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Student Loan Forgiveness Calculator

Calculate student loan forgiveness benefits with PSLF, teacher forgiveness programs, and income-driven repayment plans. Discover if you qualify and estimate your savings.

Forgiveness Program Highlights
100%
PSLF Forgiveness
$17,500
Teacher Max
10 Years
PSLF Timeline
No Tax
PSLF Liability

Calculate Forgiveness Benefits

Enter your loan and employment details to estimate potential forgiveness benefits from PSLF, teacher programs, and income-driven repayment plans.

Student Loan Forgiveness Calculator

Calculate PSLF and other forgiveness program benefits

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Student Loan Forgiveness Programs

Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF)

100% of remaining balance
Forgiveness Amount
10 years (120 payments)
Time Requirement
Avg. Forgiveness: $75,000

Eligibility Requirements:

  • Work full-time for qualifying employer
  • Federal Direct Loans only
  • Income-driven repayment plan
  • 120 qualifying monthly payments

Qualifying Organizations:

  • Federal, state, local government
  • 501(c)(3) nonprofit organizations
  • AmeriCorps and Peace Corps

Advantages

  • Complete loan forgiveness after 10 years
  • No tax liability on forgiven amount
  • No limit on forgiveness amount

Considerations

  • Strict employment requirements
  • Only Direct Loans qualify
  • Must stay in qualifying employment

Teacher Loan Forgiveness

Up to $17,500
Forgiveness Amount
5 consecutive years
Time Requirement
Avg. Forgiveness: $12,500

Eligibility Requirements:

  • Teach in low-income school/district
  • Highly qualified teacher status
  • Direct or Stafford Loans
  • 5 consecutive years of service

Qualifying Organizations:

  • Low-income elementary schools
  • Low-income secondary schools
  • Educational service agencies

Advantages

  • Up to $17,500 forgiveness for math/science/special ed
  • Up to $5,000 for other subjects
  • Shorter time requirement than PSLF

Considerations

  • Limited forgiveness amount
  • Must teach in low-income schools
  • Cannot combine with PSLF

Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) Forgiveness

100% of remaining balance
Forgiveness Amount
20-25 years
Time Requirement
Avg. Forgiveness: $45,000

Eligibility Requirements:

  • Federal loans only
  • Income-driven repayment plan
  • 20-25 years of payments
  • Demonstrate financial need

Qualifying Organizations:

  • Any employer (no restrictions)
  • Self-employed individuals
  • Unemployed periods count

Advantages

  • Available to all federal borrowers
  • No employment restrictions
  • Lower monthly payments

Considerations

  • Long repayment period (20-25 years)
  • Forgiven amount may be taxable
  • Higher total payments over time

State-Specific Loan Forgiveness

Varies by state
Forgiveness Amount
2-5 years typically
Time Requirement
Avg. Forgiveness: $15,000

Eligibility Requirements:

  • Work in specified professions
  • Serve underserved communities
  • State residency requirements
  • Maintain good standing

Qualifying Organizations:

  • State government agencies
  • Rural healthcare facilities
  • Underserved legal aid organizations

Advantages

  • Targeted professional assistance
  • Often faster than federal programs
  • May combine with federal programs

Considerations

  • Limited to specific states/professions
  • Smaller forgiveness amounts
  • Varying program availability

Real-World PSLF Forgiveness Scenarios

Government Social Worker: $65,000 loans, $45,000 income

Borrower Profile

Loan Balance:$65,000
Annual Income:$45,000
Family Size:1
Employer:County Social Services

IDR Payment Plan

Plan Type:Income-Based Repayment (IBR)
Monthly Payment:$267
Annual Payment:$3,204
Standard Payment:$743

PSLF Benefits

Total Paid (10yr):$38,448
Balance at Forgiveness:$89,500
Amount Forgiven:$51,052
Net Benefit:$51,052

Analysis: Excellent PSLF candidate

  • Government employment qualifies
  • IDR payments much lower than standard
  • Significant forgiveness after 10 years
  • No tax liability on forgiven amount

Public School Teacher: $35,000 loans, $40,000 income

Borrower Profile

Loan Balance:$35,000
Annual Income:$40,000
Family Size:2
Employer:Public School District

IDR Payment Plan

Plan Type:Pay As You Earn (PAYE)
Monthly Payment:$156
Annual Payment:$1,872

PSLF Benefits

Total Paid (10yr):$22,464
Balance at Forgiveness:$42,000
Amount Forgiven:$30,000
Net Benefit:$35,000

Teacher Loan Forgiveness Strategy:

5-Year Forgiveness:
$5,000
Remaining Balance:
$30,000
Continue PSLF:
5 more years for full forgiveness

Analysis: Use Teacher Forgiveness first, then PSLF

  • Qualify for both programs
  • Teacher forgiveness after 5 years
  • Continue PSLF for remaining balance
  • Maximize total forgiveness benefits

Nonprofit Healthcare Worker: $95,000 loans, $65,000 income

Borrower Profile

Loan Balance:$95,000
Annual Income:$65,000
Family Size:1
Employer:501(c)(3) Hospital

IDR Payment Plan

Plan Type:Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR)
Monthly Payment:$445
Annual Payment:$5,340
Standard Payment:$1086

PSLF Benefits

Total Paid (10yr):$64,080
Balance at Forgiveness:$125,000
Amount Forgiven:$60,920
Net Benefit:$60,920

Analysis: Strong PSLF candidate despite interest growth

  • Nonprofit hospital employment qualifies
  • Significant monthly payment savings
  • Large forgiveness amount after 10 years
  • Better than standard repayment long-term

Income-Driven Repayment Plans Comparison

Income-Based Repayment (IBR)

10-15% of discretionary income
Payment Calculation
Forgiveness: 20-25 years

Eligibility Requirements:

  • Partial financial hardship required
  • All federal loan types eligible
  • New borrowers get 10%, others 15%

Advantages:

  • Lower payments for high debt-to-income
  • Interest subsidy for first 3 years on subsidized loans
  • Forgiveness after 20-25 years

Limitations:

  • Must demonstrate financial hardship
  • Longer repayment period
  • Interest may capitalize

Best For:

Borrowers with high debt relative to income

Pay As You Earn (PAYE)

10% of discretionary income
Payment Calculation
Forgiveness: 20 years

Eligibility Requirements:

  • New borrower on or after Oct 1, 2007
  • Received disbursement on or after Oct 1, 2011
  • Partial financial hardship required

Advantages:

  • Lowest payment calculation
  • Interest subsidy for first 3 years
  • Forgiveness after 20 years
  • Payment cap at standard plan amount

Limitations:

  • Strict new borrower requirements
  • Limited loan type eligibility
  • Must recertify income annually

Best For:

Recent borrowers with lower incomes

Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE)

10% of discretionary income
Payment Calculation
Forgiveness: 20-25 years

Eligibility Requirements:

  • Direct Loans only
  • No financial hardship requirement
  • No borrowing date restrictions

Advantages:

  • Available to all Direct Loan borrowers
  • Interest subsidy on unpaid interest
  • No payment cap
  • Forgiveness after 20-25 years

Limitations:

  • Considers spouse income even if filing separately
  • Graduate loans get 25-year forgiveness
  • No payment cap (can exceed standard)

Best For:

Borrowers seeking interest subsidies and flexibility

Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR)

20% of discretionary income or 12-year fixed
Payment Calculation
Forgiveness: 25 years

Eligibility Requirements:

  • Direct Loans only
  • No income requirements
  • Parent PLUS loans eligible after consolidation

Advantages:

  • No income requirements
  • Parent PLUS eligible after consolidation
  • Available since 1994
  • Forgiveness after 25 years

Limitations:

  • Highest payment calculation
  • Longest forgiveness timeframe
  • Less favorable than other IDR plans

Best For:

Parent PLUS borrowers and those who don't qualify for other plans

PSLF Qualifying Employers

Federal Government

Examples:

  • Department of Veterans Affairs
  • Department of Education
  • Department of Health and Human Services
  • Department of Justice
  • Military (active duty and civilian)
  • Postal Service

Qualification Rule:

All federal agencies and departments automatically qualify

Additional Info:

Military service members and federal civilian employees all qualify

State and Local Government

Examples:

  • State departments and agencies
  • County and city governments
  • Public schools and universities
  • Public hospitals and health departments
  • Fire and police departments
  • Public libraries

Qualification Rule:

Must be government organization, not contractor

Additional Info:

Part-time positions may qualify if considered full-time by employer

501(c)(3) Nonprofit Organizations

Examples:

  • Charitable organizations
  • Religious organizations
  • Educational institutions
  • Hospitals and healthcare nonprofits
  • Environmental organizations
  • Social service agencies

Qualification Rule:

Must be tax-exempt under Section 501(c)(3)

Additional Info:

Other 501(c) organizations typically do not qualify

AmeriCorps and Peace Corps

Examples:

  • AmeriCorps VISTA
  • AmeriCorps NCCC
  • AmeriCorps State and National
  • Peace Corps volunteers
  • Other national service programs

Qualification Rule:

Full-time service positions qualify

Additional Info:

Service periods count toward 120 payment requirement

Common PSLF Mistakes to Avoid

Wrong Loan Type

Very Common (60% of denials)

The Problem:

FFEL or Perkins loans don't qualify for PSLF

The Solution:

Consolidate non-Direct loans into Direct Consolidation Loan

Prevention:

Submit Employment Certification Form annually to verify loan eligibility

Wrong Repayment Plan

Common (25% of denials)

The Problem:

Graduated, extended, or standard plans don't always qualify

The Solution:

Switch to income-driven repayment plan immediately

Prevention:

Use only IBR, PAYE, REPAYE, or ICR plans for PSLF

Employment Gaps or Changes

Moderate (15% of issues)

The Problem:

Changing jobs or employment gaps reset payment counting

The Solution:

Maintain continuous qualifying employment or document gaps

Prevention:

Submit Employment Certification when changing jobs

Late or Missed Payments

Common (20% of issues)

The Problem:

Late payments don't count toward 120 requirement

The Solution:

Set up autopay and make up missed qualifying payments

Prevention:

Enroll in autopay and monitor payment processing

Employer Doesn't Qualify

Moderate (10% of denials)

The Problem:

For-profit companies and some nonprofits don't qualify

The Solution:

Verify employer qualification before starting PSLF track

Prevention:

Submit Employment Certification Form to confirm eligibility

Student Loan Forgiveness FAQ

How does Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) work?

PSLF forgives remaining federal Direct Loan balances after 120 qualifying monthly payments while working full-time for qualifying employers (government or 501(c)(3) nonprofits) on income-driven repayment plans. The forgiven amount is not taxable income.

What jobs qualify for PSLF?

Qualifying employers include federal, state, and local government; 501(c)(3) nonprofit organizations; AmeriCorps and Peace Corps. Must work full-time (typically 30+ hours/week as defined by employer). For-profit companies, most other 501(c) organizations, and labor unions typically do not qualify.

How much can be forgiven through student loan forgiveness programs?

PSLF forgives 100% of remaining Direct Loan balance after 10 years with no limit. Teacher Loan Forgiveness offers up to $17,500 after 5 years. IDR forgiveness cancels remaining balance after 20-25 years. Average PSLF forgiveness is around $75,000.

Are there taxes on student loan forgiveness?

PSLF and Teacher Loan Forgiveness are not taxable income. IDR forgiveness may be taxable income unless you qualify for insolvency exclusion. State forgiveness programs vary. The American Rescue Plan Act temporarily made forgiveness tax-free through 2025.

Can I combine Teacher Loan Forgiveness with PSLF?

You cannot use the same teaching service for both programs, but you can use Teacher Loan Forgiveness first (up to $17,500 after 5 years) then continue with PSLF for remaining balance (5 more years). This strategy maximizes forgiveness for teachers in qualifying schools.

What loans qualify for PSLF?

Only federal Direct Loans qualify for PSLF. FFEL, Perkins, and private loans do not qualify, but can be consolidated into Direct Consolidation Loans. However, consolidation resets your payment count to zero, so consolidate early in your career for maximum benefit.

Additional Student Loan Resources

Start Your Path to Loan Forgiveness

Calculate your potential forgiveness benefits, verify your employer qualification, and take the first steps toward loan forgiveness today.