Headline Roundup • June 22nd, 2026
Who Qualifies for Lower Student Loan Interest Rates?
Summary from the AllSides News Team
The Education Department will temporarily reduce interest rates for qualifying student loan borrowers in an attempt to ease repayment costs and incentivize enrolling in the "autopay" feature.
The Details: The 1% interest rate reduction will be available to borrowers with federal Direct Loans issued after July 1, 2012, who are enrolled in automatic payments by July 1, 2026. The rate reduction will last through June 2028. Simultaneously, rates for new student loan borrowers have increased, with undergrad rates increasing from 6.39% to 6.52% and graduate rates increasing from 7.94% to 8.07%.
Who Doesn't Qualify? Fortune (Center bias) noted that the rate reduction is not available to the nearly 9 million student loan borrowers who have defaulted on their loans, as they will need to get back in good standing by consolidating their loans and applying for a new repayment plan in order to qualify. CBS News (Lean Left bias) reported that 10.3% of loans were delinquent during the first quarter of 2026, the highest delinquency rate in six years.
How Will This Affect Taxpayers? Though not all outlets on the right were critical of the change, Just the News (Lean Right) wrote that the new plan "could cost taxpayers." Just the News cited the nonprofit Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which said that the change could cost $5 billion and "effectively amounts to a form of student debt cancellation because it reduces the total amount borrowers repay over the life of their loans rather than lowering monthly payments."
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The Education Department on Thursday announced a reduction in interest rates for federal student loans, describing it as part of a plan to make higher education more affordable.
With growing numbers of borrowers in default, the Trump administration pitched the temporary, 1% reduction in student loan interest rates as a salve for those struggling with repayment.
Education Undersecretary Nicholas Kent said the change is a way of "making student loan repayment easier than ever" and of improving "the overall health of the federal student loan portfolio."
The Education Department on Thursday said it is temporarily cutting interest rates for some federal student loan borrowers, a move aimed at easing repayment costs as delinquencies climb to their highest level in six years.
The reduction – a temporary shave of 1 percentage point from borrowing costs — comes as 10.3% of student loans were delinquent during the first quarter, representing the highest share in six years and a twenty-fold spike since mid-2024, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
The U.S. Department of Education is reducing student loan interest rates for borrowers, but critics argue the move could cost taxpayers billions of dollars.
The Education Department announced this week that federal student loan borrowers enrolled in automatic payments will be eligible for a 1% interest rate reduction beginning July 1.
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