Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) Calculator 2026 | PSLF & SAVE Plan Analyzer
This upgraded underwriting engine models your exact amortized payment paths, 20/25-year student loan forgiveness timing, and true Present-Value (PV) cost. It analyzes Married Filing Jointly (MFJ) vs. Separately (MFS) tax impacts, spousal federal loan allocation, Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) trajectories, and private refinance breakpoints so borrowers can execute the mathematically optimal debt strategy—not just settle for the lowest discretionary income payment today.
Run the workbench to compare plan-by-plan payment paths, total cost, present-value cost, forgiveness year, tax exposure, and household filing strategy.
| Plan | Current Payment | Total Paid | Forgiveness Year | Forgiven | Tax | PV Cost | Comment |
|---|
How Our Student Loan Underwriting Engine Models Your Debt
This workbench goes beyond a basic payment calculator. It models your full repayment path across every available federal IDR plan, projects 25-year costs in today’s dollars, and factors in your household filing strategy — so you pick the right plan, not just the cheapest one this month.
Federal IDR Plans Compared: SAVE, PAYE, IBR, and ICR
There are five federal income-driven repayment plans available in 2026, each with a different payment formula, eligibility rule, forgiveness timeline, and PSLF compatibility. This table shows how they differ before you run the workbench.
| Plan | Payment Cap | Income Used | Forgiveness Timeline | PSLF Compatible | New Borrowers Only | Spousal Income Counted | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAVE Saving on a Valuable Education |
5% disc. income (undergrad) / 10% (grad) | AGI minus 225% FPL | 10 yrs (≤$12K balance) up to 20–25 yrs | ✅ Yes | No — all borrowers | MFS: excluded; MFJ: included | Lowest ongoing payment, short-balance forgiveness |
| PAYE Pay As You Earn |
10% discretionary income (capped at Standard) | AGI minus 150% FPL | 20 years | ✅ Yes | Yes — new borrowers Oct 2007+ | MFS: spouse income excluded | Lower payment, 20-yr forgiveness, MFS advantage |
| IBR (New) Income-Based Repayment — New |
10% discretionary income (capped at Standard) | AGI minus 150% FPL | 20 years | ✅ Yes | Yes — new borrowers Jul 2014+ | MFS: spouse income excluded | Similar to PAYE; available to more borrowers |
| IBR (Old) Income-Based Repayment — Original |
15% discretionary income (capped at Standard) | AGI minus 150% FPL | 25 years | ✅ Yes | No — all borrowers | MFS: spouse income excluded | Borrowers ineligible for PAYE/SAVE; PSLF track |
| ICR Income-Contingent Repayment |
20% discretionary income OR 12-yr fixed payment, whichever is lower | AGI minus 100% FPL | 25 years | ✅ Yes | No — all borrowers | MFS: spouse income excluded | Parent PLUS borrowers (after consolidation); high-income borrowers |
| Standard 10-Year Fixed |
Fixed monthly payment over 10 years | N/A (not income-based) | None — fully repaid at 10 yrs | ✅ Qualifying (120 payments = forgiveness) | No | N/A | Lowest total interest; PSLF if exactly 120 payments |
Real-World Student Loan Scenarios: PSLF vs. Private Refinance
Three borrower profiles that represent the most common IDR decision points — from a public service employee targeting PSLF to a high-income married couple optimizing the joint vs. separate filing trade-off.
The Borrower: A 29-year-old public school teacher with $78,000 in federal Direct Loans at 6.5% average interest. AGI is $52,000. Single, family size 1. She has been making qualifying IDR payments for 3 years — meaning she has 7 years left to PSLF forgiveness.
The Strategy: Her workbench result points clearly to SAVE or IBR (New) on a PSLF track. Under SAVE, her monthly payment is approximately $142/month. Over 7 more years, she pays roughly $11,900 total, and her remaining ~$82,000 balance (with interest accrual) is forgiven tax-free under PSLF.
The Alternative Cost: If she abandons PSLF and switches to Standard 10-year, she pays approximately $880/month and $105,600 total. PSLF saves her over $93,000 in real payments — making it the clearest possible win in the workbench.
The Borrower: A 34-year-old physician in private practice with $310,000 in federal graduate loans at 7.2% average interest. AGI is $240,000 and growing at 5%/year. Single, family size 1. Works for a private employer — no PSLF eligibility.
The Strategy: At this income level, IDR payments approach or exceed the Standard payment, so the payment reduction benefit largely disappears. The workbench compares three paths: (1) Aggressive payoff on Standard or Extended, (2) IBR-Old for the 25-year forgiveness runway, and (3) Private refinance to a 7-year or 10-year term at a lower rate.
The Outcome: The present-value cost model shows that refinancing to a 6.1% private rate on a 10-year term saves approximately $44,000 in total interest versus remaining on IBR. However, refinancing immediately sacrifices income-driven protection if income drops. The workbench marks this as a Refinance Breakpoint — worth doing only if income is stable and there is no anticipated need for IDR-based protection.
The Borrowers: A married couple. Borrower: $145,000 federal loans, AGI $95,000, works at a non-profit. Spouse: $22,000 federal loans, income $78,000, private employer. Combined household income $173,000, family size 2.
The Dilemma: Filing Married Filing Jointly (MFJ) includes spouse income in the IDR payment calculation, pushing the borrower’s payment to approximately $1,240/month. Filing Married Filing Separately (MFS) excludes spouse income (under PAYE and IBR), dropping the IDR payment to approximately $590/month — a difference of $650/month.
The Trade-Off: MFS costs approximately $6,000–$9,000 per year in lost tax benefits (reduced standard deduction, lost credits). The workbench models the net household cost of both filing strategies over the full IDR window. In this case, the $7,800/year payment savings under MFS exceeds the estimated $7,200 annual tax penalty — making MFS the net winner by a small margin that grows over time as the IDR payment savings compound.
Pro Borrower Tips: Maximizing Federal Student Aid (FSA) Rules
The biggest IDR mistakes aren’t about picking the wrong plan — they’re about ignoring how your filing status, income trajectory, and employer type interact with the math over a 20-25 year horizon.
Never Privately Refinance Federal Loans If Pursuing PSLF
Refinancing to a private lender permanently removes your loans from all federal programs — including PSLF, IDR, deferment, and forbearance. A borrower with 6 years of qualifying PSLF payments who refinances loses those 6 years entirely. There is no way to return to federal loan status after private refinancing.
Irreversible RiskRe-Certify Your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) Annually
All IDR plans require annual income re-certification. If you miss the deadline, your payment reverts to the Standard 10-year payment amount — often several times higher than your IDR payment. Servicers send reminders, but setting your own calendar reminder 60 days before your certification anniversary is critical insurance.
Annual Action RequiredTrack Qualifying Payments with the Official PSLF Help Tool
The Department of Education’s PSLF tracker on StudentAid.gov shows your qualifying payment count in real time. Don’t assume your servicer is counting correctly — cross-check your count annually and submit an Employment Certification Form (ECF) every year, not just at the 120-payment mark. Early ECF submissions catch employer eligibility issues before they compound.
Best PracticeModel the IRS Tax Bomb Before Accepting 20/25-Year Forgiveness
Non-PSLF IDR forgiveness (after 20 or 25 years) is currently taxable as ordinary income at the federal level — and potentially at the state level too. A $120,000 forgiven balance could generate a $28,000–$40,000 tax bill in the forgiveness year. Start saving for this tax exposure in a high-yield savings account or investment account years in advance. The workbench models this as “Tax on Forgiveness” so you can plan.
Tax PlanningReassess Your MFJ vs. MFS Tax Penalty Every Year
The Married Filing Separately advantage isn’t permanent. As income grows, IDR payments under MFJ approach the Standard payment cap anyway — narrowing the MFS advantage. Meanwhile, the tax cost of filing separately often grows. Reassess the net household cost of both filing strategies every year, especially after a raise, job change, or when you get close to the forgiveness finish line.
Annual ReviewWhy Present-Value (PV) Cost Beats “Total Paid” in IDR Analysis
A plan that shows $180,000 total paid over 20 years isn’t necessarily more expensive than one showing $140,000 total paid over 10 years — because money paid 15 years from now is worth less than money paid today. The workbench’s PV Cost column discounts all future payments at your chosen rate, giving you an apples-to-apples comparison. Use PV Cost as your primary decision metric when comparing plans with different timelines.
Decision FrameworkDirect Consolidation: Understand the Weighted Average Trade-Offs
Direct Loan Consolidation can make FFEL or Perkins loans eligible for IDR and PSLF, but it resets your qualifying payment count to zero. If you have a mix of loan types with different payment counts, consolidating them together loses all prior counts. The general rule: consolidate before making any qualifying payments, or consolidate each loan type separately to preserve the highest existing count where possible.
Consolidation RiskFinding Your Private Refinance Breakpoint
For borrowers not pursuing PSLF, private refinancing can save significant money if your interest rate drops materially (at least 1.5–2 percentage points). The breakpoint is the income and career stability level at which refinancing wins over a lifetime horizon. The workbench’s refinance comparison shows exactly where that line is for your numbers — don’t make this decision based on the monthly payment alone.
Strategy InsightFAQs: Recertification, Subsidies & Pending SAVE Litigation
Answers to the most common questions from borrowers navigating income-driven repayment, PSLF, forgiveness taxation, and the joint vs. separate filing decision.
Related Student Debt & Mortgage DTI Calculators
Explore more tools on USFinanceCalculators.com to model refinancing, payoff strategies, tax impact, and the broader personal finance picture around your student debt.
CFPB Compliance, Legal Disclaimer & Editorial Transparency
This IDR Strategy Workbench is provided strictly for educational and estimation purposes only and does not constitute — and must not be relied upon as — financial advice, legal advice, tax advice, or any regulated financial or student loan counseling service.
All calculations are simplified models based on current federal IDR plan formulas and publicly available poverty guidelines. They do not account for:
- Pending or future regulatory, legislative, or court-ordered changes to IDR or PSLF
- Loan servicer-specific processing differences or system errors in payment counting
- State-level income taxation of forgiven student loan balances
- Loan consolidation history or how it affects your qualifying payment count
- Graduate PLUS vs. undergraduate loan type distinctions for SAVE payment rates
- Income verification issues, recertification delays, or servicer transitions
- PSLF employer eligibility edge cases or employer certification processing times
- Any IDR-related litigation outcomes that may change plan availability
Federal student loan policy is subject to rapid change through regulation, litigation, and legislation. Always verify current plan terms directly at StudentAid.gov and consult a qualified student loan counselor, financial advisor, or tax professional before making repayment decisions. USFinanceCalculators.com is not affiliated with the Department of Education or any loan servicer.
IDR payments follow official federal formulas: (Discretionary Income × Plan Rate) ÷ 12. Discretionary income = AGI − (FPL threshold × family size). Federal poverty guidelines (2026) are used for all calculations. PSLF and non-PSLF forgiveness timelines use statutory plan rules.
Federal FormulaFederal Poverty Guidelines, SAVE plan structure, FPL multipliers, and IDR payment percentages are reviewed when updated by the Department of Health and Human Services (typically each January) and when regulatory or court changes affect plan availability.
Reviewed May 2026Workbench outputs, strategy verdicts, and plan comparisons are produced independently using our own formulas and editorial judgment. No loan servicer, refinance lender, or financial institution pays to influence tool outputs or recommendations.
Editorially IndependentUSFinanceCalculators.com is supported by display advertising via Google AdSense. Ad content is served automatically by ad networks and has no influence on calculator outputs or content. Refinance lender advertisements, if shown, are not endorsements.
Ad-SupportedThe SAVE plan was subject to federal court injunctions in 2025. This workbench models SAVE using its statutory formula, but current enrollee status (forbearance vs. active repayment) may differ. Always check StudentAid.gov for live enrollment status before relying on SAVE projections.
Regulatory CaveatFound a formula error, outdated poverty guideline, or missing plan update? Use our Contact page to report it. Verified corrections are reflected in the next review cycle with the date updated above.
Feedback WelcomeThe following official US government sources provide the authoritative legal and regulatory framework underlying federal student loans, IDR plans, PSLF, and forgiveness taxation. Always use these as your primary source of truth.