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2026-27 Changes to Federal Loans

The Working Families Tax Cuts Act (Pub. L. 119-21) was signed into law on July 4, 2025. This law significantly changes federal student loan eligibility and repayment. These changes will affect students starting on July 1, 2026. The information and FAQ’s below reflect the most current guidance available and is subject to change as we receive additional information from the US Department of Education.

Parents of Undergraduate Students

As of July 1, 2026, first-time Parent PLUS borrowers have new annual and lifetime loan limits.

  • The new annual limit is $20,000 per year per dependent student.
  • The new lifetime loan limit is $65,000 per dependent student.
  • These new limits apply to all parents combined per dependent student.

A temporary exception exists to allow Parent PLUS borrowers to borrow under the previous loan limits which is referred to as the “legacy provision”. Below are the qualifications for the provision:

  • Student is enrolled as of June 30, 2026
  • Student or their parent(s) previously borrowed a federal loan for their program of study, and
  • Student stays enrolled in the same program of study through the program’s expected length or graduation, whichever occurs first.

Graduate Students

As of July 1, 2026 graduate students have new annual and aggregate loan limits:

  • The aggregate borrowing limit of Federal Direct Loans is $100,000 per graduate student.

Part-Time Enrollment and Loan Eligibility

Starting with the 2026-27 academic year, Federal Direct Loans are required to be adjusted for students that are enrolled less than full-time.


Loan Repayment

There are two repayment plan options:

  • Standard Repayment Plan
  • Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP)

Existing income-contingent repayment plans will sunset in 2028.


FAQs

I am starting a new graduate program in Fall 2026. What loans am I eligible for?

If you start a new graduate program in Fall 2026 and you did not receive a Federal Direct loan (Unsubsidized) for that program before July 1, 2026, you will be considered a new borrower under the new federal rules. 

I qualify for the legacy provisions, what does this mean?

Graduate students can continue to borrow federal student loans under the federal loan programs originally available to you when you start your program of study up to graduation. The federal student loan limits (annual and aggregate) continue to apply. If you exceed the expected length of your program, you will no longer qualify for the legacy provision.

Parents can continue to borrow Federal Direct PLUS loans originally available when the dependent student started their program of study through its expected length or graduation (whichever occurs first).

How do I maintain legacy status?

By staying enrolled at Northwest Missouri State University in your current program of study, you maintain legacy status. If you choose to change majors during your Undergraduate or Graduate studies, you will no longer qualify for the legacy provision and all new loan limits will apply for parent and student.

Can a student or parent opt out of the legacy provisions?

No. If they meet the requirements to be under the legacy provisions they cannot opt out.

Will I still qualify for federal student loans if I am enrolled in less than 12 credit hours?

Starting with the 2026-27 academic year, students enrolled less than full-time will have their loans adjusted. Students enrolled less than half-time are not eligible for federal student loans. For example, an undergraduate student enrolled in nine hours will only be eligible for 9/12 (75%) of the semester loan amount previously awarded in aid years prior to 2026-27.