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Trump Administration Raises Student Loan Autopay Discount To 1 Point

Published Jun 19, 2026
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Summary:
  • The Education Department will cut federal student loan rates by up to 1 percentage point for borrowers who enroll in automatic payments by September 30, 2025.
  • Auto-pay enrollment on federal loans has fallen from over 80% before the pandemic to just 40% today, with only about a third of borrowers currently making payments.
  • The rate discount kicks in July 1, 2026 and runs through June 30, 2028, but only covers loans issued on or after July 1, 2012.

Right now, autopay shaves a quarter point off your federal student loan rate. Starting July 1, it shaves off a full point.

That sounds like a big win. On a $10,000 loan, it's worth about $8 a month.

What Actually Changed

The Trump administration is raising the autopay discount. Borrowers who turn it on get a 1 point cut to their interest rate.

That's up from the current 0.25 point. The new deal starts July 1 and runs through June 30, 2028.

Not signed up yet? You have until September 30 to qualify.

"Borrowers should not wait to take advantage of this temporary interest rate reduction," said Nicholas Kent, the Under Secretary of Education.

The stakes are huge. Americans owe more than $1.6 trillion in federal student loans, spread across over 42 million people.

That's nearly one in six American adults, a massive group.

Money moves like this hit your wallet directly, and we break them down every morning in Market Briefs, plus you get a free investing masterclass when you join.

The Savings Are Smaller Than They Sound

Higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz did the math. He called the benefit small.

Cut a $10,000 loan from 6.5% to 5.5%, and you save about $8 a month. That's lunch, not a windfall.

Over the two years it lasts, that's only a couple hundred dollars in savings. Helpful, but it won't change your life.

After June 2028, the rate climbs back up.

So why bother? Autopay makes you far less likely to miss a payment.

And one late payment costs a lot more than $8. Consumer advocates push autopay for that reason alone.

It takes human error out of the equation.

Why So Few People Use It

Autopay used to be far more common. Sign-ups have dropped hard since Covid.

Before the pandemic, more than 80% of borrowers in repayment used it. Today it's just 40%.

The long payment pause knocked many people off autopay, and most never turned it back on.

The government wants that number to climb again, so it's dangling a bigger discount.

More people on autopay also means fewer missed bills.

A Catch Worth Knowing

Autopay isn't foolproof. Some borrowers have been overcharged.

One person was billed $2,074 in a single month while on a $0 plan. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has flagged the same kind of error before.

A wrong charge can drain your bank account fast.

Mistakes are rare, but they do happen. So sign up, then still check your statement each month.

What To Watch

The discount runs through the middle of 2028. The bigger shake-up is coming first.

A new federal law will narrow repayment plans this summer. It trims the most generous plans, so some monthly bills will climb.

Borrowers will feel both shifts at once.

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