loan in exactly 120 payments, you’d have nothing left to forgive. Graduated and extended plans generally do not qualify. Most PSLF borrowers use an IDR plan to minimize payments and maximize forgiveness.

4. How does this calculator estimate my qualifying payment count?

You enter the number of qualifying payments already credited and your years in public service. The workbench checks whether those two figures are roughly consistent — years × 12 should be close to or greater than your payment count. It then calculates payments remaining as 120 minus your credited count, and estimates your projected forgiveness date in months. These are estimates only; your actual certified count comes from your loan servicer after you submit an Employer Certification Form.

5. What is an IDR payment and how is it calculated?

An income-driven repayment (IDR) payment is set as a percentage of your discretionary income — defined as the portion of your Adjusted Gross Income above a federal poverty guideline threshold. For example, SAVE calculates payments at 5% of income above 225% of the poverty line for undergraduate debt. This workbench models that calculation using your AGI, family size, and the poverty factor you specify — giving you an estimate of your current monthly payment and how it grows as your income rises.

6. Should I file taxes Married Filing Separately (MFS) to lower my IDR payment?

Potentially, but only after a full cost-benefit analysis. MFS excludes your spouse’s income from the IDR calculation, which can dramatically lower your payment. However, MFS also disqualifies you from several federal tax benefits — the student loan interest deduction, the Earned Income Credit, and others. The correct approach is to use this workbench to calculate the IDR savings, then have a CPA calculate the lost tax benefits. If IDR savings exceed the lost tax value, MFS makes financial sense for that tax year.

7. When does refinancing beat PSLF?

Refinancing can beat PSLF when: your balance is low relative to your income (projecting minimal forgiveness); your income is rising quickly (pushing IDR payments toward or above standard repayment); you have few qualifying payments and years to go; or your employer eligibility is uncertain. This workbench compares PSLF total economic cost versus refinance total cost including fees — use the “Best strategy” result, not just the monthly payment, as your decision benchmark.

8. Is PSLF forgiveness taxable income?

Under current federal law, PSLF forgiveness is not taxable at the federal level. This is a key difference from the 20-25 year IDR forgiveness (non-PSLF), which is taxable. Some states may tax the forgiven amount — check your state tax rules. This workbench’s economic comparison assumes federal non-taxability, which is a significant factor in PSLF’s favor for high-balance borrowers.

9. What happens if I miss a qualifying payment?

A missed or late payment simply doesn’t count toward your 120 — it doesn’t disqualify you or restart the clock. Your PSLF journey just takes one payment longer. However, if you go into delinquency or default, your loans may lose their eligible status. If you expect difficulty making payments, contact your servicer immediately to adjust your IDR payment based on current income or to apply for forbearance, which also doesn’t disqualify you but typically doesn’t count as a qualifying payment.

10. Can I work part-time and still qualify for PSLF?

Yes, but with conditions. PSLF requires that you work full-time for a qualifying employer. “Full-time” is defined as the greater of 30 hours per week or your employer’s definition of full-time. If you hold multiple part-time jobs that together total at least 30 hours per week, and at least one employer is a qualifying organization, you may still qualify. Enter your employment status carefully in this workbench’s employer and full-time fields to get an accurate eligibility screen.

11. How does this workbench compare PSLF vs. standard repayment vs. refinancing?

The workbench builds three separate financial projections: (1) PSLF — total payments made from now to forgiveness, using projected IDR amounts; (2) Standard 10-year — total payments remaining on the standard schedule; and (3) Refinance — total payments under the APR, term, and fees you enter. It then identifies the lowest-cost strategy and flags it as “Best strategy” in the KPI card and comparison chart, accounting for projected forgiveness value in the PSLF path.

12. Does consolidating into a Direct Loan restart my PSLF payment count?

Yes. When you consolidate, the new Direct Consolidation Loan is treated as a fresh loan, and your qualifying payment count resets to zero. If you have FFEL loans with 50 qualifying payments, consolidating will forfeit all 50 credits. There are limited exceptions under temporary waiver programs — check the current status of any active PSLF waivers on the Federal Student Aid PSLF page before consolidating.

13. What is the PSLF Help Tool and should I use it?

The Federal Student Aid PSLF Help Tool is the official government tool for verifying employer eligibility, submitting the PSLF Form (formerly called the ECF), and checking your payment progress. This workbench is an educational estimator for financial decision-making — the FSA Help Tool is the authoritative source for actual eligibility determination. Use both: this workbench for strategic planning and the FSA tool for official certification.

14. Can private student loans qualify for PSLF?

No. PSLF only applies to federal Direct Loans. Private student loans are not eligible and cannot be consolidated into a Direct Consolidation Loan. If you have a mix of federal and private loans, this workbench models only your federal balance. For private loans, your options are refinancing, standard repayment, or negotiating directly with your private lender.

15. How does income growth affect my PSLF payoff projection?

As your income rises, your IDR payment rises proportionally. If your income grows fast enough, your IDR payment may eventually equal or exceed your standard 10-year payment — at which point PSLF stops generating monthly cash-flow benefit, though the forgiveness value at the end remains. Enter an income growth rate in the workbench (e.g., 3–5% annually) to see the month-by-month payment trajectory and whether your IDR payment crosses the standard payment line before your forgiveness date.

16. What if my employer changes from qualifying to non-qualifying mid-journey?

Payments made while employed at a non-qualifying employer do not count. Your progress is paused, not erased — once you return to a qualifying employer and resubmit an ECF, the clock resumes. However, the months spent at the non-qualifying employer extend your timeline. Use this workbench to model a “gap scenario” by reducing your qualifying payments made to see how a 12–24 month employment gap affects your forgiveness date and total economic outcome.

17. Does my spouse’s student debt affect our PSLF strategy?

Your spouse’s debt affects your IDR payment calculation under the Married Filing Jointly path — lenders who include spouse debt in the payment formula may give you a lower payment if your spouse also has significant federal debt. The MFS path excludes spouse income and debt entirely from your calculation. This workbench includes a spouse student debt field for scenarios where joint-income IDR plans are relevant.

18. What is interest capitalization and how does it affect my PSLF balance?

Interest capitalization happens when unpaid interest is added to your principal balance — most commonly when you switch repayment plans, miss a recertification deadline, or exit forbearance. A larger capitalized balance means more interest accrues going forward. Under PSLF, capitalization matters less than under standard repayment because any remaining balance is forgiven — but a capitalized spike can temporarily push your IDR payment higher and reduce the cash-flow benefit of being on an IDR plan.

19. Will using this calculator affect my loan servicer or credit report?

No. This is an entirely browser-based educational tool. It does not connect to your loan servicer, pull your credit report, send any data to federal systems, or submit any application. All inputs remain on your screen and are not stored, transmitted, or sold. Only you can see what you enter. Your loan terms and servicer relationship change only when you take formal action — submitting an ECF, changing your repayment plan, or refinancing with a lender.

20. How should I use the PDF report and WhatsApp share features?

The PDF export captures your verdict, KPI results, payment comparison, and key inputs in a single document — ideal for discussing your PSLF strategy with a financial aid counselor, HUD-approved credit counselor, or trusted advisor. The WhatsApp share text condenses the key numbers into a message for a quick second opinion. Before making major decisions — such as leaving PSLF, changing your repayment plan, or filing MFS for the first time — sharing the summary and reviewing it with a knowledgeable professional is always worthwhile.